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Met to continue giving updates on expected 2026 El Nino rains

By JOHN MUSEMBI 

‎The Kenya Meteorological Department is closely monitoring global weather forecast reports suggesting an anticipated development of El Nino conditions. In a press release dated June 9, 2026, the weatherman said, "most models suggest the event will be at least moderate, and possibly strong".
‎A flooded area. Kenya Meteorological Department says there is a likelihood of having El Nino phenomenon this year. Photo used for illustration.

Acting Director of Meteorological Services Edward Muriuki noted that while the forecast may change as new data is availed,  there was an "80-82 % likelihood of El Nino during June-August 2026". He added that there was  probabilities of near or above 90-96% for El- Nino to continue through the end of 2026.
‎Experts expect this phenomenon to have varied impacts in Kenya and East Africa. Some of the outcomes expected by KMD are increased rainfall over the entire country during the October-November-December rainfall season.
‎KMD assured Kenyans that it will provide monthly weather conditions on this matter or when it is required.

DCP Leaders Reject Gachagua Impeachment Ruling

By BRIAN MUSYOKA 

Leaders of the Democracy for Citizens Party (DCP) in Embu County have rejected the High Court ruling that upheld the impeachment of former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, vowing to challenge the decision at the Court of Appeal.
Manyatta MP Gitonga Mukunji together with other DCP leaders in Embu town during a press briefing regarding former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua's impeachment ruling. MWINGI TIMES |Brian Musyoka 

Speaking during a press briefing in Embu Town today 9th June 2026, Manyatta MP Gitonga Mukunji said the judgment failed to address what he described as a violation of Gachagua's constitutional right to a fair hearing.

"The court itself acknowledged that there were shortcomings in the Senate process. If there was no fair hearing, then the Constitution is clear that such a process should be nullified," Mukunji said.

The MP argued that the judges' findings did not correspond with the final decision, insisting that the impeachment ought to have been overturned. He said many Kenyans who followed the lengthy court proceedings had expected a different outcome.

"We sat for hours listening to the judgment because we believed justice would prevail. The findings pointed to violations of due process, yet the court chose to uphold the impeachment," he added.

Mukunji also appealed to Chief Justice Martha Koome to safeguard the independence of the Judiciary, warning against any perceived interference from the Executive.

"We want an independent Judiciary that is guided only by the Constitution and the law. The confidence of Kenyans in our courts depends on judges making decisions without fear, favour or external influence," he said.

The legislator further criticized what he termed a growing trend of compensating victims of injustice instead of addressing the injustices themselves.

"You cannot build a just society by merely compensating victims after their rights have been violated. The focus should be on preventing those violations and holding those responsible accountable," Mukunji stated.

DCP Embu Chapter Chairperson Joshua Mugo Kanake echoed the sentiments, insisting that the Judiciary must remain independent and resist pressure from other arms of government.

Former Embu County Assembly Deputy Speaker Steve Simba also faulted the judgment, saying it had fallen short of delivering justice. He called for transparency in the appeal process and urged judges who will handle the next phase of the case to uphold public trust in the legal system.

Meanwhile, Embu County DCP Youth Leader James Ireri Soja led a group of youths in peaceful demonstrations through Embu Town to protest the ruling. Ireri maintained that inconsistencies identified during the proceedings should have resulted in the impeachment being overturned.

Despite their dissatisfaction with the verdict, DCP leaders urged supporters to remain calm as they prepare for a fresh legal battle at the Court of Appeal.

"We respect the courts, but we do not agree with this decision. We will pursue all legal avenues available to ensure justice is served," Mukunji said.

Protests Erupt in Embu Over Court Decision on Gachagua Impeachment

By BRIAN MUSYOKA 

A section of boda boda riders and residents in Embu Town on Tuesday 9th June 2026 staged demonstrations to express their dissatisfaction with the High Court's decision regarding the impeachment of former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua.
Demonstrations happened in Embu town on Tuesday as leaders and residents showed their dissatisfaction with the High Court ruling upholding DCP leader Rigathi Gachagua's impeachment as deputy president. MWINGI TIMES |Brian Musyoka 

The demonstrators, led by local political figure James Ireri Soja marched through sections of the town carrying placards and chanting slogans in support of Gachagua. They criticized the court's judgment, describing it as unfair and maintaining that the former Deputy President was denied justice during the impeachment process.

