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PNU and ODM law talks hit deadlock

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Even as the coalition partners ODM and PNU go for further talks on the draft constitution, both sides are maintaining a hardline stance on the matter of the Executive. President Kibaki (third right) with Prime Minister Raila Odinga (third left) and some of the members of the Grand Coalition Management Committee address a press conference after holding consultations at Harambee House on Thursday. Photo/PPS

President Kibaki and PM Raila Odinga reportedly instructed ministers in the Cabinet’s grand coalition management committee (which met on Thursday) who are also members of the Parliamentary Select Committee on the constitution (PSC) to negotiate a compromise deal on the draft constitution during the PSC’s retreat in Naivasha on Sunday. Photo/PPS  

By LUCAS BARASA
Posted  Thursday, January 14  2010 at  21:00

In Summary

  • Contentious issues will now be thrashed out at consensus retreat

President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga on Thursday evening failed to agree on key contentious issues in the draft constitution after a four-hour meeting of the grand coalition management committee.

They shifted the search for a compromise to the Parliamentary Select Committee retreat set for Sunday.

Mr Odinga, however, said that substantial progress on some of the major sticky issues had been made “but finer details will be sorted out by the PSC” at the Naivasha retreat.

Hardline stance

President Kibaki and Mr Odinga jointly chaired a four-hour coalition management committee meeting aimed at seeking consensus before the draft law goes to referendum, but sources told the Nation not much was agreed on due to hardline stance by some members.

ODM and PNU are sharply divided on how the country should be ruled.

Mr Odinga’s ODM wants a Parliamentary system, with the Prime Minister wielding executive power as proposed in the draft put forward by the Committee of Experts, while President Kibaki’s PNU wants executive power retained by the president.

On Thursday, the divisions forced the management committee, which is supposed to address issues affecting the coalition and resolve differences to leave it to the Parliamentary Select Committee on the Constitution led by Mr Abdikadir Mohammed.

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Negotiations

“The two sides of the coalition have agreed that all the contentious issues should be resolved through negotiations in the Parliamentary Select Committee session in Naivasha,” Mr Odinga said.

Sources at the meeting said Mr Odinga and the President asked the members to put the country first in discussing the contentious issues, adding, they expected nothing short of consensus in the Parliamentary Select Committee when their members go to Naivasha retreat.

However, the two sides are said to have stuck to their positions during the talks.

Mr Odinga, who read the resolution to journalists after the meeting in the company of President Kibaki, however, assured Kenyans that they are committed and optimistic that the constitution review process will be finalised “in due course for the benefit of all Kenyans.”

“The two principals have mandated their respective teams to ensure that the negotiations are conclusive because Kenyans have waited for a new constitution for a long time,” Mr Odinga said.

The 27-member Parliamentary Select Committee, which comprises 14 MPs from PNU and 13 from ODM starts a one-week retreat in Naivasha on Sunday to try and reach consensus on the  contentious issues to facilitate easy passage of the constitution in referendum.

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Add a comment (43 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by jacquelineakinyi

    yes,now i can see u Mr Michuki.you are standing next to mr Wetangula and half hidden.Do you ever aspire for the top seat?i know many people who will vote for you.

    Posted  January 16, 2010 12:21 AM  
  2. Submitted by petero65

    Commitee of experts or exports exporting kenyans into confusion

    Posted  January 15, 2010 09:48 PM  
  3. Submitted by beejaychester

    krugutt the question is not just reducing the imperial powers or just strong checks balances. This is exactly why the PNU don't understand the issue at hand here. The question is making the executive a servant of the people and not an oppressor. Strong Checks and balances are just a bunch of written rules which amount to nothing if president can still has a hand in everything !!

    Posted  January 15, 2010 09:36 PM  
  4. Submitted by lubumbashi

    PNU lineup is made up of personalities who have helped keep Kenyans oppressed. Former Moi attack-dogs like Kalonzo Musyoka (aka SPOILER FOR HIRE) has never had any conviction on anything. He swings like a pendulum on national issues. At the 2005 referendum Kalonzo was 'opposed' to powerful presidency. Today the same Kalonzo wants a constitution with a powerful president. Now Kalonzo is a member of 'Ku Klux Klan' championing the cause of an aristocrat (read Uhuru Kenyatta) hoping to get a political lifeline and relevance after his 'Spoiler For Hire' contract with Kibaki os over.

    Posted  January 15, 2010 09:24 PM  
  5. Submitted by harriison

    Look at the way they are posing!!! just mere mama na baba syndrome and stereotype type of politikas??? Shame.

    Posted  January 15, 2010 08:56 PM  

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