United Republican Party (URP) member and Senate Devolved Government
Committee chairman Kipchumba Murkomen (left) addressing the press in
Nairobi on October 13, 2014. After a meeting with other party members on
December 5, 2014, Senator Murkomen sought to downplay any anxiety among
Mr Ruto’s supporters, saying the Jubilee Coalition was not established
on the ICC cases. PHOTO | BILLY MUTAI |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Anxiety has gripped the URP wing of the Jubilee Coalition
following fears that the government machinery may take its foot off the
pedal after the International Criminal Court (ICC) withdrew charges
against President Uhuru Kenyatta.
The fear is that
Deputy President William Ruto may only receive lukewarm State support in
his trial for crimes against humanity charges linked to the 2007-2008
post-election violence which he faces alongside former radio journalist
Joshua arap Sang.
The heightened activity registered
in Mr Ruto’s URP, which is in a coalition with President Kenyatta’s TNA,
moments after the announcement exposed this reality.
The
Sunday Nation has learnt that some of Mr Ruto’s allies retreated to an
informal meeting at a Nairobi hotel on Friday night to ponder the next
move, hours after ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda withdrew charges against
President Kenyatta.
An MP who attended the meeting,
but who spoke on condition he is not identified, said the overriding
agenda was reinforcing the defence in Mr Ruto’s case and ensuring
continued government support.
DON'T ABANDON RUTO
Sources also revealed that another informal meeting took place at the Nairobi Spring Valley home of a Cabinet Secretary associated with the URP side of the government. The meeting, on the sidelines of a graduation party, lasted until midnight.
Sources also revealed that another informal meeting took place at the Nairobi Spring Valley home of a Cabinet Secretary associated with the URP side of the government. The meeting, on the sidelines of a graduation party, lasted until midnight.
Most of the Mr Ruto’s allies who attended the meetings, however, declined to comment on record.
Elgeyo
Marakwet Senator and Mr Ruto’s confidante Kipchumba Murkomen, however,
sought to downplay any anxiety among Mr Ruto’s supporters, saying the
Jubilee Coalition was not established on the ICC cases.
“The
President and his deputy joined forces to bring peace among the warring
communities in the Rift Valley region together. We are aware that our
competitors are scavenging on this to get some relevance,” he said.
But
it is perhaps the Bomet East MP Bernard Bett who captured the feeling
within the larger URP fraternity when he asked President Kenyatta not to
abandon Mr Ruto at his hour of need.
“We congratulate
the President on this relieving development. He should, however, not
rest until his deputy is acquitted — otherwise it would be an act of
betrayal,” the MP said.
The lawmaker urged Ms Bensouda to also withdraw the charges facing Mr Ruto and Mr Sang.
ONE DOWN, TWO MORE
Ainabkoi MP Samuel Chepkong’a, who chairs the Justice and Legal Affairs Committee in the National Assembly, however, said what some may perceive as an acid test for the unity of the coalition was just a passing cloud.
Ainabkoi MP Samuel Chepkong’a, who chairs the Justice and Legal Affairs Committee in the National Assembly, however, said what some may perceive as an acid test for the unity of the coalition was just a passing cloud.
“There is no problem in Jubilee; the withdrawal
never came as a surprise. Before you realise it, charges against the
Deputy President and Sang will also be dropped,” he said.
On
Saturday, Mr Ruto appeared keen to show that he was unmoved by the
development and if he was then it was in sharing joy with his boss.
Speaking
in Watamu, Kilifi County, where he opened police posts at Ngerenya and
Kizingo areas in a constituency represented by perceived ODM “rebel”
Gideon Mung’aro, the Deputy President said the fact that the President
was no longer facing charges will not affect their relationship.
“Our
desire with President Kenyatta is to unite this country. That is what
brought and keeps us together. We thank God and the millions of Kenyans
who have prayed for us until the case against the President collapsed,”
he said.
Speaking in the same forum, National Assembly
Majority Leader Aden Duale said cases at the ICC are political and
should be terminated, a position supported by his Senate counterpart
Kithure Kindiki.
“It was clear right from the start
that the cases were heading nowhere. We ask the prosecutor to do the
honourable thing and terminate them,” Prof Kindiki said.
And
in a show of solidarity, President Kenyatta through State House
official Munyori Buku stated: “One down, two cases left, the Deputy
President is an indispensable part of the Jubilee administration and he
deserves to be discharged so he can concentrate on the mandate given to
him by Kenyans.”
AN INDISPENSABLE ASSET
Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria, a member of TNA, told The Sunday Nation that suggestions that the government will take its foot off the pedal are far-fetched. He said the government will lobby the African Union to have the remaining case dropped.
Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria, a member of TNA, told The Sunday Nation that suggestions that the government will take its foot off the pedal are far-fetched. He said the government will lobby the African Union to have the remaining case dropped.
When she broke the news on
Friday during the President’s roundtable with the Kenya Private Sector
Alliance, Foreign Secretary Amina Mohammed had said that the government
will remain engaged as before until the case is concluded.
“We are not done yet, we will pursue the dropping of the charges of the other case… with the same energy and passion,” she said.
Not
wanting to be seen to celebrate so much while his co-principal in the
Jubilee coalition is still fighting the charges, President Kenyatta
similarly expressed support for his deputy.
“I stand
with them, and will support them and pray with them until that time. As
my deputy and principal assistant, William Ruto is an indispensable
asset in my government.
I look forward to the day when
we shall not have the distraction of the trials, so that we can
continue delivering our transformational agenda to the people of Kenya.”
He personally called Mr Sang, Mr Ruto’s co-accused, who is attending the trials in The Hague.
“My
President Uhuru Kenyatta called to assure me of his support on our
case… Congratulations Mr President. You are free, we are free too,” said
Mr Sang after talking to the President.
However, some observers believe the government’s commitment could wane now that the President’s case has been withdrawn.
CONSPIRACY THEORIES
Lawyer Ahmednassir Abdullahi said the ramifications of withdrawing the case will be felt locally and internationally.
Lawyer Ahmednassir Abdullahi said the ramifications of withdrawing the case will be felt locally and internationally.
“African
leaders and other critics of the court will jump onto that to justify
their claims that the ICC was pursuing political cases.
Locally,
there will also be conspiracy theories as people will start asking why
the President’s case has collapsed while his deputy’s is ongoing,” said
Mr Abdullahi.
In addition, the lawyer said the
government machinery could also become disengaged from the ICC process, a
situation that will further fuel the conspiracy theories and this
“might upset the other side of the coalition (URP)”.
Mr
James Mamboleo of the Africa Nazarene University’s law school said the
zeal with which the government machinery pursued the Kenyatta case may
wane sooner rather than later. He noted that the history of the cases
showed they were different.
He said at the time he was
charged Mr Ruto was in the ODM wing in the Grand Coalition and the
government machinery, largely believed to be controlled by the PNU side,
was cooperating with the ICC.
“Some of the people who were key in government then are still occupying high positions in the current government,” he said.
He
was alluding to the allegations raised by Mr Ruto’s lawyers in court
that Defence Principal Secretary Mutea Iringo and the President’s
political advisor Nancy Gitau were involved in “fixing” Mr Ruto in their
official roles in the previous government.
A section of leaders from Mr Ruto’s backyard have in the past unsuccessfully called for the sacking of the two.
NON-COOPERATION
The same voices have questioned the zeal with which TNA supporters want Nyeri County Woman Representative Priscillah Nyokabi punished for allegedly taking part in procuring and protecting witnesses against President Kenyatta when she worked for Kituo Cha Sheria, a Non-Governmental Organisation, while Mr Iringo and Ms Gitau remain untouched.
The same voices have questioned the zeal with which TNA supporters want Nyeri County Woman Representative Priscillah Nyokabi punished for allegedly taking part in procuring and protecting witnesses against President Kenyatta when she worked for Kituo Cha Sheria, a Non-Governmental Organisation, while Mr Iringo and Ms Gitau remain untouched.
Ms Nyokabi has, however, denied the allegations.
“For
now the government will put up a public relations exercise to pursue
the withdrawal of the Ruto case. But I am sure the enthusiasm will not
be the same as it has been in the Kenyatta case,” said Mr Mamboleo.
And
if the government machinery chooses to support Mr Ruto, it will be
interesting to see the mode such support takes because the hardnosed
approach taken by Mr Kenyatta, is different from Mr Ruto’s non-combative
path.
“The government machinery will be very
uncomfortable playing into the Ruto strategy. In fact, if Ruto succeeds
in his case it will not be because of the government’s pursuit but
probably because of the complexities of running a criminal prosecution,”
said Mr Mamboleo.
Questions have also being raised
whether the government will comply with an asset freeze order from the
ICC if it is issued in the case against Mr Ruto.
The
government, through the State Law Office and other agencies had fought
off the ICC Prosecutor’s request for identification of President
Kenyatta’s financial and property records, partly leading to the
collapse of the case — something pointed out by Ms Bensouda when she
withdrew the case on Friday.
She said the case was
weakened by the “failure of the Government of Kenya to cooperate fully
and effectively with my investigations in this case.
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