MIGUNA MIGUNA exposes IEBC Chairman ISAACK HASSAN badly in this article ....... RAILA's CORD may be right
COURTESY OF DAILY POST
Do
you remember this article from the archives???
IIEC Chair Isaack Does Not Deserve All The Plaudits
Thursday, July 21, 2011 - 00:00
-- BY MIGUNA MIGUNA
Although English has always been the de facto principal medium of communication in parliament, over the years, many MPs have managed make do with a fleeting acquaintance with the language. And since the onset of live television coverage of parliamentary proceedings, we have watched with delight the linguistic challenge most MPs face in both English and Swahili.
Yet of all prominent public
figures in Kenya today, the most distinguished linguistic offender isn’t
Bifwoli Sylvester Wakoli, Kambi Kasungu, Ephraim Maina, Cyprian Omolo, Wilfred
Moriasi Ombui or Clement Wabara.
The gold medal for
linguistic and logical incoherence goes to the IIEC chairperson Hassan Ahmed Isaack.
This isn’t a trophy you win through occasional lapses.
One gets the ‘privilege’ of
holding the title through persistent failure.
Many people watching Isaack
speak may feel sympathy for him on the mistaken belief that he stammers. I’ve
watched this man keenly over the past three years and can confirm that what sounds
like natural stutter is actually due to logical incoherence, confusion and uncertainty.
Those who can’t think clearly can’t also speak coherently.
The IIEC has been praised
for conducting a number of by- elections around the country fairly well. It
also received well- deserved kudos for holding a peaceful constitutional referendum
last August. Yet credit goes to the entire institution, not just to one man.
Isaac has tended to hog the
limelight and claim all the credit.
Conveniently forgotten are
the IIEC employees, those faceless and anonymous, hardworking and dedicated
patriots. These are the people who prepare the ground and physically conduct elections.
Without them, there would be no voting booths, no inks,
no ballot papers and nothing to count. It’s the IIEC workers – the clerks and returning
officers - who are largely responsible for the integrity of the electoral
process.
And of course, these people
work as a team with the commissioners, the CEO and the senior executives at the
IIEC. People tend to serenade Isaac with
all the successes of the interim electoral body without asking whether those
praises are well deserved. For starters, is Isaac a good manager? Looking at
the ethnic intrigues and rumblings about questionable procurement
at the IIEC, one has to wonder about Isaac’s integrity and management skills.
But more fundamentally, what is Isaac’s background? Does he have a solid legal
background?
As a lawyer, Isaack’s
record is patchy. He isn’t a good courtroom lawyer, nor is he a good drafter or
negotiator. In fact, Isaack isn’t quick on his feet. He floundered badly when the
‘red brigade’ invaded the Bomas of Kenya where the IIEC was releasing results
for the referendum. He couldn’t stand his ground. He couldn’t explain the minor computer glitches. He couldn’t
rebut the unfounded rumours that the ‘green campaign’ was doctoring results.
If he couldn’t handle such a simple electoral exercise, he certainly can’t manage presidential, gubernatorial, parliamentary and civic elections with a ten metre-long ballot paper.
His record at the CKRC
isn’t endearing either. Reports indicate that he was among the commissioners
who tried to scuttle the process on behalf of Moi. When Isaack was appointed to
the Kiruki Commission to be part of an ‘investigation’ of the criminal
escapades of Artur Brothers, many Kenyans suspected that he was part of a well
designed cover-up.
Apart from the millions the
Kiruki Commission skimmed off the public till, it didn’t advance any known
public interest.
Two weeks ago, Isaac
addressed a press conference and announced that he had ‘recalled’ a letter the IIEC
had sent to the Minister for Local Government ratifying ODM’s request to
de-gazette 34 nominated councillors for non- compliance with the party’s policies.
Not only was Isaac’s ‘decision’ unilateral; it wasn’t an IIEC decision. It was
also difficult to understand how he could ‘recall’ a letter orally at a press conference.
But the most intriguing
part of Isaac’s press conference was the ‘reason’ he gave for the reversal. First,
he argued that if ODM wants to de-gazette councilors for disloyalty, it should
start with the ‘big fish’ within the party. True to form, he didn’t offer
any logical or legal basis for saying so. He stated that unless ODM moved
against William Ruto and company first, he will not allow it to de-gazette the
councillors. Again, there wasn’t any foundation for that, either.
Isaack is partisan. He has
always been. That’s typical of status-quo elements. They rely on patronage to
survive. Nearly one year ago, ODM petitioned the Registrar of Political Parties
– which is operating under him - to have a number of ODM rebel MPs removed from
its register as having resigned from the party.
To date, the registrar
hasn’t acted on that petition. The law grants ODM, like any other party, power
to take action against disloyal members. The law doesn’t give Isaack power to supervise,
vet or grant permission to parties when making that decision. Isaack’s
declaration that ODM must go against the ‘big fish’ first exposes his bias and
rusty legal reasoning.
Coming soon after Isaack’s childhood friend Aden Duale’s
press conference ‘condemning’ ODM for the action,
many knew that Isaac had been recruited into the factional war within ODM.
Section 17(4) of the
Political Parties Act, 2007 provides that a person who, while a member of a
political party
(a) forms another political
party;
(b) joins in the formation
of another political party;
(c) joins another political
party; or
(d) in any way or manner
publicly advocates for the formation of another political party, shall be
deemed to have resigned from the previous political party.
Article 103(1)(e) of the Constitution
provides that the office of a Member of
Parliament becomes vacant… “If having been elected to Parliament as a member of
a Political Party, the Member resigns from that party or is deemed to have
resigned from the party as determined in accordance with the legislation contemplated
in Clause (2).”
Section 7 of the Sixth
Schedule of the Constitution provides that all law in force immediately before the
effective date continues to be in force and shall be construed with
alterations, adoptions, qualifications and exceptions necessary to bring it
into conformity with the Constitution.
Doesn’t Isaack understand
such basic law? Or is he lobbying for ‘political accommodation’ after realising
that he isn’t qualified to be the chairperson of the IEBC?
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