Addressing the protesters, Ireri argued that the three-judge bench contradicted itself by acknowledging that Gachagua's constitutional rights had been violated during the Senate proceedings but still allowed the impeachment to stand. According to him, the court's finding that Gachagua's right to a fair hearing had been infringed upon should have automatically rendered the impeachment process invalid.

Ireri particularly faulted the Senate for declining a request to adjourn proceedings despite Gachagua reportedly being hospitalized at the time. He said the decision denied him a reasonable opportunity to defend himself against the charges facing him.

"The denial of an adjournment infringed on his right to a fair hearing, and that alone should have been enough for the court to overturn the impeachment. Justice cannot be served when an individual is condemned without being given a fair chance to participate in proceedings affecting his political future," Ireri said.

He further criticized the National Assembly's public participation exercise, claiming it was poorly conducted and failed to adequately consider views submitted by members of the public. According to him, the process did not meet the constitutional threshold required for such a significant political decision.

Ireri also maintained that many Kenyans believed President William Ruto and Gachagua were elected on a joint ticket and therefore questioned why political responsibility appeared to have fallen solely on the former Deputy President.

He called on voters across the country to begin efforts aimed at recalling senators who supported the impeachment motion, arguing that elected leaders must be held accountable for their decisions.

Meanwhile, leaders of the Democracy for the Citizens Party (DCP) in Embu are expected to address the press over the court ruling. The briefing will be led by Manyatta MP Gitonga Mukunji and is expected to outline the party's position on the judgment and its political implications.

Critique of the Ruling on Gachagua Impeachment

By AMOS MUOKI 

The three-judge bench ruling of June 8, 2026, is a landmark judgment that will shape Kenya’s constitutional law for years to come. However, like any complex judicial decision, it is not beyond reproach. 

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua during the hearing of his impeachment motion in Parliament on October 8, 2024. |HANDOUT

While the court deserves credit for courageously navigating a politically explosive dispute and for holding the Senate accountable through a damages award, several aspects of the ruling raise serious legal and practical concerns. 

Below is a balanced critique organized under key thematic headings. It is worth noting that this is the first bench to adjudicate on matters of impeachment of a Deputy President of the Republic of Kenya.

The contradiction at the heart of the judgment

The most glaring flaw in the ruling is its internal inconsistency. On one hand, the court found that the Senate violated Gachagua’s right to a fair hearing under Articles 47 and 50 of the Constitution. On the other hand, it upheld the impeachment as substantially constitutional and refused to nullify the removal. This creates a logical paradox: if a fair hearing is a fundamental component of any valid impeachment process, how can a process that violated that right still be deemed constitutional? 

The court appeared to separate the violation from the outcome, essentially saying that Gachagua was treated unfairly but that unfairness did not affect the validity of his removal. Once a violation of the rights of a litigant has been proved, the corresponding remedy should be a nullification of the impeachment pursuant to Article 23 of  the Constitution of Kenya.

The remedy was inadequate for the harm suffered

This remedy stems from the provision of Article 23(e) of the Constitution of Kenya. The award of KSh 50 million in constitutional damages against the Senate sounds significant in the abstract, but when measured against the gravity of what Gachagua lost the office of Deputy President, its salary, privileges, political platform, and future career prospects, the sum appears disproportionately small. 

Constitutional damages are meant to vindicate rights and deter future violations, not merely to compensate for pecuniary loss. Gachagua lost an office that carries immense public trust and political power. No amount of money can restore that, but a more substantial award (or a different remedy, such as a declaration that the impeachment was void ab initio) would have sent a stronger signal.

Furthermore, the damages were awarded only against the Senate, not against the National Assembly or individual lawmakers who may have acted in bad faith. This narrow targeting lets other institutional actors off the hook.

The court avoided grappling with political reality

Throughout the ruling, the judges repeatedly stated that there was no evidence of bias or pre-determination by lawmakers. With respect, this finding strains credulity given the publicly documented record: the impeachment motion was tabled by allies of President William Ruto, debated at an extraordinary spet5ed, and passed by a lopsided majority of 281 to 44 in the National Assembly. 

Gachagua himself described the process as a “political lynching,” a view shared by many legal observers and ordinary Kenyans. While the court correctly noted that impeachment is a political-constitutional process where lawmakers are entitled to political opinions, the threshold for bias should not be so high as to be practically unreachable. 

