News

Kenya sets voter registration for December

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
Interim Independent Electoral Commission chairman Mr Issack Ahmed Hassan addresses a media briefing at a past function.  Kenya will start to build a new voter register in December in preparation of referendum on a new constitution expected in April next year. FILE

Interim Independent Electoral Commission chairman Mr Issack Ahmed Hassan addresses a media briefing at a past function. Kenya will start to build a new voter register in December in preparation of referendum on a new constitution expected in April next year. FILE 


Posted  Monday, November 2  2009 at  15:07

Kenya will start to build a new voter register in December in preparation of referendum on a new constitution expected in April next year.

According to a progress report prepared by the Interim Independent Electoral Commission, the process will be automated in what is seen as one of the ways to improve the credibility of the voters’ roll.

In the report, the IIEC tells the parliamentary committee on justice and legal affairs that it is currently putting together its secretariat of 237 officers ahead of the exercise. The report notes that the recruitment of 10 executives, 17 regional coordinators and 210 constituency elections coordinators will end at the end of November.

Speaking to the Daily Nation on Friday, IIEC chairman Isaack Hassan said that the new electoral staff are expected to report to work on December 1. It is after this, he added, that the Electoral body will be able to kick off the registration exercise.

“We expect to be through with the recruitment exercise by the end of the month and then embark on the voter registration exercise which is one of our mandates stipulated in law,” said Mr Hassan.

The IIEC is one of the reform bodies that was established after the 2007 disputed presidential elections. It replaced the Electoral Commission of Kenya, which was disbanded for bungling the polls, to reform the country’s electoral system.

The country’s voter register which was said to contain up to a million dead voters was thrown out together with the electoral body.

The secretariat which is being set up by the IIEC is half that which ran the elections in 2007 and was sent packing after the polls.

Share This Story
Share

There have been calls for an expedited voter registration exercise in the country as only two constituencies - Bomachoge and Shinyalu, which held by elections in August - that have voters. The voter roll is vital as the draft constitution which is to be published any time from now must be subjected to a referendum by April next year.

The IIEC says that it is setting up a new computerised structure that will be used to conduct and manage elections in future. It says that it has been exposing the commissioners to international electoral process that are automated.

An automated system is seen as one of the ways that can help curb multiple registration of voters that has in the past been used to rig elections.

The IIEC also presented to the Mohammed Abdikadir led committee two bills - Elections Bill, 2009 and the Electoral Commission Bill, 2009 - that propose a radical shift in Kenya’s electoral conduct and management.

The two bills promise to overhaul the country’s electoral system in a move that will see independent legal frameworks to govern elections and the electoral commission of Kenya. The bills are to be published by the end of December.

Among the major changes is the trimming down of the electoral body, limit in the number of years they should serve and introduce direct election of mayors by the electorate.

In a departure from the past, the Electoral Commission Bill will further cut down the country’s electoral body to between four and six members. The defunct ECK had 22 commissioners while the IIEC has nine.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (3 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Diasporian

    Kenyans in Diaspora should be facilitated to take voting cards and vote from the countries where there are Kenyan envoys. Those who have not changed their citizenship can do so now while others can wait till dual citizenship is allowed. If people in diaspora from Iraqis, Zimbambians, South Africans and many other developing countries can vote from wherever they are through their embasies why not Kenyans?

    Posted  November 02, 2009 09:05 PM  
  2. Submitted by MichaOlga

    Cool! At least now kids know when to expect their IDs and no more bribery needed.

    Posted  November 02, 2009 07:39 PM  
  3. Submitted by vgogero

    is a there a referendum law entrenched in our constitution and is a referendum really necessary ask the South Africans as long as a Parliamentary two thirds majority can be achieved then we can avoid a painful and costly referendum that law should be eancted in our current constitution

    Posted  November 02, 2009 05:53 PM