Politics
Parliament to reopen early to discuss draft law
President Kibaki speaks at a past public function. File
Posted Wednesday, February 3 2010 at 13:41
Parliament reconvenes in two weeks with the major task of debating the new Constitution.
President Kibaki Wednesday summoned the House early, just a day after anxiety had started building on the fate of the crucial document, whose date with Parliament as per the review timetable is February 25.
In a short brief from State House, the President recalled the MPs for the start of the Fourth Session of the Tenth Parliament on February 23 –five days after the Committee of Experts officially presents the document to the Parliamentary Select Committee on Constitution Review.
The Head of State also prorogued Parliament with effect from Wednesday officially bringing to an end the Third Session of the 10th Parliament. The State House dispatch quoted a Special Gazette Notice.
With the prorogation, the President officially wound up some pending issues that were still in Parliament’s in-tray, opening doors for them to be re-introduced in the House afresh.
Bills before the House will, however, not lapse as was the case prior to the revision of the Standing Orders. New Standing Orders came into effect on April 21 last year. Questions will have to be re-introduced afresh.
The PSC reached a political settlement in Naivasha a fortnight ago. The law gives MPs 30 days to debate the draft. If they pass it unchanged, it goes to Attorney General Amos Wako for publication.
However, if MPs amend the draft, they’ll have to forward the amendments to the AG who will work with the experts to redraft according to the wishes of Parliament. The AG has seven days to look at the proposed amendments and then forward them to the experts.
The CoE, in which the AG sits, will then have seven days to look into the proposed amendments and resubmit the draft back to the House.
If Parliament rejects the CoE’s recommendations, then the PSC and the CoE will have to meet to strike a deal. This meeting will involve several stakeholders — under the Reference Group — among them the clergy, workers and employers.
The law does not permit such a team to disagree and as such, it gives them seven days to reach a consensus and allow the CoE another seven days to redraft the contentious issues, before resubmitting the draft to the MPs.
The House will then have 21 days to endorse the draft and forward it to the AG for publication and a consequent referendum after 60 days.
The draft is currently being reviewed by the CoE in line with proposals made by the PSC after their 11-day retreat that ended in Naivasha last Thursday. However, emerging differences between the two bodies are threatening to scuttle the constitution review.
At the centre of the simmering row is whether the experts are obliged to accept all the recommendation made by the MPs. The CoE is said to have, on Tuesday, decided to isolate all the proposals that it felt should not be effected in the draft and then meet the PSC to try to iron out the differences.
“We met today (Tuesday) and will continue meeting as we study the proposals made by the PSC. We have decided to, from Thursday when we get down to the redrafting, isolate the issues that should come for further discussions between us and the PSC,” said one of the experts who sought anonymity.
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Submitted by Jolly77Posted February 04, 2010 11:09 AM
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Submitted by ememen
Sad but true. Patrick Lumumba and his as assistant directors Pravin Bowry and Dr Jane Onsongo will have their hands tied behind their backs with the way KACC is currently constituted. The only way for them to do anything meaningful is to contravene the law as it is written in KACC which will just lead into more constitutional litigations. Parliament did a shoddy job when they constituted KACC and they are just shirting around the real problem with KACC. A few people settled political grudges with Kibaki with the re-appointment of Ringera but new faces is not a solution.
Posted February 04, 2010 12:15 AM -
Submitted by mytake
good riddance!it show that president is commited to give kenyans a new constitutional order.
Posted February 03, 2010 08:27 PM -
Submitted by MichaOlga
If you ask me they should have reopened a month ago and it is late not early. Our mps never seem to want to work for the wages. They just want to get free goodies.
Posted February 03, 2010 04:56 PM




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Changes to the Draft constitution on http://www.mykenyanlink.com/Home_Page.html How can PSC take out residency in Kenya for Husband/wife of a citizen. In the original draft it was under Chapter 4/23. My husband is able to become a citizen after 7 years but why don’t the PSC not allow legal residence status and work permit. How can somebody become a citizen if he/she is not even able to live in the country before. If I go to US; UK, Germany, whatever and dont get residency and work permit, so how should I even live and work?