Former Deputy President
Rigathi Gachagua now wants
damages, including salaries for the
months he has been out of office, citing unlawful impeachment.
Gachagua, through his lawyer senior counsel Paul Muite, yesterday
told the High Court that he wants
to amend the petition challenging
his impeachment to claim compensation.
Muite told judges Eric Ogola, Anthony Mrima and Ferda Mugambi
that he wants leave to amend his
original prayers, which included the
bid for reinstatement to office.
Initially, Gachagua wanted the
court to declare his ouster null and
void and be reinstated.
“Those are the prayers of declaration which the petitioner (Rigathi
Gachagua) wishes to be abandoned,” Muite told the judges.
Instead, Gachagua says he wants
to pursue compensation equivalent
to what he would have earned had he served the full five-year term following his election in August 2022
as Deputy President.
Gachagua was impeached in October last year after the Senate approved charges that were levelled
against him by the National Assembly.
A Deputy President earns a
monthly salary of Sh1,227,188 plus
allowances.
“The petitioner wishes to challenge the legality of his impeachment and will be seeking leave to
amend the prayers. He will be asking for the money he would have
earned had he served the full five-year term,” Muite said.
Gachagua’s case, initially filed
under a certificate of urgency, was
classified as being of public interest.
However, Muite yesterday said
the case is now a personal matter.
“This petition is not a matter
of public interest. It is a personal
matter that directly affects the petitioner, who is the one impeached,”
Muite said.
Gachagua’s amended petition will
focus solely on the constitutional
and legal validity of his impeachment.
“The petitioner will now be vigorously challenging the legality and
constitutionality of his impeachment and will be seeking to persuade this court to grant him the
amount he would have earned had
he served for the entire five years for
which he had been elected by the
Kenyan people.”
The respondents, who include the
National Assembly and the Senate
and the Attorney General, did not
object to Gachagua’s request to
amend the petition.
The judges allowed the application and directed that the matter be
mentioned on June 19.
“Leave is hereby granted to the
petitioners to further amend their
respective petitions, if need be, within seven days from today. Leave is
also granted to the respondents to
further amend, as the case may be,
their respective responses in the petition also within seven days,” the
court ruled.
Gachagua’s renewed fight comes
after the Court of Appeal on May 9
ruled that Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu did not have powers
to constitute a bench that heard his
initial petitions against the impeachment.
Justices Daniel Musinga (president), Mumbi Ngugi and Francis
Tuiyott ruled that assigning judges
is a constitutional duty of only the
Chief Justice.
Gachagua’s lawyers had challenged the decision by Mwilu to
remit files to the bench of Judges
Eric Ogola (presiding), Mrima and
Mugambi to hear as consolidated
petitions that challenged Gachagua’s impeachment in October last
year.
The bench had initially been constituted by Chief Justice Martha
Koome.
However, more petitions were
filed as the impeachment process
progressed, culminating in the Senate approval of the ouster motion
from the National Assembly.
More petitions were then filed in
the High Court in Kerugoya, including where orders were issued stopping then Deputy President nominee
Kithure Kindiki from being sworn in.
There were also orders stopping
President William Ruto from appointing Gachagua’s replacement
as Deputy President following the
impeachment.
It is the files containing those orders that were referred to the Chief
Justice for empanelling a bench.
However, given that Koome was
out of the country at the time, her
deputy Mwilu remitted the files to
the Justice Ogola-led bench.
Gachagua’s lawyers contested
that decision, arguing that Mwilu
did not have powers to remit the
files to the bench.
Such an action, they argued,
amounted to assigning the judges to
hear the petitions.
But Justices Ogola, Mrima and
Mugambi ruled it was proper for
Mwilu to refer the files to the bench,
terming it an administrative duty.
The Court of Appeal disagreed.