It looks like "RHOA" stars Porsha Williams and Kenya Moore aren't the only ones receiving backlash for the catfight that took place during last Sunday's "RHOA" reunion.

"RHOA" reunion host Andy Cohen is now in the mix of the controversial fight because fans, as well as civil rights groups, are claiming that Cohen instigated the all-out brawl.

By providing Moore with the scepter and megaphone to point at Williams' face, fans believe Cohen enabled the violence and chaos that took place at the reunion show.

In response to the backlash, Cohen tweeted, "Call me crazy guys but I didn't see that coming. I hear y'all about the props but at the same time I didn't see that result coming."

Cohen's tweet sparked a wave of criticism from fans who tweeted questions and responses such as, "Why didn't you see it coming? Stop it," and, "You knew damn well it was going there."

One Twitter user named Melanie Jones even tweeted, "How you could you not see it coming after Porsha had to throw the first prop out of Kenya's hands. You are becoming such a liar."

What was Cohen's response to the accusations?

He tweeted, "If I thought it was going to go there I obviously would've taken the bullhorn away asap." And "The idea of two women are going to get physical isn't top of mind for me. Sorry. If I saw it coming I would've stopped it sooner."

As a result of the fight, Cohen also tweeted that props would no longer be allowed on set of any "RHOA" reunion.

Civil Rights group Color of Change has proposed for a stricter form of policy to be put in place. Similar to what VH1 has in place for their reality TV series, "Basketball Wives," COC requested that Bravo adopt a no excessive physical confrontations policy for the show, the Hollywood Reporter reports.

Color of Change released an official statement expressing their disapproval of Bravo's exploitation of violent acts between African American women on the show.

"From the Real Housewives of Atlanta reunion to the second season of Married to Medicine, the physical violence displayed during Bravo's Sunday primetime lineup was deeply alarming. After weeks of promoting the RHOA reunion altercation, on Sunday executive producer Andy Cohen finally condemned the violent behavior of cast members -- completely ignoring the staged hostile environment that provoked the altercation and the troubling pattern of violent, stereotypical portrayals of Black people across many of Bravo's Black reality franchises.

"Research shows that dehumanizing portrayals of Black people on television lead to real-world consequences for Black folks -- influencing how we are treated by doctors, judges, teachers and lawmakers. No matter how entertaining, this should be the last fight between Black women that Bravo profits from."

Was it Bravo instead of Kenya that provoked the fistfight? Share your thoughts with us below.