Opinion

New Law: It’s time for a paradigm shift in our implementation tactics

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By DENNIS KABAARA, dkabaara@gmail.com
Posted  Thursday, September 9  2010 at  12:47

With the new Constitution now in force, the focus has turned on implementation. At the policy level, Cabinet and technical committees have been formed.

Institutions are reviewing their mandates. Bills are rapidly being drafted. Local government and provincial administration are quietly re-engineering themselves.

On the ground, the new Kenya now means localised governance, resources and accountability, new livelihood opportunities, political representation for marginalised groups, and equal enforcement of rights and freedoms.

What is wrong with this picture? At one level, implementation means “enactment and operationalisation”; at another, it means “enforcement and results”.

This disconnect is epitomised in our stuttering progress in the past. As we enter the new era, it is time we pursued a new implementation paradigm built on four pillars.

The first is national ownership. In recent articles, Prof Pal Yash Ghai and Dr Willy Mutunga warn against implementation “capture” by politicians and bureaucrats.

The private sector and civil society promise diligent monitoring. The implementation pace continues to be dictated by the government. Counter-reform, a focus on the mechanics rather than substance of reform, prevails.

Now is the time, not for monitoring, but for participation, consultation and true partnership. It requires mindset change by Kenyans, and attitude change among our leaders. Ownership means that implementation is a national, not a government, “project”.

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The second, is strategic focus. While the spotlight is on the 49 laws in the Fifth Schedule, public institutions are now discovering that they must thoroughly review their policy, legal, regulatory, institutional, administrative and operational frameworks.

This applies to all of our 600-plus laws.
Further, the Serena Agenda is incomplete.

  • The militia problem (Agenda 1),
  • IDP resettlement (Agenda 2) and
  • Agenda 4 (now with constitutional backing) are pending.

New electoral boundaries must be drawn. Then there is our social covenant, dealing with our past.

Sustainable peace requires the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission and the International Criminal Court justice for victims of past human rights abuses and violations.

Finally, as President Kibaki recently said, “we now have erected two pillars to secure our advancement to the next level…Vision 2030 . . . the Constitution of Kenya 2010. The third pillar is Social Vision.”

In the past, these priorities would have been treated disjointedly. Now, we must “chew gum as we walk the stairs”. A strategic focus means we “implement” the Constitution, “complete” Serena and our social covenant, and effect a new Social Vision even as we pursue Vision 2030.

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by vgogero

    Wel put a tow tier system would entail a local or county Govt and a national Government .Therefore we do not require even local councils since their functions can easily be performed by the local counties .otherwise why have Governors ,senators and councillors all perfoming the same functions

    Posted  September 10, 2010 05:43 PM  
  2. Submitted by atuara

    The New Constitution has been hijacked by the incumbets, they are forcing old forms into new structures. In conclusion,all ministries of the government must instructed, to slow down, first, they must formulate miniature blue prints on how, old institutions are going to fit into the new constitution(round pegs don't fit into square holes).

    Posted  September 10, 2010 04:38 AM