Pressure is mounting from religious leaders on President Uhuru
Kenyatta not to sign the election amendments Bill that were passed by
Jubilee MPs on Thursday.
The changes
that allow a manual back up in election management were effected during a
stormy session in the National Assembly boycotted by Cord.
The religious are calling for a return to the negotiating table between Jubilee and the opposition.
The
Evangelical Council of Kenya and the Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims
joined the Catholic Church bishops on Friday in asking President
Kenyatta to “rise above politics” and refuse to assent to the Bill until
after negotiations.
The laws will go to the Senate before President Kenyatta’s make-or-break signature.
They
seek to allow the electoral commission to use a “complementary
alternative” in case the electronic system fails in the August 8, 2017
General Election.
But Cord has said
that was a recipe for chaos and election rigging. It has called on its
supporters to go to the streets on January 4 to protest what they said
was Jubilee’s assault on the will of the people.
On
Friday, the Evangelical Council of Kenya said in a statment: “We are
asking President Kenyatta to display his magnanimity, by not assenting
to the acrimonious amendments, until there is a consensus on the same.
This will be in line with the Christmas spirit, which is about peace,
joy and good towards all.”
WAS DETRIMENTAL
And
like the Catholic bishops before them, the evangelicals said the way
the laws were passed in the House was detrimental to the negotiations
that birthed the now disputed law.
There
were claims of pepper spraying, injured MPs from fist-fights and a
House that was cordoned off by heavily-armed police for the two days.
“This
political grandstanding, altercation and standoff must be stopped. We
call on the government and the opposition to come back to the
negotiating table,” the churches said.
In
their statement on Thursday evening after the special sitting the
Catholic Justice and Peace Commission offered to lead the negotiations,
again.
During the National Assembly’s
special sitting, the live broadcast was cut off, a journalist arrested
and others locked out of the press gallery.
The
church had led the walk to bring truce to the two sides after five
weeks of deadly and violent street protests when Cord demanded the
removal of the Issack Hassan-led nine-member electoral commission.
It
also led to the creation of the 14-member bi-partisan joint select
committee that created the new laws, which President Kenyatta and Cord
leader Raila Odinga agreed will not be changed.
“We urge you, Mr President, not to sign the amendments into laws, and that you give dialogue a chance,” the Bishops said.
‘OUR SUPPORT’
“We assure you of all our support in building a stable, cohesive, democratic and prosperous Kenyan society.”
Supkem
Deputy Secretary General Hassan ole Naado on Thursday said that the
amendments could lead to another round of violence, akin to the
2007/2008 post-election violence chaos that left 1,133 dead and over
650,000 displaced.
“The president
should rise above partisan interests by rejecting those amendments. Laws
that come into place through negotiated processes cannot be brought
back by one side and changed the way it happened in Parliament,” Mr
Naado said in Narok.
Kanu also said it will join the January demonstrations if no agreement is reached.
“We
will not sit back and watch as the government reverses electoral
reforms,” party Secretary General Nick Salat said in a text message to
the Nation.
Meanwhile, Amani
National Congress leader Musalia Mudavadi on Friday said that “the
President ought to know no power is more potent than a determined
people. The people of Kenya being masters of their own fate must rise up
against an increasingly intolerant regime,” Mr Mudavadi said in a
statement.
“The track record of this regime is to sign agreements it never intends to keep.
‘BE SWINDLED’
‘‘It
doesn’t matter whether they are cheating the teacher or doctor. To
Jubilee, everyone should be swindled. To them, the only advantage they
seek is how to contravene the Constitution,” said Mr Mudavadi.
He
condemned the way the laws were passed, also castigating House Majority
Leader Aden Duale for reprimanding High Court Judge George Odunga.
“That
the President has no respect for the Constitution is confirmed by the
President ceding the moral high ground for which he was elected as the
symbol of national unity to propagating chaos. It is now obvious that
Uhuru is setting the ground for a rigged and violent election that will
give him an excuse to retain power,” he said.
Jubilee
and Cord brigades on Friday held on to their hardline stances, each
saying that their positions were backed by reason and international
practice.
Mr Raphael Tuju, the head
of the Jubilee secretariat and his Cord counterpart Norman Magayu differ
sharply in commentaries on the issue. They both give the same examples
from African countries but with different intepretations. (See opposite
page)
Reporting by Patrick Lang’at, George Sayagie and Justus Ochieng.
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