Azimio La Umoja leaders on Sunday evening called off the bi-weekly anti-government protests which were set to enter the fourth day on Monday.
The Azimio La Umoja One Kenya coalition leader Raila Odinga made the announcement in a press address at his Capitol Hill office in Nairobi.
It came just hours after President William Ruto’s address in which he called on the opposition leader to do so and give way for a bipartisan parliamentary process in the recruitment of commissioners to the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), which is one of the issues the opposition had raised with President Ruto’s administration.
Odinga said the Azimio camp is ready for dialogue that will address the key issues they have raised.
According to the opposition leader, the decision to call off the protests came after wide consultations, including with religious leaders, among others.
“William Ruto has issued what I regard as an important statement, we have met and listened to a lot of people, including religious leaders, and they have implored us to give dialogue a chance,” he said.
“We acknowledge the olive branch on dialogue, this is a positive development. We agree to a balanced parliamentary proceed co-chaired by both sides, this committee must be done immediately, including all arrests and prosecution related to demos.”
Odinga said the Azimio camp is prepared to resume protests if “no meaningful outcome” is reached within a week.
“We emphasize that rights to assemble are anchored in our constitution, we reserve our rights to call for demos if there is no meaningful outcome. We will resume after one week,” he added.
Among the issues, the Azimio camp wants to be addressed are electoral justice, high cost of living, attacks on media, attacks on democracy as well as the alleged ‘buying’ of MPs.
On the assembling of the new IEBC, the opposition has been accusing Ruto of reconstituting the electoral commission
“without consulting other stakeholders and interested parties.”
Ruto had suggested that through the bipartisan parliamentary process, the IEBC selection panel and the future recruitment of its commissioners could yield “constitutionally and legally-binding proposals.”
“My suggestion is that this matter can be handled by parliament so that we can agree on what the issue is and we can adjust as agreed and as necessary,” Ruto, who was flanked by his deputy Rigathi Gachagua, said.
Noting that the protests over the last two weeks have led to the killing of three people, including a police officer, and injuring at least 400 others, Ruto said: “I urge my brother Raila Odinga to call off the demonstrations and to give this bipartisan approach a chance to take this country forward.”