Sumerian Anunnaki

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Sumerian Anunnaki

Sumerian Anunnaki

@Patzigzagzig

انضم Haziran 2024
92 يتبع302 المتابعون
Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
Iran’s lakes are vanishing as years of drought, falling rainfall and unsustainable water use have been worsened further by the US-Israel war. In this visual explainer, Al Jazeera breaks down Iran’s worsening water crisis and what is driving it. 🔗: aje.news/i0rxaz
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Jim Njue
Jim Njue@jimNjue_·
When you see how Obroadbased bloggers are celebrating to Gachagua’s Impeachment case, you understand why God decided Raila should die a loser.
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Sumerian Anunnaki
Sumerian Anunnaki@Patzigzagzig·
Ghasia wewe si uko kwa serikali ya kalenjinga
Faith Odhiambo@FaithOdhiambo8

Yesterday's High Court judgment on the impeachment of H.E. Rigathi Gachagua raises serious and legitimate questions that our constitutional jurisprudence must grapple with honestly. The three-judge bench found that the Senate violated the former Deputy President's right to a fair hearing under Article 50 of the Constitution specifically by declining to grant an adjournment when he was unable to attend the proceedings. The court acknowledged that violation, issued a declaratory order and awarded Ksh.50 million in constitutional damages. Yet the bench ultimately upheld the impeachment itself. I respect the court and the constitutional role it plays. But I believe this outcome calls for serious reflection on the coherence of our remedial framework. The tension in the judgment lies in this, if the Senate's refusal to adjourn was a constitutional infirmity serious enough to warrant a finding of violation and a Ksh.50 million award, then the question that naturally follows is whether that infirmity was capable of tainting the entire removal process. The right to a fair hearing is not procedural decoration. It is a substantive constitutional guarantee, particularly in proceedings that result in the removal of a person from high public office. Courts must therefore grapple carefully with what it means to vindicate a right while simultaneously affirming the outcome that flowed from its violation. It is a difficult balance and I appreciate that the bench was navigating complicated constitutional terrain. It is instructive to recall the reasoning of the Supreme Court in the landmark 2017 presidential election petition delivered by the then Chief Justice David Maraga. The court, in a 4-2 majority, nullified the presidential election not on the basis that the outcome was necessarily wrong but on the basis that the process through which it was arrived at did not conform to the Constitution and the law. The court found that irregularities and illegalities in the transmission of results had compromised the integrity of the election and that the constitutional standard required more than a plausible result, it required a process that was itself constitutionally compliant. That principle that a flawed process cannot produce a constitutionally valid outcome remains a pillar of our public law. When we place that 2017 reasoning alongside yesterday's judgment, a legitimate concern emerges. Both cases involved constitutional violations in the course of a high-stakes removal or electoral process. In 2017, the violation of constitutional standards was sufficient to nullify the result entirely. Yesterday, a violation of the right to a fair hearing was found, remedied in damages but the result was preserved. These are not necessarily irreconcilable positions, courts do have discretion in fashioning remedies but the distinction must be clearly reasoned and transparently justified because the precedent being set will govern how future impeachments are conducted and how future courts respond to violations within those processes. My concern is about the precedent this decision may establish. If a constitutional violation during impeachment proceedings can be remedied by damages without disturbing the outcome, future Parliaments and Senates may not feel the full weight of their constitutional obligations when handling removal proceedings. The court itself noted the urgent need for Parliament to enact a dedicated statutory framework under Article 150 governing the removal of a Deputy President which is a legislative gap that should never have existed this long. That recommendation must not be ignored. A constitutional democracy is built on the integrity of its processes not merely its outcomes. We must ensure that the right to a fair hearing in Kenya remains substantive and not merely symbolic.

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Sumerian Anunnaki
Sumerian Anunnaki@Patzigzagzig·
STEFON DIGGS IS THE USUAL HOMOSEXUAL IMAGE PUSHED ON YOUNG BLACK MEN ESPECIALLY TO FEMINISE THEM TO BE MAN-GINAS,
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Sumerian Anunnaki
Sumerian Anunnaki@Patzigzagzig·
Akuna kitu inauma ngetai ama jaluo jinga kama ati Gachagua has enough weight to decide the next president of Kenya despite his ILLEGAL IMPEACHMENT BEING HELD UP BY THE YAMUNE GOVT JUDGES, #WANTAM #RUTOMUSTGO
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Iran First
Iran First@IranFirst_PTV·
‼️ASPI’s Critical Technology Tracker ranks Iran among the world’s top four countries producing advanced aircraft engines, including hypersonic technology, ahead of Japan, Italy and UK. #IranFirst
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Sumerian Anunnaki
Sumerian Anunnaki@Patzigzagzig·
Yeah I know it's about time to test the NUKE,
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