By NJ Ayuk In a 2014 article, Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa argued for an Apartheid-style boycott on coal, oil and gas companies as a way to fight climate change and help ensure global environmental sustainability goals. “We must stop climate change. And we can, if we use the tactics that worked in South Africa against the worst carbon emitters,” he wrote. Climate change is something to be rightfully concerned about. But although Tutu’s sentiment is laudable, it is also misguided. Oil and gas companies are not autocratic regimes focused on oppressing the people and steal their resources. They are businesses.…
Author: NLM Correspondent
By Ouma Ojango If the Government patronage that has shielded Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KP) from competition were to be dropped, the electricity retailer would suffer the same fate as Kodak, a one-time world leader in technology with products and services in commercial print, packaging, manufacturing and entertainment. Left to its own devices, KP would quickly join the defunct Kenya Posts and Telecommunications Corporation (KP&TC) in the deep end of the sea with no prospects of ever rising to the surface again, leave alone staying afloat. These two are world’s best examples of how not to catch up with…
By Peter Wanyonyi S outh Africa, Africa’s most advanced and most sophisticated economy, is reeling under punishing electricity rationing. Operational failures, insufficient generating capacity, and an unwillingness to invest in new power plants have combined to create a disaster in waiting, as the country’s electricity monopoly, Eskom, hikes electricity tariffs to service debt. It is estimated that, at any given time, over a third of Eskom’s total capacity is offline due to power rationing. Kenya’s power-rationing story hardly needs retelling. Despite the talking heads at KenGen mealy-mouthing the now-tired “we generate more electricity than we need” every day, Kenya continues…
By Douglas Lucas Kivoi At least one person gets killed every two days in Kenya’s capital city, Nairobi. Most of these cases are never resolved. Only 94 murder cases were registered in Nairobi courts in 2021. Nairobi is Kenya’s most populous city with more than four million people. Like other major cities across Africa, it grapples with crime amid the strain of policing services. Kenya was ranked fourth in the 2021 Organised Crime Index in Africa, with the 2022 Economic Survey reporting that Nairobi regularly records the highest number of crimes in the country. The swift progress the Directorate of Criminal Investigations made in investigating the murder of Dutch…
By Eric Ngumbi On 27th August 2010, Kenyans ushered in a new constitutional order, which marked a paradigm shift from the past in many ways. As aptly captured by Willy Mutunga in his work ‘The 2010 Constitution of Kenya and its Interpretation: Reflections from the Supreme Court’s Decisions’, “the Kenyan people, in enacting the Constitution, chose the route of transformation to end their poverty and deprivation, and regain their dignity as well as sovereignty. The centrality of the Constitution, 2010 in Kenya’s transformation was also appreciated by the High Court in Republic v. Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) Ex…
By Eric Mukoya The office of the Chief Justice established by Article 161 (2a) of the Constitution is revered for the power it carries, but importantly the significance and direction it provides on constitutionalism. It needs to be known as the custodian of the rule of law, justice, and legal integrity. It isn’t easy to understand why legal practitioners, for a long time, remained reserved almost to a course of self-preservation. It was easy to dismiss this practice that seemed to represent cultural superiority embedded in the language, occasions, the dressing, and sometimes, the associations of many legal practitioners. The…
By Solomon Atela The place of integrity within a personal and organizational space is an invaluable distinctive organizational capability. The efficacy of systems and process is an outcome of the integrity of the people running them. An electoral system must be both ethically and legally compliant, and of necessity founded on the tenets of fairness, inclusivity, openness, justice, transparency, and accountability. Elections is not an event but a process whose integrity goes beyond the happenings on an election day. The actions and decisions of all electoral stakeholders should be born out of a consummate desire for greater good. This responsibility…
By Ouma Ojango What happens to the trend that has become synonymous with President Uhuru Kenyatta of relying on military personnel in the running of key government functions when he leaves the seat of power in early September or thereabout? But, probably, the first question should be, what, in the first place, pushed President Kenyatta to go fishing in the military barracks? Why did the military generals become his most trusted stewards of key government agenda as is evident in every crucial sector of his government including Construction, Immigration, Trade, and the Criminal Justice System, just to mention a few?…
By SHARLENE MUTHURI Often when I mention to entrepreneurs that I work with startups in the justice sector, there comes an assumption that my work primarily involves funding non-profit organisations in grassroot communities that organise youth programmes – which is great but also rather unfortunate as it shows the over-reliance on donor funded opportunities in the justice sectors in Kenya and the East-African region. At the Hague Institute for Innovation of Law (HiiL), we aim to make justice user-friendly, which is still a far-fetched idea here in East Africa. This is because the journey to accessing justice is perceived as…
Beyond the top banker’s stellar performance at KCB, the closet was always full of skeletons By NLM Writer It may be too early to find out which of these skeletons consumed him, or if he just opted to take an early retirement some seven months before his contract expired. The announcement came as a surprise. While everyone expected Joshua Oigara to leave his C-suite office at KCB this year, he had some months to go on the extension to his contract that the board had sanctioned. Yet, in May the board abruptly announced that he would be exiting to be…
