Politics
Sh3bn to kick-off Kenya referendum
A Kakamega resident goes through the harmonised Draft Constitution of Kenya. Photo/ FILE
Posted Wednesday, March 10 2010 at 14:45
The Interim Independent Electoral Commission (IIEC) will get a Sh3 billion boost in this year’s supplementary budget to be tabled in the House later this month.
The money will be used to cater for voter registration, an exercise set to begin within the next fortnight.
Finance assistant minister Oburu Oginga said even though the IIEC had so far been given just Sh1.1 billion of its budgetary requirement of Sh7.3 billion, the money was sufficient for the request it made to the Treasury. The electoral body will meanwhile use part of its current allocations to start off the process while waiting for the supplementary budget.
“We will avail some money to the IIEC if it exhausts its current allocations (before the Supplementary Budget or the next Budget),” said Dr Oginga.
Budalang’i MP Ababu Namwamba (ODM) raised the query on the probability of the electoral body failing to register voters and holding the referendum on the draft Constitution.
Mr Namwamba, a member of Parliament’s committee on justice and legal affairs and also of the select committee on Constitution review, said the IIEC was “concerned that there was a lack of funds to handle its functions.”
Reform Agenda
The two committees are directly in touch with the electoral body in implementing the reform agenda.
“I assure this House that the government will provide funds to the IIEC,” Dr Oginga said.
The assistant minister said the referendum money will come from donors, but this drew the wrath of MPs who questioned the Government’s chest-thumping over sovereignty “when it can’t run a referendum.”
“This (help) is not unique (as) the development partners have been supporting our reform agenda and that in no way compromises our sovereignty,” Dr Oginga added.
Imenti Central MP Gitobu Imanyara (CCU), Garsen’s Danson Mungatana (Narc-Kenya) and Isiolo South’s Abdul Bahari (Kanu) queried why the government released very meagre resources to the IIEC knowing very well the mandate that the “important institution” is charged with.
“Is the government broke or how do you explain the inadequate allocations?” posed Mr Bahari.
Mr Mungatana questioned why the IIEC’s push for electronic voting had not been allocated money.
Dr Oginga replied: “We act on the request of the IIEC and e-voting was not part of the request that we received. If they bring it, we’ll factor it in the next budget.”
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Submitted by TARBEYPosted March 10, 2010 10:21 PM
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Submitted by olegaita66
Having a referendum in a country where natives vote according to the wishes of their tribal warlords is just a waste of money.I know its hard to decide the legitimate way to go about since even the parliament itself is filled with untrustworthy crooks.Seriously speaking,why not toes a coin up and we can save billions of shillings?
Posted March 10, 2010 10:14 PM -
Submitted by lemuelmwas
I think this is a good move Dr. Oburu. If only all Kenyans can have a chance to determine if the new constitution is better than the old one. But I am concerned if Kenyans abroad, like me, will have the opportunity to vote in the referundum.
Posted March 10, 2010 08:09 PM -
Submitted by bushebi
Stop the referendum and save money for moire important projects. We need electronic voting in 2012, we are not ready for another round of manipulations.
Posted March 10, 2010 06:26 PM -
Submitted by Mishuki
Give this money to the poor for micro financing small scale businesses..constitution will not put food on the table.
Posted March 10, 2010 06:25 PM




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the constituition should be voted for electronically!not even wait for 2012!