By Luke
Awich, NAIROBI Kenya
A
showdown is in the offing as President of Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta and his
handshake partner Raila Odinga launch the signatures drive for the contentious
referendum.President Uhuru Kenyatta hosted by ODM leader Raila Odinga during a tour of Kisumu county on October 22.
There's no public consensus. An
NIS report to Uhuru says only 19 per cent of the country wants a referendum -
but the drive will begin on Thursday.
The drive means the two have
slammed the door on any changes to the disputed Building Bridges Initiative
proposals.
Some of its key proposals have
drawn widespread strident criticism - and calls for more time and amendments.
Raila says just vote 'no' at the ballot if you don't like it.
Deputy President William Ruto has
threatened to lead the 'no' campaign in the contested referendum.
On Tuesday, Raila announced the
signatures collection drive will begin on Thursday, setting the stage for a do-0r-die
battle barely two years to the 2022 General Election.
“On Thursday (tomorrow), I and
the President will lead the country in launching the collection of signatures.
We want it to be done as quickly as possible so that by latest end of next week
we shall have concluded the exercise,”Raila said.
For the first time, it has
emerged the BBI secretariat will be led by Uhuru and Raila diehards.
The Secretariat will be
co-chaired by Kisii Woman Representative Janet Ongera and Sarah Kilemi, the
wife of former Education assistant Minister Kilemi Mwiria.
Ongera is a Raila confidant and
served as ODM executive director for many years, including during the 2010
referendum when Raila was Prime Minister.
Suna East MP Junet Mohamed and
former Dagoretti South MP Dennis Waweru will constitute the political wing of
the secretariat.
They will be charged with
coordinating all the activities and ensure that the BBI referendum sails
through the population, county assemblies and Parliament.
Waweru is a staunch supporter of
the President who has no time for Ruto.
Raila told reporters they are
working on elaborate plans to ensure signatures of registered voters are
collected within a week, a record time.
The signatures will be submitted
to the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission for verification before
the year ends.
It is reported signature
collection will be spearheaded by the provincial administration — with
roots across the country — that is likely to
make the exercise a walk in the park.
In 2016, Cord failed to get one
million signatures in its Okoa Kenya Referendum drive.
With the door for further
amendments bolted, it's clear Kenya is headed for fiercely contested
plebiscite.
On Monday, Ruto trashed the BBI
recommendations as a "bad document" and warned against refusing to
open it for amendments.
He expressed regret the costly
two-year product had turned out to be “highly controversial and with so many
glaring gaps”.
“Those driving the BBI should not
tell Kenyans that they have no time for further amendments. If we cannot enrich
the document, then we would end up with a bad Constitution because its work was
entirely unprofessional,” the Deputy President said.
So far, the Catholic Church, the
Evangelical Alliance of Kenya, a wide section of civil society players and
women's groups have threatened to shoot down the initiative.
The Kenya Conference of Catholic
Bishops says the BBI report will birth an imperial presidency and a police
state.
In 2010, Ruto teamed up with the
church to oppose enactment of the current Constitution.
On Tuesday, Raila told Ruto to
brace for an epic political battle in the impending referendum, ruling out
possibility of further amendments on the documents as demanded.
“Those are his views; he is
entitled to his views. There will always be doubting Thomases in any process
and that is why we are saying if you disagree with it [BBI proposals]l let's
meet in the field. Useme yako, tuseme yetu (You sell your position as we sell
ours),” Raila said.
The ODM leader spoke after
meeting minority and majority leaders from all the 47 county assemblies.
He was accompanied by Junet
Mohamed and Nyando MP Jared Okelo during the afternoon meeting at a Nairobi
hotel.
During the Thursday launch at
KICC, which will be attended by 300 people, the President, Raila and national
leaders will sign the signature booklets before they are taken to counties,
constituencies and wards.
Raila, the former PM and current
AU envoy for infrastructure, said any editorial adjustment will be concluded on
Wednesday and the bill published this week.
Junet hinted the bill might be
published on Wednesday, ahead of Thursday's signature launch.
“The bill will be available at
the signature launch,” he told the Star on the one.
Already, a BBI secretariat has
been set up that will spearhead the process expected to culminate into a
referendum in June next year.
The Star has established four
experts have been identified to make the suggested editorial work on the
document.
They include university don Prof
Ben Sihanya, ODM executive director Oduor Ong’wen, Tom Macharia and former
Nyeri Woman Representative Priscilla Nyokabi.
The experts are expected to
finish on Wednesday and the bill published the same day.
Initially, the signature
collection drive was to be held on Monday but that idea was abandoned in what
insiders called the need to build more consensus on the document.
On Sunday, Raila met Western
region governors to whip them into supporting the document after the Council of
Governors raised a number of issues they demanded be addressed.
Governors had proposed a long
list of changes to BBI, including giving them a free hand in choosing their
deputies after election, strengthening Senate and giving it veto power on all
bills.
They also want powers to hire and
fire their deputies, as they do with members of County Executive Committees,
given that BBI proposes DGs be given ministerial portfolios.
Governors also want removal of a
proposal that they choose deputies of the opposite gender, meaning they don't
want mostly women deputies.
Apart of meeting county
Assemblies’ leadership on Tuesday, Raila is also expected to meet the women
leaders on Wednesday as he makes his final dash to build consensus. - The
Star
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