Inside the silent push to reconcile warring Orange party groups
Leading the truce are Mama Ida Odinga and former Attorney General Amos Wako
by LUKE AWICH
Audio By Vocalize
Former Attorney
General Amos
Wako is one of
the trustees
trying to
reconcile the
ODM group
A silent but determined push is underway to
reconcile warring factions within the ODM, even as the party grapples with deepening
internal divisions.
Leading the truce are party trustees backed by the
widow of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga and Kenya’s Permanent
Representative to United Nations Environment Programme nominee
Ida Odinga.
The trustees made the first push in the days
leading up to the contentious National Executive Council meeting, in a bid to
broker a truce between the camps aligned to ODM leader Oburu Oginga and Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna.
Ruaraka MP TJ Kajwang’, in an interview
with the Star,revealed
the behind-the-scenes efforts to
have ceasefire in the opposition party.
“Yes, we have efforts that we are talking closely
in the party. I am aware that the trustees are begging both sides to come and
reason, I know there is (former Attorney General Amos)Wako’s initiative which is doing shuttle diplomacy
behind the curtains to bring these people together,” Kajwang’ said.
The same was corroborated by Kibra MP Peter Orero
who also believes it is a matter of time before the efforts bear fruit.
“In politics we always must have back channels. No
politician will refuse to sit on a table to negotiate, because politics is
about consultation, about building bridges and focus on the aspirations of
Kenyans who we represent,” Orero told the Star.
ODM trustees is a revered club within the party and
is relied upon to give directions to the party during critical moments.
The team has Wako, ODM treasurer and former lawmaker Timothy Bosire and the
party’s financial director Joshua Kawino.
Oburu is also amongst the party’s trustee.
The reconciliation team sought to persuade both
sides to shelve hardline positions and allow structured dialogue over
leadership and the party’s political direction.
However, the efforts reportedly collapsed after the
factions failed to reach consensus, leading to the dramatic removal of Sifuna
as secretary general during the NEC meeting in Mombasa.
Despite the setback, members of the mediation team
insist they are not giving up.
Bosire told the Star the unity of the party remains
paramount, particularly at a time when ODM is navigating delicate political
realignments.
He said the trustees have made progress on some
issues and remain optimistic of finding way forward even after the Mombasa NEC
meeting which triggered heat in the party.
“The hiccups caused by Mombasa meeting, a solution
will be found. That is my hope,” he said, adding that fresh consultations are
being lined up in the coming days.
“Trying to get a solution to certain issues or problems as they
arise is a normal effort, in some we manage in some it is difficult.”
“Like at the moment I have I have put my effort, I
have succeeded too some extent. Largely the problems remain, I hope for a
solution as we move forward.”
The former Kitutu Masaba MP termed the turbulence
rocking the 20-year-old party normal, especially after the passing on of the outfit’s
founder.
“Problems within ODM were expected because of the
departure of our father, they are not surprising problems. These are
adjustments. This (ODM) is not church, this is politics. It is understandable,
it is a normal process,” Bosire said.
He however remains optimistic that reason will
prevail and the factions will stop their
hardline stance.
“People will come to their terms with reality and
we will settle. Experience informs that after whatever ambitions one has, we
level up, we are mature people. We know what works and what does not work,” he said.
“I called them together, I sat with them, we had
tea together and we were friendly, that environment that is enabling is good
enough – you can call it progress.
“When protagonists are able to sit together, they
are not as bad as those who throw stones from very far.”
ODM deputy leader
Godfrey Osotsi, an ally of the embattled secretary general, has also
confirmed the ongoing mediation efforts.
In a parallel development, Treasury Cabinet
Secretary John Mbadi has also extended an olive branch to the so-called ODM
rebels, urging them to embrace dialogue and avoid actions that could fracture
the party further.
Mbadi, a long-time ODM chairman before he crossed
over to the Cabinet, has publicly indicated willingness to
engage the the dissenters in an attempt to cool tempers.
"They should come and try convince us as to
why we (ODM) should not work with President Ruto. But these disjointed
statements are hurting us as both a party and a community," he said.
"We are now telling them to come and tell us why they want to go to the
other side...because let's be honest, in Kenya there are just two political
groupings. So if you do not want to work with Ruto, who do you want to work
with? Is it Uhuru, Gachagua and the rest
Observers say the renewed reconciliation efforts
underscore growing concern among senior party figures that a protracted
standoff could erode ODM’s traditional support base and weaken its bargaining
power in national politics.
According to Raila’s younger sister and Kisumu
Woman Representative Ruth Odinga, the only way the party will be stronger is
when the two rival factions are brought together.
She insisted that a truce must be sought to avoid
weakening the outfit that produced presidential candidate in the last four general elections.
“ODM is a very strong party. This is the woman
everybody wants to marry. If we can have our act together, and these two
factions come out back and strong, we are going to be able to come out and say
‘here we are, this our card and this is what we want.’ Even if somebody from ODM is willing to become president – why would we say that ODM does not want
to field a president?”
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