Tag: iebc chair

  • Youths at South Africa Cyber Café Forced Me to Apply for IEBC Job – Ethekon

    Youths at South Africa Cyber Café Forced Me to Apply for IEBC Job – Ethekon

    IEBC chair nominee Erastus Ethekon has told MPs that he only applied for the position after being encouraged by young people at a cyber café who believed he had what it takes to lead the electoral body.

    Appearing before the National Assembly Justice and Legal Affairs Committee, Ethekon said he was hesitant to apply when the position was first advertised.

    “There was too much negativity around the job, and I was reluctant,” he said.

    He recalled being at his usual cyber café when three young people, Peter, Purity and Kizito urged him to go for the job.

    “They looked at my documents and said, ‘You can lead this country through IEBC,”‘ Ethekon said.

    At the time, Ethekon was working in South Africa and was unsure whether to apply for the chair or a commissioner’s role.

    The youth went ahead and submitted applications for both. “They sent me a screenshot showing the submission while I was on my way to Angola,” he said.

    Ethekon clarified that the application was his own, and that he had signed and prepared all the documents.

    “I asked them to submit once everything was ready. I still have a copy of my application,” he said.

    Responding to questions from the committee, Ethekon denied claims that he had been pushed by political interests or external forces.

    “Let the record show that it was ordinary Kenyans who encouraged me. There was no pressure from any group,” he said.

    He added that he went through the public interview process and was shortlisted according to the law. “I gave my reasons for seeking the position, and the process followed the law,” he said.

    The trajectory of former IEBC chairpersons, including Wafula Chebukati, who passed away on February 20, 2025, at the age of 63, has been marked by a troubling pattern of health complications, legal battles, threats, and untimely deaths.

    Of Kenya’s four electoral commission chairpersons since the start of multiparty democracy in 1992, at least three have faced similar misfortunes.

    Justice Zacchaeus Chesoni, a respected Kenyan jurist, served as the Chief Justice of Kenya from 1997 to 1999. Shortly after leaving office, he developed health complications that led to his death in 1999, also at the age of 63.

    Samuel Mutua Kivuitu was appointed as deputy head of the defunct Electoral Commission in 1992 under Chesoni.

    He later succeeded him as chairman, overseeing the 1997, 2002, and 2005 elections, and presided over the troubled 2007 general election.

    His handling of the 2007 presidential results—where he stated, “I don’t know who won the elections,” despite announcing Mwai Kibaki as the winner—triggered post-election violence that claimed at least 1,300 lives and displaced more than 600,000 people.

    The aftermath led to the disbandment of the Electoral Commission of Kenya (ECK).

    Kivuitu’s final years were marked by illness.

    He died of throat cancer at MP Shah Hospital in Nairobi on February 25, 2013, at the age of 74.

    Issack Hassan followed Kivuitu, serving first as chairperson of the Interim Independent Electoral Commission (IIEC) from 2009 to 2011, and then as the first chairperson of the newly formed IEBC from November 2011 to October 2016.

    During his time at the helm, the 2013 general election was challenged by former Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

    Hassan later returned to public service as chairperson of the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA), a position he currently holds.

    Wafula Chebukati’s tenure during the 2017 and 2022 elections was also turbulent. He oversaw two hotly contested elections, including the 2017 poll, which was annulled by the Supreme Court—the first such ruling in Africa.

  • Charles Nyachae: Scandalous History Comes to Haunt Ruto’s Blue-Eyed Boy Favoured for IEBC Chairperson

    Charles Nyachae: Scandalous History Comes to Haunt Ruto’s Blue-Eyed Boy Favoured for IEBC Chairperson

    As Kenya braces for the high-stakes 2027 elections, the selection of the next Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) Chairperson has taken a contentious turn.

    Among the 37 candidates shortlisted by the recruitment panel is Charles Nyachae, a veteran lawyer and former chair of the Commission on the Implementation of the Constitution (CIC).

    With interviews set to conclude by April 25, 2025, and whispers of President William Ruto’s favouritism swirling, Nyachae’s chequered past is raising red flags about his suitability to helm an electoral body promising a “stainless” process.

    The stakes couldn’t be higher. The IEBC selection panel, reconstituted after legal battles and accusations of Ruto stalling to avert a constitutional crisis, has shortlisted 1,356 candidates for chairperson and commissioner roles.

    From these, two names will be presented to the President for the top job, and nine for six commissioner slots.

    Yet, Nyachae’s emergence as a frontrunner—allegedly Ruto’s preferred pick—threatens to undermine public trust in an institution tasked with delivering impartiality in one of Kenya’s most consequential polls.

    A Politically Tainted Track Record

    Nyachae, 67, is no stranger to Kenya’s political elite. The son of the late Simeon Nyachae, a towering figure in Kenyan politics, Charles has repeatedly aligned himself with ruling powers.

