'The friendly activist': Interesting facts about judge Njoki Ndung'u

Supreme Court Judge Njoki Ndung'u leaves court after the ruling on the presidential election petition on September 1, 2017. /JACK OWUOR
Supreme Court Judge Njoki Ndung'u leaves court after the ruling on the presidential election petition on September 1, 2017. /JACK OWUOR

Supreme Court Judge Njoki Ndung'u has attracted both praise and criticism for her dissenting stand on the annulment of President Uhuru Kenyatta's re-election.

A 52-year old lawyer of merit, Njoki has a law degree from the University of Nairobi and a Masters of Laws in

Human Rights and Civil Liberties from the

University of Leicester

in the

United Kingdom.

Lawyers in court consider her as one of the most friendly judges who treats litigants warmly and patiently waits for them to argue their cases.

Read:

1. She was a nominated MP in Narc government

Njoki was a nominated MP during the government of former President Mwai Kibaki between 2003 and 2007.

She served on four committees in the ninth parliament and is credited for moving bills including the human rights amendments to the Refugee Bill.

2. She sued the late businessman Jacob Juma on bribery allegations

The eloquent and soft-spoken judge sued Juma in February 2016 for linking her to alleged bribery to influence the outcome of an election petition by current Kiambu Governor Ferdinand Waititu against former Nairobi Governor Evans Kidero.

She was named

alongside Justice Philip Tunoi, who

had been accused of receiving a Sh200 million bribe from Kidero.

More of this:

3. Njoki won the EBS, United Nations Person of the Year Award in 2006

for gender activism

The judge was awarded the Elder of the Burning Spear (EBS) title, a prestigious state commendation for

her fight for gender equality.

As MP, she successfully introduced a motion in Parliament that saw the amendment of the Employment Act to guarantee women a compulsory three-month paid maternity leave, excluding their annual leave.

Njoki also

pushed for new fathers to be granted two weeks paternity leave.

4. She moved

Sexual Offences Bill, 2006, which proposed the

castration of rapists

In her time as a legislator, Njoki moved the Bill which sought to have sexual

offenders

chemically castrated.

Members of the then Parliament supported allowing the introduction of the Sexual Offences Bill and harsher penalties for sexual crimes.

But others called

for physical castration or even stoning to death.

5. Njoki's appointment as Supreme Court judge triggered mixed reactions in corridors of power

In June 2012, Njoki

was nominated and later appointed

Supreme Court judge, a move that raised murmurs among critics who viewed her as an ‘activist” given her past performance in Parliament when she constantly vouched for gender equality.

Others viewed her as “a greenhorn” not fit for the big shoes in the highest court on the land owing to her inexperience as a judge.

In 2013, Njoki was one of the seven judges who declared Uhuru Kenyatta validly elected after Opposition leader

Raila Odinga

challenged his election at the

Supreme Court.

This year, she rendered a dissenting opinion alongside Justice Jacktone Boma Ojwang citing no evidence to announce the elections as null and void.

Read:

WATCH: The latest videos from the Star