Tag: 2024

  • Ruto’s Cybercrime Law Is Foolish Political War Against Kenyans

    Ruto’s Cybercrime Law Is Foolish Political War Against Kenyans

    By Gitobu Imanyara

    On the very morning we were waking up to the devastating news of Raila Odinga’s death, President William Ruto signed into law the Computer Misuse and Cybercrime (Amendment) Bill, 2024. A draconian piece of legislation that effectively criminalizes dissent.

    The law states that if you post something that “offends” someone online, you could be fined up to Sh20 million or jailed for 10 years. Ten years for a tweet, a meme, a Facebook post, or a TikTok video that the State finds uncomfortable.

    This is not a law about protecting the public from cybercrime. It is a law about protecting power from criticism. It is a desperate attempt by a failing regime to silence the country’s most vocal and politically awake generation, the Kenyan youth.

    President Ruto’s obsession with control and fear is fast becoming the defining feature of his presidency. He came to power branding himself a “hustler,” the voice of the ordinary people. But that mask has fallen. What remains is a ruler terrified of the same young people he once courted, those who tweet, post, and protest because they have been denied jobs, dignity, and hope. Instead of fixing the economy, he is fixing his grip on power. Instead of creating jobs, he is creating jail sentences.

    If Ruto fought corruption with the same zeal he uses to fight free speech, Kenya would be far. But he will not. Because corruption sustains his political system, while free speech threatens it.

    The President and his allies understand something important that Kenya’s youth have changed the rules of political engagement. They no longer wait for mainstream media to tell their stories. They have built their own spaces on X, TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram, where truth travels faster than propaganda and where power can no longer monopolize the narrative. In those spaces, they have exposed government scandals, organized protests, and mocked hypocrisy. That is what scares Ruto.

    By criminalizing “offensive” speech, the regime is not protecting civility. It is criminalising emotion. It is declaring war on anger, satire, and expression, the lifeblood of democracy. What does “offensive” even mean? The offense is subjective. To a tyrant, truth itself is offensive. To the corrupt, exposure is offensive. To the liar, facts are offensive. This law, in its vagueness, gives the State infinite power to decide who can speak and who must be silenced.

    And yet, history has shown that suppression always births rebellion. Every generation that has been silenced has found new ways to speak. The late President Daniel Moi banned student politics in universities, and students turned lecture halls into underground movements. The state-controlled newspapers and dissidents like Raila Odinga, Kenneth Matiba, and this columnist printed their own from secret presses. Today’s youth don’t need printing presses. They have smartphones, millions of them.

    President Ruto’s government may soon discover that fear does not kill freedom; it fertilizes it. The more you try to silence a generation, the louder they become. The more you criminalise their voices, the more creative and defiant those voices grow. You can not jail an entire generation’s imagination.

    It is also worth remembering that social media is not a luxury for Kenyan youth. It is survival. It is how small businesses advertise, how artists build audiences, how freelancers find work, and how citizens seek accountability. It is the new town square, the new parliament, the new court of public opinion. To attack digital freedom is to attack the very lifeline of a generation that already feels betrayed by a broken economy and a corrupt State.

    The new cyber law is, therefore, not just unconstitutional. It is immoral. It violates the spirit of Article 33 of Kenya’s Constitution, which guarantees every citizen the right to freedom of expression, including freedom to seek, receive, or impart information and ideas. It violates the legacy of those, like Raila Odinga, who fought and died for a democratic Kenya, where speech is free and citizens are not ruled by fear.

    But beyond its illegality, this law is politically foolish. It signals a regime that is tone-deaf to the times.

    The writer is a former MP and advocate of the High Court.

  • Nandi Senator Samson Cherargei Proposes New Bill To Extend President, Elected Leaders’ Term Limits To Seven Years From Five‬

    Nandi Senator Samson Cherargei Proposes New Bill To Extend President, Elected Leaders’ Term Limits To Seven Years From Five‬

    A new bill seeking to extend the terms of the President and all elected leaders from five to seven years has been published.