    In 2017, he ran for Kisii County governor on a Jubilee ticket under Uhuru Kenyatta, only to be rejected by voters.

    Undeterred, he switched allegiance to Ruto’s United Democratic Alliance (UDA) in 2022, managing the President’s campaign in Kisii County before losing again to Simba Arati, who garnered 270,928 votes.

    This flip-flopping raises a glaring question: can a man so deeply entwined with Ruto’s political machinery be trusted to oversee a fair election in 2027?

    Charles Nyachae, while still serving as a Judge in East Africa Court of Justice attends a political function with Ruto in December 2020.

    Political insiders whisper that Nyachae’s loyalty has earned him Ruto’s nod, a claim that, if true, casts a shadow over the panel’s promise of merit-based selection.

    Faith Odhiambo, President of the Law Society of Kenya, recently warned the panel against producing “incompetent candidates,” urging them to prioritize “proven records of competence and integrity.”

    Nyachae’s resume, however, tells a different story—one of ambition, failure, and unanswered questions.

    CIC Tenure: A Legacy of Missed Opportunities?

    Nyachae’s most prominent public role came as CIC chair from 2011 to 2016, tasked with implementing the 2010 Constitution.

    It was a golden opportunity to cement his legacy, yet critics argue he squandered it.

    Chapter 6, meant to enforce leadership integrity and combat corruption, remains a toothless provision under his watch, with systemic graft still plaguing Kenya.

    While Nyachae admitted to implementation hurdles in 2015—blaming low public participation and institutional clashes—his detractors say he failed to push for robust legislation, leaving the anti-corruption fight floundering.

    Devolution, another cornerstone of the Constitution, also stumbled. Nyachae once declared it “irreversible,” but the lack of clear handover regulations to counties during his tenure contributed to the ongoing devolution crisis.

    Was this a systemic failure or a personal one? The jury is out, but for a man eyeing the IEBC chair, such ambiguity is a liability.

    EACJ Exit and Family Feuds

    Charles Nyachae
    Charles Nyachae being sworn in as Judge of the East African Court of Justice in February 2018.

    Nyachae’s recent resignation from the East African Court of Justice (EACJ) in November 2023 adds another layer of intrigue.

    Representing Kenya at the regional court, he stepped down without explanation, just as high-profile cases—like Mike Sonko’s impeachment challenge and Martha Karua’s 2022 election petition—loomed.

    Was he dodging the heat, and if so, on whose behalf? For a potential IEBC chair, expected to withstand intense electoral pressure, this abrupt exit raises doubts about his resilience.

    Closer to home, Nyachae is locked in an ugly succession battle over his father’s multi-billion-shilling estate, estimated at over Sh2 billion.

    Appointed an administrator alongside siblings Angela and Eric, he faces off against stepmother Grace Wamuyu and others, with mediators now stepping in.

    This public family feud could distract him from the IEBC’s demanding role—or worse, signal a man more preoccupied with personal gain than public service.

    Age and the Pressure Test

    At 67, Nyachae’s age is another sticking point. The IEBC chairmanship is a pressure cooker—think 2017’s annulled election or 2022’s razor-thin margins.
    Critics question whether he can endure the strain, pointing to his EACJ resignation as a sign he might buckle.

    While he could argue experience trumps youth, but with no clear explanation for his judicial exit, the concern lingers: will he quit again when the going gets tough?

    Media Silence: A Clean Slate or a Cover-Up?

    Curiously, mainstream media has been muted on Nyachae’s scandals, often framing him as a “clean” alternative to candidates like James Oswago and Anne Amadi, whose pasts are tainted by corruption allegations.

    This selective spotlight—focusing on his CIC credentials while glossing over his political baggage and family woes—smacks of bias.

    Has the press been co-opted to polish his image, as some allege, or is Nyachae simply flying under the radar?

    Either way, the lack of scrutiny leaves Kenyans in the dark about a man who could shape their electoral future.

    The Bigger Picture

    DP WIlliam Ruto makes the collars of East Africa court of justice Judge Charles Nyachae at his Karen residence office in Nairobi on October 14, 2020.

    Nyachae’s candidacy isn’t just about one man—it’s a litmus test for the IEBC selection panel’s credibility.

    After months of legal wrangling and accusations of Ruto buying time, the panel vowed a transparent process.

    Yet, with a politically connected figure like Nyachae in the mix, that promise hangs by a thread.

    The 2027 elections will test Kenya’s democracy after a rocky reign by president Ruto who is under constant pressure from the youths leading to widespread protests, and the IEBC chair must be above reproach.

    Nyachae’s history—rife with political loyalty, unfulfilled potential, and personal entanglements—suggests he may fall short.

    As the April 25 deadline nears, Kenyans deserve answers.

    Can Charles Nyachae rise above his past, or will Ruto’s blue-eyed boy drag the IEBC into another quagmire?
    For a nation still scarred by electoral mistrust, the stakes are too high to gamble on a tainted legacy.