Politics
MPs team hopeful of reform deal
Parliamentary Select Committee on review of the constitution chairman Abdikadir Mohammed (left) and Budalang’i MP Ababu Namwamba address journalists at a past press briefing. Photo/ File
Posted Friday, January 15 2010 at 22:00
In Summary
- Parliamentary committee says Naivasha retreat could save draft
The Parliamentary Select Committee heads to Naivasha on Sunday for a retreat confident that it will strike a deal on the contentious issues that could mar the writing of a new constitution.
Vice chairman Ababu Namwamba said there was ‘real determination’ amongst the 27 member committee that ‘they will get things right’.
ODM and PNU are sharply divided on how the country should be governed.
While ODM wants a parliamentary system, with the Prime Minister wielding executive power as proposed in the draft put forward by the committee of experts, PNU wants executive power retained by the President.
On Friday, Mr Namwamba asked the PSC members to attend the retreat with an ‘open mind’, saying the future of the country lay in their hands.
“This constitution is not for an individual or political parties. We must remember that it is for all Kenyans,” he told journalists in Nairobi.
“Therefore, as we head to Naivasha with all the optimism that white smoke will billow at the end of it all, we must keep an open mind,” he added.
On Thursday, President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga failed to agree on contentious issues in the draft constitution after a four hour meeting of the grand coalition management committee.
The meeting had been called to seek consensus on the sticky issues before the draft law goes to a referendum.
They consequently shifted their search for a compromise at the Naivasha retreat.
The Budalangi MP said while divergent views on the draft were welcome, hard-line positions should be dropped for the sake of the country.
“What is happening in the country is not strange. Kenyan should realise that making a constitution is not a wedding ceremony. It has a lot of push and pull. It happened in the US and South Africa,” he said.
On Wednesday, the two parties differed on the revised draft, with each blaming the other for the stalemate. PNU has maintained it will push for an executive system that has a single centre of power.
It has indicated it will only accept a PM if the country adopts Tanzania’s model of government, where the President is the Head of State and Government and appoints a Prime Minister who is leader of government in Parliament.
PNU also want the new law enacted only after the 2012 elections saying that changes needed for conduct and management of elections can be done through amendments to the current Constitution.
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Submitted by thesagePosted January 16, 2010 02:48 AM
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Submitted by jnalyanya
The reason we cannot trust parliamentarians is our fault too-we elected thieves to enrich themselves and not take care of our interest.if we do our part by electing right persons to server people, no worry, as they will be able replicate us by electing and deserving PM if necessary. We need a clause as how we can immediately recall these thieves and strip them off if they misbehave or if they donot go there and take care of our interests. Give us a draft that will walk through it, empower us to do the righ thing for all
Posted January 16, 2010 01:05 AM




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I wish Ababu had said 'give and take' instead of push and pull. Sounds like a fight. Anyway if it was give and take, then may be PNU could give ODM the executive PM thing and ODM could give PNU the equal representation thing javascript:void(0); Submitetc.