Jump to navigation

Kenya

Appeal Court will pronounce this week on Odinga and Kenyatta's referendum and basic law plan

The ruling will shape the game plan for next year's presidential election and Deputy President Ruto gears up his own campaign

President Uhuru Kenyatta and 'handshake' partner Raila Odinga have paved the way for their constitutional reform package to speed through parliament, with a referendum to be held within two months, should the Court of Appeal agree this week that it can be salvaged.

Several months of legal argument have followed the High Court's decision in May to strike down the Building Bridges Initiative, largely on the grounds that the president does not have the unilateral right to instigate constitutional reform (AC Vol 62 No 11, Picking up the pieces). The Court of Appeal is due to rule on the fate of BBI on 20 August.

In the meantime, the National Assembly's Justice and Legal Affairs committee has prepared a revised bill which, though largely identical to the initial legislation, may speed up the organisation of a referendum by November.

It tries to limit the scope for BBI's opponents to take another appeal to the courts. Yet it keeps the plans to scrap several county administrations and create new seats in the National Assembly. Both  those provisions were struck down by the High Court ruling in May.

The bill has also been sent to eleven counties for a rapid citizens' consultation process. For now, Kenyatta and Odinga are not willing to concede ground on either the substance or the timing of the referendum – despite growing calls from civil society and religious leaders to delay a plebiscite (AC Vol 61 No 23, A divisive plan for unity).

The fate of BBI is still tied to the politics of who will succeed Kenyatta in the presidency. Odinga's lieutenants have indicated that he will declare his intention to run for the presidency later this month.

A flurry of recent meetings by the two suggest that Kenyatta will endorse his former rival to be his successor. That will clarify the two men's stern opposition to the ambitions of Deputy President William Ruto who has been in full campaign mode this year.

The presidential elections have been confirmed for 9 August next year by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission.



Related Articles

Picking up the pieces

The High Court’s rejection of the BBI process risks ripping apart a carefully constructed compromise

Having sailed through parliament, the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) bill hit a major and unexpected roadblock on 14 May, when the High Court ruled the constitutional reform pla...


A divisive plan for unity

A new report is supposed to be the blueprint for sweeping reforms but it has deepened the split between the president and his deputy

Three years after President Uhuru Kenyatta won re-election in polls boycotted by opposition leader Raila Odinga, the two erstwhile rivals sat on a red-carpeted podium at the Bomas ...


Through the Wikihole

The publication by WikiLeaks of the US Nairobi Embassy’s cables affords a unique and stark view of the country’s ruling figures

As the International Criminal Court (ICC) starts to hear accusations against six senior Kenyans accused of links to the violence after the 2007 elections, a set of United States di...


Frontier fracas

Conflict flares between Mogadishu and Nairobi over Jubaland. Kenya wants a buffer zone but Farmajo has other ideas

Months of tensions between Mogadishu and its southern state of Jubaland came to the boil in early March and spilled across the Kenyan border in a violent face-off between the Somal...