The High Court will today
hear the cases challenging the implementation of the Finance Act, 2018.
Lady Justice Wilfrida
Okwany Tuesday certified the matter as urgent.
The judge asked activist
Okiya Omtatah, who was the first to move to court to challenge the matter, to
give copies of his case documents to Attorney General Paul Kihara and the
National Assembly.
In a letter to the court,
and addressed to the duty judge, the Attorney General had requested to be
granted a hearing before any orders are issued.
Solicitor General Kennedy
Ogeto, who had signed the letter on behalf of the AG, termed the matter as one
of great public interests.
"The purpose of this
letter therefore is to humbly and most respectfully request the court to accord
the AG a hearing before it can consider granting any orders against him,"
said Mr Ogeto.
SUED AG
Last Friday, Mr Omtatah
sued the Attorney General and the National Assembly over the Finance Act, which
was assented to by President Uhuru Kenyatta and published in the Kenya Gazette
on September 21.
According to the activist,
the Finance Bill died the moment it failed to garner two-thirds support of MPs.
He argued that the Speaker
of the National Assembly was wrong to thereafter present a dead Bill to the
President for assent.
Mr Omtatah said he filed
his case in good time since the President assented to the bill last week on
Friday -- the same day the activist moved to court.
USURP POWERS
He said the matter is
extremely urgent because implementation of the Finance Act will be a major
violation of the Constitution.
"I believe that the
resultant stalemate has to be resolved by the President negotiating with
Parliament to enact a new Bill," said Mr Omtatah.
He added: "It is a
wrong interpretation of the Constitution which allows the President to usurp
the powers of the Legislature, allowing him to legislate with the support of a
minority of one-third of MPs."
In his suit documents, the
activist argued that the President's powers are limited to returning a bill to
Parliament accompanied with a memo containing his reservations.
He said it is not only
practically impossible to determine the two-thirds threshold through
acclamation, but also totally unacceptable to the petitioner that such an
important matter should be subjected to a vote by acclamation, robbing it of
its objectivity and allowing the Speaker the discretion to subjectively determine
the outcome.
At the same time, three
lawyers have also filed a similar suit against National Assembly Speaker Justin
Muturi and his temporary deputy Soipan Tuya.
The lawyers want the High
Court to issue temporary orders declaring the decision of Ms Tuya as null and
void.
They also want the said
disputed law declared to have been passed unprocedurally, hence it violates the
Constitution.
Mr Omtatah wants a
temporary order seeking to bar the sued parties or any other person whatsoever
from implementing the Finance Act 2018.
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