Raila calls off nationwidewide demonstrations after Ruto’s plea

Raila calls off nationwidewide demonstrations scheduled on Monday after President William Ruto's plea
Raila calls off nationwidewide demonstrations scheduled on Monday after President William Ruto’s plea.
Azimio party leader Raila Odinga on Sunday, April 2, called off the ongoing mass protests.
Speaking during a press conference at his Capitol Hill office, Odinga confirmed that all demonstrations would not take place on Monday, April 3,as earlier planned.
“In view of the forgoing, we stand down our demonstrations for Monday, April 3, 2023,” Odinga stated.
Raila said they will call off protests for Monday and Thursday this week to give room for Ruto’s kind gesture to allow for dialogue.
“We want to strengthen our democracy and we want to ensure that how Kenyans vote is what the commission announce,” Raila said.
“We are ready to engage and we will engage without any form of corruption and this process should start as early as tomorrow.”
Raila warned that the mass protests would resume after a week if no meaningful progress is made.
His declaration came hours after President William Ruto asked the opposition chief to call off the demonstrations.
President William Ruto on Sunday urged opposition leader Raila Odinga to call off the ongoing anti-government protests which were set to enter the fourth day on Monday.
In a televised address from State House, Nairobi, the Head of State said he had listened to the opposition’s demands, among which has been a halt to the ongoing recruitment of commissioners to the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC).
“I have listened to the issues raised by my friend, the Honorable Raila Odinga, in times like these, it is not about who is right or who is wrong,” he said.
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“On the reconstitution of the future electoral commission, the selection panel that is currently in office is a creation of the law that was passed by the two chambers of Parliament… However, considering the matters raised by our friends in the opposition, I suggest a bipartisan engagement by Parliament within the parameters of the law and the constitution,” he added.
On assembling of the new IEBC, the opposition has been accusing President Ruto of reconstituting the electoral commission “without consulting other stakeholders and interested parties.”
The Head of State suggested that through the bipartisan parliamentary process, the IEBC selection panel and the future recruitment of its commissioners could yield “constitutionally and legally-binding proposals.”
“My suggestion is that this matter can be handled by parliament so that we can agree on what the issue is and we can adjust as agreed and as necessary,” Ruto, who was flanked by his deputy Rigathi Gachagua, said.
Noting that the protests over the last two weeks have led to the killing three people, including a police officer, and injuring at least 400 others, Ruto said: “I urge my brother Raila Odinga to call off the demonstrations and to give this bipartisan approach a chance to take this country forward.”
Other issues the opposition has raised with the Kenya Kwanza administration include lowering the cost of living, alleged electoral malpractice and vote-rigging in the 2022 General Election as well as what they see as purported discrimination in State appointments.
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