NAIROBI, Kenya
An unprecedented battle opposing Kenya's President, Parliament and the impeached deputy president takes place in the corridors of the justice in Nairobi this week.
A litany of issues is on the
table in what could turn out to be a constitutional quagmire.
After Senate voted the removal
of Rigathi Gachagua last week, his legal counsel denounced an infamy and rushed
to court.
The team notably argues that
the allegations presented against the deputy-president elect to remove him from
office were unfounded and were not supported by evidence.
The high court has issued a
conservatory order stopping the move to replace Gachagua until October 24.
This came moments before the
swear in ceremony of the aspiring new deputy, Kithure Kindiki.
Parliament which is dominated
by the ruling alliance has petitioned the High court to lift orders barring
Kindiki from assuming DP’s office, which it declined.
In an unexpected development,
the bench of three judges set to rule on the fate of the impeached deputy
president convened on Saturday (Oct. 19).
In a letter to the Deputy
Registrar of the Judiciary, Gachagua's lawyer called for an investigation into
the procedure of empanelment of the bench.
He was in court Tuesday (Oct.
22) morning to attend the hearing of his impeachment case.
It is the first time in
Kenya's history that a Deputy President has been impeached.
Debates surrounding the
interpretation of the 2010 Constitution are rife.
Kindiki served as the interior
minister throughout Ruto's term. He has been blamed in part for the violent
crackdwn on protestors during the historic June-July anti-tax protests. He
survived the cabinet reshuffle which followed the dropping of certain portions
of the controversial bill.
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