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Kenya MPs reject gay clause

BY ANTHONY KAGIRI
Updated : 226days and 11 hours and 12 minutes ago

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NAIVASHA, Kenya, Jan 19 - Parliamentarians have deleted a controversial clause in the draft Constitution that experts had warned could legalise same sex marriages.

In its second day of its week-long retreat the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) on the Constitutional Review yielded to public pressure to seal the ‘loophole that could give gay marriages a legal lifeline.’

The proposed draft had stated that “every adult has the right to found a family” raising eyebrows especially from religious leaders who had threatened to reject the document saying this was a Western ideal.

The team spent much of its second day debating the Bill of Rights which is the fifth Chapter. Reports indicated that the committee deleted close to half of the chapter claiming “the Committee of experts was influenced by the civil society.” The team also deleted any mention of the civil society in this chapter. 

“The discussions are very cordial and are bearing fruits in terms of not having any disagreements,” PSC Chairman Abdikadir Mohammed said in his short brief to the media.

“We have not had to vote on any issue. Everything we have agreed on has been on consensus and the environment is excellent.”

The quest to clearly outlaw abortion is however reported to remain unclear as the legislators failed to insert the clause stating that life starts at conception as requested by the clergy.

The committee later in the afternoon shelved debate on the sensitive chapter touching on Land and instead embarked on Representation which, according to Mr Mohammed, was to enable them ‘finalise on the political matters first.’ He said the team would start on the more controversial chapter on Executive on Wednesday.

Other hot chapters to follow include the Legislature, Devolution and the Judiciary.

The harmonised draft proposes a two-chamber Parliament, two levels of devolution and far-reaching changes to the Judiciary.

At the same time Mr Mohammed maintained that there will be only one draft for Kenyans to vote on in the much anticipated national referendum. He said they were keen on coming up with one system of government by consensus.

“We intend to agree on one system of government; be it parliamentary, presidential or any other form. I am confident that we should be able to come to some agreement on that point,” he said.

His latest statement comes amid reports of a deal by the PSC to do away with the hybrid system proposed by CoE which would see Executive authority shared out between a President and a Prime minister.

ODM tends to favour a Parliamentary, with a powerful Prime Minister elected by MPs while PNU says it wants a presidential system, where the President will be powerful, but checked by other institutions.

The retreat is meant to arrive at a compromise on the contentious issues, among them the form of government the country will adopt, and emerge with a document that will be acceptable to MPs in Parliament and Kenyans at the referendum.

 
Comments (6) posted
joyce mungai (March 22nd, 2010, 11:13 AM)
abortion is a crime!A fact that cannot be changed.It will only take a minute to change the statement in the draft n say life starts at birth for the sake of women.
 
Shelly (January 26th, 2010, 4:28 PM)
People. If you want to have a society that allows Arbotion and allows Gayism, I propose that you move pout of a multireligious country and get citizenship in a humanist country. why should I have to allow my children to adopt such unatural and unjustified practices. if we allowed arbotion and Gay demands and a whole generation choose these choices what would hapen to future generations and development of the human race....
 
pattie (January 25th, 2010, 11:36 AM)
the issue with Kenyans is they sell their own religion only. Sure it is a sin before God-but who told you we are all Christians? It is between them and their God-if they believe in Him. Correct me if i am wrong but Kenya is not registered as a Christina state so why do we have to follow Christian doctorates in our laws because the same laws allow for Freedom of religion. If this is the case, why should your religious beliefs affect my actions? The way to sort this stuff out is simply separate evangelism and socio-economic and political development. that is my personal opinion.
 
M .MUCHUNGU (January 25th, 2010, 9:33 AM)
abortion is a sin before GOD and a crime. when will people learn from others? abortion has taken our friends,relatives and our own mothers.
 
Ngugi (January 20th, 2010, 3:52 PM)
How much longer are we going to keep denying that abortion is a fact in Kenya? Life starts at conception but abortion legal or not is a matter of personal choice.Nigeria spends 13m€ annually to take care of abortion related complications while it would only cost 3m€ to provide safe abortions,what about Kenya? the verdict is yours!
 
O. Jack (January 20th, 2010, 8:34 AM)
I believe marriage is for man and woman. People can do whatever they want in the privacy of their bedrooms, but outside it we need to exercise caution.
 
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