Kenya contemplates amendment of assumption of the office of the president law to fix succession chaos

Kenya contemplates amendment of assumption of the office of the president law to fix succession chaos

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A bill to ensure passage of regulations to oversee smooth handing over of presidential powers is in pipeline.

This was revealed by Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi during the burial of former Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission Chair Wafula Chebukati at Sabata in Trans Nzoia County on Saturday )March 8, 2024).

Mudavadi explained that the passage of the bill was a well thought out idea that will help prevent scenes like those that were witnessed during the 2022 general election from reoccurring, where he noted the nation was almost thrown into chaos.

Speaker of National Assembly Moses Wetangula who was present called for a change of culture among Kenyans to eliminate that ingrained habit that sees elections losers often blame IEBC.

“It’s high time we had a paradigm shift in our politics where election losers blame the referee while those on the winning end up praising the same person,” he said.

The sentiments were made after the family of the late Chebukati led by his wife Mary narrated the tribulations and abuse the family received from a section of Kenyans dissatisfied with how the late chair handled the 2022 presidential results.

The family revealed the trauma they were taken through by social media users even after the death of their loved one.

“Social media has done a great disservice to my family. I cannot remember the number of times my late husband was killed by the same social media before his final day. Now that he has finally rested, we pray and hope social media will leave my family alone,” she pleaded.

Trans Nzoia Governor George Natembeya said it was wrong to rejoice because a family somewhere has lost a loved one who in many aspects was the bread winner.

“Our culture as a people does not allow us to rejoice when others are mourning. It is very wrong,” he said.

However, he urged Kenyans and politicians to interrogate what goes wrong during elections on cycle and fix thee loopholes that create room for chaos.

“It happened with the former chairman Samuel Kivuitu, who together with his family, were subjected to all manner of insults after an election,” he recalled.

A similar thing happened with Chebukati’s family. There’s need to draw lessons from the past. Please let’s interrogate ourselves to prevent this from happening in future,” he implored.

  • A Tell report / KNA report / By Isaiah Nayika
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