    This proposed law sponsored by Nandi Senator Samson Cherargei aims to increase the terms of service for the President, Members of Parliament (MPs), Members of County Assemblies (MCAs), and governors to seven years. Currently, Kenyans elect their leaders every five years.

    The Constitution of Kenya (Amendment) Bill, 2024, is set for its first reading in the Senate.

    “The bill proposes to amend Article 136 of the Constitution, which provides for the election of the President, to increase the term of President from five years to seven years,” reads part of the Bill.

    It also amends Articles 101, 177, and 180 to extend the terms of MPs, senators, MCAs, and governors.

    Discussions around constitutional amendments began in November 2022 when a UDA legislator proposed removing the presidential term limit.

    Fafi MP Salah Yakub suggested replacing it with an age limit of 75 years, but this proposal did not gain traction.

    The Constitution currently limits the presidential term to two five-year terms.

    Additionally, the bill introduces the office of the Prime Minister, mirroring proposals made in the National Dialogue Committee and the Building Bridges Initiative reports.

    The bill states that the President shall appoint the Prime Minister from among members of Parliament, specifying, “The Prime Minister shall be the leader of the largest party or coalition of parties in Parliament.”

    To enhance the Senate’s powers, the bill assigns it the exclusive mandate to vet certain state officers.

    “This bill therefore seeks to increase the parliamentary role of the Senate by addressing the issues that have hampered the implementation of the constitution,” the Bill reads in part.

    Limited role

    The Senate has often been perceived as having a limited role compared to the National Assembly.

    Specifically, the bill proposes amendments to Articles 152, 156, 157, 166, 215, 228, 229, 245, and 250.

    This will allocate the responsibility of approving the appointment of various state officers between the Senate and the National Assembly.

    Under the new proposal, the Senate will vet and approve appointments for Cabinet secretaries, the Attorney General, the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Chief Justice, and judges, as well as for the chairperson of the Commission on Revenue Allocation, the Controller of Budget, the Auditor General, members of the Public Service Commission, the Inspector General of Police, and members of constitutional commissions.

    Currently, these state officers are vetted solely by the National Assembly. The bill also amends Article 229 to ensure that the Auditor General submits annual expenditure estimates directly to Parliament for approval.

    While the Senate gains new responsibilities, the National Assembly will maintain its role in vetting high commissioners, ambassadors, and diplomatic representatives.

    The proposal designates the Senate as the appropriate forum for filing petitions to remove members of constitutional commissions or independent officeholders, a shift from the current process that relies on the National Assembly.

    “The principal object of the Constitution of Kenya (Amendment) Bill, 2024, is to amend the Constitution to, among others, expand the mandate of the Senate,” the proposed law reads.

    Moreover, the bill seeks to amend Article 58 to require involvement from both the Senate and the National Assembly when approving an extension of a state of emergency.

    It emphasises that “a state of emergency affects the stability and functioning of the nation as a whole including county governments,”

    Furthermore, both Houses of Parliament must now approve the deployment of the Kenya Defence Forces in any part of the country, a process that is currently approved solely by the National Assembly.

    The bill also proposes that any legislation, except for money bills, which must originate in the National Assembly can start in either House of Parliament.

    Additionally, it aims to amend Article 181 of the Constitution regarding the procedures for the removal of a county governor or deputy governor.

    Under this proposal, any challenge to a governor’s impeachment by the Senate can only be addressed at the Supreme Court, which must resolve the case within 30 days.

    Presently, such matters begin at the High Court.

    The proposed legislation increases the percentage of the equitable share of revenue allocated to counties from the current 15 per cent to 40 per cent.

    “The bill seeks to strengthen devolution by aligning the roles and functions of Parliament and all entities at the national and county levels of government in a manner that would promote the effective administration of the devolved system of governance,” the proposed law reads.

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