Daily Nation Newspaper

UHURU PETITIONED

…Medic moves to court to compel Uhuru to appoint six judges left out

- – THE STANDARD, Kenya.

NAIROBI

- A surgeon has moved to a Nakuru court seeking to compel President Uhuru Kenyatta to  appoint the remaining six judges  who were left out in his latest Judiciary appointmen­ts.

Dr Magare Gikenyi wants the court to order the 34 judges who were sworn in last Friday not to assume their office  until the six “who did not meet the threshold” are on board.

He argues that the President’s move is unconstitu­tional, adding there was no room for picking nominees forwarded to him by the Judicial Service Commission as is provided for in the constituti­on.

The Judicial Service Commission ( JSC) had conducted interviews and recommende­d the appointmen­t of 41 judges in 2019 out of which one passed away while awaiting the president’s appointmen­t.

“If the same is left unbated (sic), the independen­ce of the judiciary which Kenyans hold dearly will be lost/eroded,” the petition read in part.

The medic added that the  six judges had been discrimina­ted against  contrary to article 27 of the Constituti­on of Kenya (2010).

Article 27 of the Constituti­on is about equality and freedom from discrimina­tion and states that every person is

equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law.

The six who were left out are Justices George Odunga, Prof Joel Ngugi, Weldon Korir, Aggrey Muchelule, Evans Makori who is the registrar of the High Court and Judith Omange.

“The said 34 judges have already been sworn in the presence of all respondent­s at State House Nairobi on 4th June 2021 which is contrary to finding/ruling of the court and the constituti­on which envisages gazettemen­t, appointmen­t and swearing-in of all judges as presented by the JSC,” the petition read.

JSC had forwarded 41 names of judges and magistrate­s to the president for appointmen­t.

However, on Thursday, June 3, the president gazetted the names of 34 judges leaving out six of them on grounds that they did not meet the threshold, sending their names back to the commission for further scrutiny.

The head of state’s failure to appoint the six judges has elicited mixed reactions, with various stakeholde­rs of the judiciary terming the move as unconstitu­tional as others urged him to uphold the rule of law. Associatio­n of judges and magistrate­s KJMA, office of the chief justice is among those who have spoken publicly against the president’s move.

The 34 were sworn in on Friday at State House, a day after their names were gazetted.

 ??  ?? President Uhuru Kenyatta presided over the swearing-in ceremony of the 34 judges at the State house on Friday, June 4 2021.
President Uhuru Kenyatta presided over the swearing-in ceremony of the 34 judges at the State house on Friday, June 4 2021.

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