Kenya is at it again! This country which is gaining an unprecedented notoriety worldwide of pulling judicial and economic pranks to the dismay of everybody, wants all convicted criminals in this great nation to be allowed to vote in the coming historic Proposed Constitution national referendum August 04, 2010. The Interim Independent Constitution Dispute Resolution (IICDR) court ruled yesterday that all 53,000 convicted criminals are illegible to participate in a national referendum which rarely comes by. They ruled that Section 43(2) of the current Constitution which bars or disenfranchises legally detained or jailed Kenyans from participating in a General Election event, is void.That according to them, a national referendum which can stay for a lifetime or generations before coming again can allowed to convicted inmates.The IICDR court then proceeded to order the Interim Independent Electoral Commission(IIEC) to formally gazette all the 90 prisons nationwide as polling stations. That they start registering the 53,000 Kenya inmates (in prisons!) as voters and finish the work within the next 21 days. Note that this is coming inside an already closed and finalized IIEC's voter's registration exercise. These court orders from the honourable IICDR have shocked the IIEC who are waiting for the honourable Attorney General Mr. Amos Wako to arrive and liaise with... in order to appeal the confusing verdict. The IICDR is a Constitutional Reference Court and its judgement is final. It can not be contested. The IIEC Chairman Mr. Yitshack Ahmed Hassan, therefore, should hasten and immediately start to organize for the possible participation [in this nation] of its criminal murderers, criminal robbers and criminal drug traffickers... inside a peaceful forthcoming August 04, 2010 Republic of Kenya's Proposed Constitution Referendum in the 90 prison facilities nationwide. The reason being that there might never be another one(referendum) in this country. It is not an election exercise which comes every five years ladies and gentlemen it is a national referendum! Now you think about that wherever you are. Meanwhile, the self proclaimed serial killer and ex-G4S security and courier company Ltd. staff Mr. Philip Onyancha, will wait until the honourable National Assembly of the Republic of Kenya amends the capital punishment Act of the Laws of Kenya. If passed and assented by the Kenya President H.E. Mwai Kibaki, Mr. Onyancha will be executed by a firing squad comprised of six anonymous Republic of Kenya top marksmen-- preferably from the flying squad police officers based in Pangani Police station next to The Pangani Girls School and opposite the Pumwani Secondary School's Sports Ground. Mr. Onyancha literally murdered nineteen Kenyans most of them ladies and children. He reckoned that he had been ordained inside a mysterious or occultism ordination to murder 100 [Kenya] citizens and drink their blood . According to him ( i.e. the exG4S employee) his mission had been 19% complete when the Kenya Police Department of Government nabbed him. Talk of strange events, they are all here in East Africa.
So you are saying that you think nobody who in incarcerated should be allowed to vote on the referendum? What about someone who is in for petty crime or one who will get released day after vote, should they also be denied right to vote on this referendum?