Court halts Homa Bay Deputy Governor, CEC vetting process
by FAITH MATETE
Audio By Vocalize
The Employment and Labour Relations Court in Kisumu has
temporarily halted the vetting and approval of nominees for key positions in
Homa Bay county.
The nominees include Deputy Governor Danish Onyango and
county executives following a petition challenging the process.
In an order issued on March 30, 2026, Justice Nzioki wa
Makau directed that the ongoing vetting exercise be suspended pending the
hearing and determination of a petition filed by Michael Kojo Otieno and Evans
Otieno Oloo.
The court issued a conservatory order stopping the process
initiated by the County Assembly of Homa Bay following an advertisement
published in one of the dailies on March 20, 2026.
The positions affected include the office of the deputy governor,
executive for trade, industry, tourism, marketing and co-operative development
and executive for governance and devolution.
“Pending the hearing and determination of the application
inter partes, there be a conservatory order staying the ongoing vetting and
approval exercise,” ruled Justice Makau.
In his petition, Otieno raises concerns over the legality
and constitutionality of the vetting and approval process, arguing that it does
not meet the required legal thresholds and due process.
He is challenging both the procedure and the authority under
which the exercise was initiated.
The petitioner has sued Homa Bay governor and the county assembly
as respondents, among others, accusing them of proceeding with the recruitment
and vetting process in a manner he terms unlawful.
Among the prayers sought, Otieno is asking the court to
declare the vetting process invalid, stop the appointments and issue orders
restraining the respondents from continuing with the exercise.
He is also seeking the court’s intervention to ensure any
future process adheres to constitutional and legal provisions.
The court directed that the application dated March 25,
2026, be served on the respondents ahead of the hearing scheduled for April 28,
2026.
A penal notice issued alongside the order warned that any
disobedience of the court directive would attract legal consequences.
The ruling now throws into uncertainty the county’s
leadership reorganisation process, as the affected offices remain unfilled
until the case is heard and determined.