The ruling effectively immunizes Parliament from any claim of political bias, even in cases where the outcome is a foregone conclusion. A more realistic standard such as whether a reasonable observer would apprehend bias might have yielded a different finding.

The directive to Parliament is weak and unenforceable

The court ordered Parliament to enact a dedicated legal framework to govern future impeachments of deputy presidents. With the absence of an impeachment legal framework, the question remains which framework was used to impeach the petitioner. The use of Article 144 and 145 of the Constitution of Kenya without modification as provided for under Article 150(2) of the Constitution is unconstitutional and should have rendered the whole impeachment process null and void. 

This is commendable in principle, but as a judicial remedy, it suffers from two weaknesses. First, the court set no clear deadline for compliance, nor did it specify what would happen if Parliament ignored the directive.

Second, courts in Kenya have a poor track record of compelling the legislature to act; previous directives on matters such as gender quotas and IEBC reform remain unimplemented years later. 

Without a specific timeline or a mechanism for judicial review of parliamentary inaction, this part of the ruling is likely to become a mere exhortation rather than an enforceable order. The court could have adopted a stronger approach, such as issuing a mandatory injunction with a fixed deadline and retention of jurisdiction to oversee compliance.

The court missed an opportunity to define “gross violation”

One of the grounds on which Hon Gachagua was impeached was “gross violation of the Constitution,” yet the court did not take the opportunity to define this term with precision. Instead, the ruling largely deferred to Parliament’s interpretation. This is problematic because “gross violation” is a vague, open-textured phrase that could be abused in future impeachments. 

Without clear judicial guidance, future majorities in the National Assembly and Senate might stretch the term to cover routine policy disagreements or minor infractions. A more robust ruling would have articulated objective criteria for example, that a gross violation must involve deliberate, serious, and manifestly illegal conduct, not mere administrative errors or political differences. By declining to do so, the court has left a dangerous ambiguity in Kenya’s impeachment jurisprudence.

Conclusion

From the above glaring findings, the judgment can be summed up a politically safe but legally flawed judgement. The three-judge bench ruling appears designed to satisfy no one entirely while avoiding the most explosive outcome: a nullification of the impeachment that would have plunged the country into a constitutional crisis.

While this political pragmatism is understandable, it came at the cost of legal coherence. The judgment upholds a flawed process, awards token damages for a serious rights violation, issues an unenforceable directive to Parliament, and leaves key constitutional terms undefined. Future litigants and courts will struggle to draw clear principles from this ruling. A stronger judgment would have either nullified the impeachment for violating fair hearing rights or, at a minimum, provided clearer guidance and a more proportionate remedy. 

As it stands, the ruling is a missed opportunity to entrench fair process as an indispensable pillar of Kenya’s impeachment architecture. I hope that the main litigant will appeal and justice will be served.

The writer is legal commentator on constitutional and human rights issues, the article is intended for public education and does not constitute legal advice. 

Editor's Note: The article represents author's own opinions and does not represent MWINGI TIMES views 

Police uncover body dumped in Mwingi town

‎By BONIFACE MWANIKI 
Mwingi town residents have been called upon to be patient as security agencies investigate suspected mysterious dumping of a dead body in their vicinity. Speaking during a visit to the crime scene, Kitui Senator Enoch Wambua said area residents should know their neighbours to be able to identify any potential crime in the town.
Kitui Senator Enoch Wambua joins Mwingi leaders and residents at the scene of suspected dumping of a dead body in Mwingi town. He expressed confidence that police will unravel the incident which has already caused alarm in Mwingi. |MWINGI TIMES


‎"People should know their neighbours. People can come from outside and spoil our town which was previously appealing. Those prospecting to set businesses here will avoid the town due to insecurity", said Senator Enoch Wambua. He said cases of insecurity in the town will also dumpen investor confidence leading to loss of business opportunities for residents and visitors.

‎The senator further lamented a wave of rising insecurity in Kitui county saying he was on his way to Kwa Kamari Trading Centre in Mwingi North subcouty where seven people lost their lives recently in suspected invasion of camel herders.  "It is not right that as leaders we have been reduced to attending burials. Let's pray for one another but also know our neighbours", he went on.
‎Homicide and pathologists teams will investigate the insecurity incident to serve justice to the victims and their families.
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