When we negotiated the contents of the
Constitution through the Bomas conferences and the subsequent processes,
we made the assumption that all Kenyans would dedicate themselves to
upholding the principles that they would agree on in the final document.
Particularly,
we assumed that all arms and officers of the Government would “obey,
preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of Kenya”.
We, in fact, required that State officers must swear allegiance to the Constitution before assuming their positions.
When
we campaigned for the Constitution during the 2010 referendum, we again
assumed that those Kenyans who did not agree with the Constitution
would accept the will of the people and join everyone else in
implementing it.
Since the opponents of the
Constitution had said that they only objected to 20 per cent of the
content, one of the first issues that should have been attended to would
have been amendments to correct the offensive provisions.
It
turns out that all these assumptions were wrong. The opponents of the
Constitution did not give up their objections but have instead actively
pursued an agenda to fight it.
SUBVERTED THE CONSTITUTION
Through
their various positions of influence in the three arms of the
government, these anti-Constitutionalists have subverted the
Constitution by sabotaging its operation and subjugating its spirit at
every turn.
Of the greatest importance is devolution.
It is clear for all to see that the government of President Uhuru
Kenyatta is intent on killing devolution.
The first way
the government is frustrating devolution is in revenue sharing. Article
203 of the Constitution says revenues shall be shared between the
national and county governments “calculated on the basis of most recent
audited accounts of revenue received, as approved by the National
Assembly”.
To deny the county governments their due,
the national government has sabotaged the presentation of audited
accounts for approval so that the only accounts that are available today
as the basis of revenue sharing are those of 2009/2010.
Another
method is by using the provincial administration to subvert the county
governments. The Constitution required the national government to
re-structure the provincial administration. Instead, it was only
renamed.
The system remains the same and its officials,
as was done previously, are used by the President as agent provocateurs
to cause confusion in the counties and frustrate the people.
UNDERMINES NLC
But
perhaps the worst and most atrocious abuse of the Constitution is in
respect of land. While the provisions on land are very clear, the
national government has refused to implement them, and now openly
undermines the National Land Commission (NLC).
In what
can only be termed as “Treason against the People’s Constitution”, the
President and his Secretary for Land have overthrown the provisions of
the Constitution and blatantly taken upon themselves the survey and
distribution of public and community land.
We now need
to amend the Constitution not to make it better, but just to save it.
The government is on a clear mission to do what was done to the
independence Constitution, which was rendered useless as Kenyans watched
helplessly.
The time has come when all patriotic
Kenyans must answer to the call of Article 3(1) of the Constitution
which says that, “Every person has an obligation to respect, uphold and
defend (the) Constitution”. But we also need to amend the Constitution
so that it works better.
It is now four years since we
promulgated the Constitution and we have seen several issues that need
to be urgently attended to. For instance, as mentioned above, if we
don’t deal with the issue of “audited accounts as approved by the
National Assembly”, the national government can continue using
out-of-date figures to cheat the county governments of their due share
of revenue.
Or, unless we make clear the mandate of
NLC, we shall continue to suffer the social crisis and the insecurity
that we all agree are tied to the illegal acquisition of community
lands.
The one objection anti-Constitutionalists keep
putting forward is that it is too early for amendments. This begs the
question of the criteria they are using to reach that conclusion.
AMENDMENTS
The
international experience stretching way back to the promulgation of the
Constitution of the United States of America is that it is never too
early. The test is not the timing but rather the necessity.
In
the case of USA, they had forgotten to insert a bill of rights. The
Constitution came into operation on March 4, 1789 and the First
Amendment was sent to the States for ratification on September 25, 1789,
barely six months later.
In fact negotiations for amendment were already under way even before the Constitution itself had been fully ratified.
Closer
home, the South African Constitution, from which ours borrows heavily,
was first amended on August 28, 1997, also barely six month after it
came into operation on February 4, 1997. In its 17 years of existence,
the South African Constitution has been amended 17 times.
It
is for that reason that the Okoa Kenya movement has proposed various
amendments. This is the next phase of the life of the Constitution we
promulgated on August 27, 2010. And many patriotic Kenyans are coming
together to defend it.
We must thank the drafters that
they foresaw a situation where government could be the enemy of the
Constitution, and gave the people the power to amend without relying on
government.
Mr Odinga is the Cord leader
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