Our MPs and senators are on a rampage to show “superiority”
vis-à-vis the Judiciary and governors. It is amazing that a year after
polls, they can display such naivety and simple-mindedness as they
destroy the Constitution, the theory of separation of powers and
devolution. And ultimately, they will be the losers, as much as Kenyans
and Kenya.
They started badly in 2013, deciding that
nothing was more important than ensuring they earned huge perks despite
controls set in by the Constitution.
They exhibited
extreme hostility and arrogance to Kenyans who had wanted their salaries
slashed. They eventually got what they wanted, but lost their potential
moral high ground that would have made them real and effective leaders
who could hold the Executive accountable.
The saddest
part was that the opposition, traditionally the bastion of principal and
dissent, went along and forgot their rightful role from which they have
never recovered.
What they did not contemplate, in
their short-sightedness, was that one of the beneficiaries of their
greed would be President Kenyatta who now did not have to worry about an
effective opposition.
And now, they are so intent on
putting governors down that they are prepared to trash court orders. In
so doing, they are weakening devolution and public support for it as
well as shredding the Constitution, barely three years after we so
joyfully passed it!
I don’t hold brief for Martin
Wambora or governors — who are not helping their cause and that of
devolution — with the way they are mismanaging resources. In fact, they
are the source of much of the discontent about devolution as they waste
money on trips, helicopters, chase cars and other luxuries.
DE-FANGED JUDICIARY
How
naïve! For in a situation where they know that Mr Kenyatta and his
cronies do not like or want devolution, they are providing the ammo
being used against them. If devolution is scrapped or weakened, they
will lose their hallowed roles, partly by their own hand!
And
I can’t understand why senators, whose raison d’etre is devolution,
have joined in this self-defeating supremacy contest. If governors go,
they too go! They are cutting off their noses to spite their faces!
I
know that court orders should be obeyed by everyone, including MPs,
senators and the President. Once they start disobeying them, as they did
with the one prohibiting them from discussing impeachment of Mr
Wambora, then the law of the jungle sets in, which could boomerang on
them once they exhibit independence for there will be no court to
provide redress.
And it is already happening. A few
days ago, the Inspector General of Police said he could not effect an
arrest warrant because that would “embarrass” his senior! The Law
Society should proceed with removing Mr David Kimaiyo — as it threatened
despite Mr Mutea Iringo showing up in court. Mr Kimaiyo has shown that
he does not understand the Constitution.
The Judiciary
had better start resisting this ritual of disobeying court orders or it
will be rendered irrelevant, something I suspect Mr Kenyatta desires in
his quest for return of the original Kenyatta dictatorship in which the
president’s word was law.
It is time CJ Willy Mutunga led this charge for respect for the law using the courts and the court of public opinion.
At
the end of it, the only office that gains from a de-fanged Judiciary,
and the end of devolution, will be the imperial presidency — which took
our blood, sweat, toil and tears to end in 2010 with our new
Constitution.
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