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Councillors demand money to back Kenya new law

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Civic leaders chant the 'No' slogan during a meeting called by the Local Authority and attended by President Kibaki at KICC, Nairobi on May 14, 2010. The councillors demanded a salary increase as a condition for their support of the proposed Constitution. Photo/FREDRICK ONYANGO

Civic leaders chant the 'No' slogan during a meeting called by the Local Authority and attended by President Kibaki at KICC, Nairobi on May 14, 2010. The councillors demanded a salary increase as a condition for their support of the proposed Constitution. Photo/FREDRICK ONYANGO 

By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU and DAVE OPIYO
Posted  Friday, May 14  2010 at  15:40

In Summary

  • 4,000 councillors want salary increase to vote for proposed law.
  • President Kibaki tells off civic leaders and tells them bullying will not work.

Kenya councillors have demanded a pay raise as a condition for their support of the proposed Constitution.

The 4,000 councillors made their intentions known during a meeting with President Kibaki at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre, Nairobi Friday.

Unanimous chants of “pesa” (money) punctuated the rhythmic clapping to welcome the Head of State and his retinue of five senior Cabinet ministers into the meeting. This was repeated when the President rose to speak, but as he left the venue, the chant became “No” and “Pesa” (money).

The civic leaders’ boss Ntaraiya ole Kores put the demand to the President.

“When you need us, you call us together. But when we need you, you don’t even have time for us. The time is now.”

However, President Kibaki put paid to the councillors’ move to arm-twist the government to have their salary increase drawn from the Consolidated Fund, if they are to support the document.

“You will not change anything through shouting or bullying (the government). That will not help you. You will only change (the Constitution) according to the will of the people you represent,” the President said.

An angry President Kibaki broke his tradition of only reading the speech and giving the off-the-cuff remarks later. He began with the off-the-cuff, then the speech and wound up with off-the-cuff.

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Booing

Interestingly, unlike the booing that the councillors gave Local Government minister Musalia Mudavadi, they kept mum and punctuated the President’s speech with feeble clapping.

“You have to reason. That’s why we produced plenty copies, so that everyone can read and not say that you will just follow what I told you,” President Kibaki said.

“We shall talk to Kenyans, tell them that this is the right change, if they think otherwise, then they’ll say so, because the current Constitution allows them to do so... bullying, shouting or calling each other bad names will not help you.

“Use your unrivalled proximity to the people to give the citizen the right information on the proposed Constitution and remember that you are in your own country called Kenya.”

President Kibaki said the new Constitution was more important than the push for a better pay package for the councillors. He reminded them that there was a 15 per cent revenue allocation to the counties, a figure which, he said, will hugely channel development.

When the meeting begun, the 4,000 grassroots leaders booed the chairman of the Committee of Experts, Mr Nzamba Kitonga, off the dais when he said he wanted to offer “elimu ya ngumbaru” (adult education). They said the use of “ngumbaru” had connotations that they were illiterate.

Mr Mudavadi rose, cajoled the councillors with an instant Sh5,000 pay raise, but they still declined to let Mr Kitonga speak.

Irate civic leaders

They then booed Mr Mudavadi, who read the mood and let Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka address the irate civic leaders. Mr Musyoka invited them to Uhuru Park for the 'Yes’ rally to be held Saturday.

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