Jump to navigation

Kenya

Ruto hits back at dissident electoral commissioners

Suspending the dissidents is likely to be the first move in a prolonged fight over control of the commission

President William Ruto has suspended the four members of the Independent Elections and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) who disowned the results which saw him elected in August in a move that will trigger a new battle for control of the organisation (AC Vol 63 No 17, Election chief proclaims Ruto victory but most of his commissioners dispute it).

IEBC commissioners Juliana Cherera, Justus Nyang'aya, Irene Masit and Francis Wanderi will remain out of office pending investigation by a tribunal chaired by Justice Aggrey Muchelule.

The move follows a series of tweets by President Ruto on 25 November in which he described the commissioners as 'rogue officials'.  It could entrench divisions over the politicised and partisan commission (AC Vol 63 No 23, Ruto and Odinga loyalists battle over election body).

The four are not going without a fight, stating via their legal team that they will not co-operate with the tribunal unless Ruto explains the statements which, they say, effectively pre-judge the process.

Azimio's  Parliamentary Group meeting attended by Raila Odinga and Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka, described the Justice and Legal Affairs Committee (JLAC) hearings against the four IEBC commissioners as a 'lynch mob, a hired hit squad and an illegality with a predetermined position.'

The four dissident commissioners were appointed by Uhuru Kenyatta last September and their seven-year term runs until September 2027, weeks after the next scheduled presidential election. That meant a majority of the seven-member commission opposed the August results but they were overruled by Wafula Chebukati, the chairman of the electoral commission, described by Ruto as 'my hero', who is himself due to retire on 17 January.



Related Articles

Ruto and Odinga loyalists battle over election body

The fight to control the electoral commission focuses on personalities instead of pushing for its wider reform

Wafula Chebukati, the chairman of Kenya's Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is due to retire on 17 January but the opposition's critiques of the organisation – and...


Criminal business is big business

Mungiki started as a Kikuyu quasi-revivalist religious cult in the Rift Valley’s Laikipia District in the late 1980s. Many Mungiki members lost their land in the 1990s when...


A hotel, a minister and a scandal

The newspapers and the ODM are having fun but what really happened?

The government's secret sale of Nairobi's Grand Regency Hotel has caused a political storm, induced the resignation of Finance Minister Amos Kimunya on 8 July and raised many...


The Armenian connection

Guns, police, parties - mysterious businessmen claim links with powerful politicians

Mary Wambui, President Mwai Kibaki's second wife, has been repeatedly embarrassed by reports of her links to two men with Armenian names, after a security breach at Jomo...