Harold Ayodo Concerns have come to the fore over family laws that compel spouses to remain bed fellows in marriages that are empty shells. Lawyers attending a recent Continuing Professional Development (CPD) Seminar on Family Laws at Hilton Hotel in Nairobi are now calling for amendment of family laws to allow spouses to divorce on mutual consent â which is currently not allowed. In daily life, when marriages hit the rocks, some couples prefer to end it with as little trauma as possible â by mutual consent as provided for in countries like the US and India. Locally, it is…
Author: NLM Correspondent
Dr Charles Khamala Because government-related agencies themselves fail to correct private sector market distortions â for both justice as efficiency and/or to obtain equity â there emerges a voluntary, not-for-profit sector. According to William Twining, âperhaps the most important problem that faces the legal profession in a poor, developing country is how to provide adequate legal services for the public at large where most to the public is indigent.â This is because, he says, âUnder the British influence the adversary model of judicial proceedings has been imported into East Africa.â The function of non-governmental organisations is not to supplant the…
Vincent Chahale The Kenyan Constitution has been lauded as one of the most progressive in the world, on account of its broad approach, appreciation and specific provisions on fundamental rights as provided in the Bill of Rights, the vesting of sovereignty in the people, the decongestion of power (executive, legislative and judicial) and devolution. The placement of the provisions for socio-economic rights in the Bill of Rights as opposed to having them imbued in the preamble as directive principles of state policy enhances their guarantee. However, the main task in ensuring these gains are realised is through appropriate implementation strategies…
Recent events have seen Kenya come to a momentary standstill, with all manner of political hogwash being rifled left, right and centre as every manner of analysts offered explanation as to why virtually all the sectors of the economy are grinding to a halt. From the striking teachers and nurses, protesting dockworkers to the NYS saga, the sugar debacle after President Uhuru Kenyattaâs visit to Uganda, the tumbling shilling, most recently the university crisis and the politicianâs favourite â the ICC puzzle of who âsnitchedâ on whom â the grand clowns of Kenyan politics battled to offer the most useless…
Newton Arori There are no more trophies for saying that our Parliament has failed. Pointers to this fact are numerous. So let us sum it up by an observation by Walter Khobe in his eye-opening piece âReflections on Five Years of Transformative Constitutionalism in Kenya: Chimerical or Viable?â He says: âThe National Assembly has emerged as the biggest threat to the transformative agenda of the Constitution.â Several views have been given regarding our failed Parliament, particularly the National Assembly. One is that MPs are ill-informed, inept and generally low-calibre. While this is not entirely untrue, it is not the…
By Alpha Femi âI weep for the liberty of my country when I see at this early day of its successful experiment that corruption has been imputed to many members of the House of Representatives, and the rights of the people have been bartered for promises of officeâ. These are the famous words of Americaâs seventh president Andrew Wilson (1829â1837) about the conduct of the United States House Commons, a state of affairs that now mirrors the affairs of our own National Assembly. Renowned English musician and actor Raymond Douglas âRayâ Davies couldnât have put it better when he said…
KIBE MUNGAI The outcome of the last general election gave Jubilee the two ultimate political prizes in a presidential system of government, namely the presidency and control of Parliament. Two years later, serious doubts have started to emerge on whether Jubilee had a clear vision for this country or legitimate public interest to seek and exercise power beyond the personal ambitions of its captains. The Kenyan State and economy are in a serious crisis and confidence in the goodwill and intentions of our leaders is diminishing. Besides the statistics purveyed by Cord leader Raila Odinga, most of the other statistics…
Ali Abdi âThose who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitableâ âJohn F. Kennedy, 35th President of the United States Napoleon once remarked: âWhen a king is a kind man, his reign is judged to be a failure.â This is a warrant for tyranny, a self-justifying ordinance that presumes power to be the principle of effective governance. And because governance is founded on law, the Napoleonic view is that law is a question not of morality, but of power. Law, in this way of thinking, is not about what is right, but about what works. Society is seen…
They say literature depicts the character of a society; that it is a social tool, which, in literal realism, portrays the faithful reality in a society. Consider Ngugi wa Thiongâoâs âThe River Betweenâ on colonialism, Henrik Ibsenâs âAn Enemy Of The Peopleâ on hypocrisy of the Victorian morality, Velma Pollardâs âHomestretchâ on the life of the average Jamaican girl, who feels âspatâ out by society, and âMayai Waziri wa Maradhi na Hadithi Nyingineâ, which will be the focus of my article. In âMayai Waziri wa Maradhiâ (Minister of Diseases), the short story âMsamaria Mwemaâ (A Good Samaritan) highlights medical negligence.…
While Kenya has outgrown her Information Communication Technology (ICT) sector, her social media has come of age, a scholar of law observes. For this reason, Dr Peter Onyango Onyoyo argues that the country needs laws that will deal with cybercrime. Onyoyo is a don at the University of Nairobiâs School of Law, Kisumu Campus. The lecturer says the Ministry of Communication has a great role to play to ensure sanity in the ICT sector. In his research titled âExamining âElectronic Fraudâ in Kenya and the Impact on Commercial Justiceâ, Dr Onyoyo notes: âAs much as the Kenyan consumer behaviour is…