Court Of Appeal’s Justice Kenneth Kakuru Dies At 65

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Court Of Appeal’s Justice Kenneth Kakuru Dies At 65

The latest news reaching our desk indicates that Court of Appeal’s Justice Kenneth Kakuru has died at the age of 65.

According to sources, Kakuru died at Aga Khan hospital in Kenya’s capital Nairobi where he had been admitted battling prostate cancer which was in advanced stages before he was pronounced dead on Tuesday morning.

Kakuru is very famous for his dissenting judgment nullifying the removal of age limits from the Constitution in 2018.

Giving his judgement, Justice Kakuru began by reciting the country’s history right from the ‘reign of terror’ of Idi Amin to the current NRM government quoted President  Museveni’s 1986 speech where he promised democratic governance, change in the quality of politics and people power.

In his judgment, Kakuru explained that the MPs consulted very few people, a size which was not representative of the actual number of voters as registered by the Electoral Commission during the previous 2016 elections.

“There was no enough evidence that the people of Uganda participated in these amendments. The evidence is too insignificant to constitute a meaningful participation of the people,” he ruled.

“Having said all that, I declare that the entire amendment was unconstitutional and should be declared null and void,” Justice Kakuru ruled before awarding costs to petitioners.

He also ruled that extending the tenure for parliament from five to seven years was illegal because it contravened the provisions of the constitution.

“If we go by what happened, it would mean that parliament would every five years extend its terms without holding an election and this is what Idi Amin did by declaring himself life president and parliament,” Kakuru ruled.

“They can even abolish  the judiciary.”

Kakuru was also among the justices that nullified section 8 of the Public Order Management Act which was previously used by police to stop public gatherings.

This section was used specifically to target opposition gatherings.

The judge has made several other rulings that have rattled the status quo.

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