Kenyan senators voted to remove Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua from office, despite his absence from his impeachment trial due to hospitalisation, according to his lawyer. Gachagua was expected to testify in the Senate but had pleaded not guilty to 11 charges the previous day.
Kenya’s Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua was ousted from office on Thursday after being impeached in an unprecedented political saga that has gripped the nation.
In a historic move, the Senate voted to impeach Gachagua on five of 11 charges, after a similar motion was overwhelmingly approved by the lower house National Assembly last week.
The vote capped a day of high drama which saw the embattled 59-year-old known as “Riggy G” fail to testify in his defence after being admitted to hospital with severe chest pains.
He is the first deputy president to be sacked in this manner since impeachment was introduced in Kenya’s revised 2010 constitution.
His downfall is the culmination of a bitter falling out with President William Ruto, who he helped win a 2022 election by rallying support from the vote-rich Mount Kenya region.
“The Senate has resolved to remove from office, by impeachment, his excellency Rigathi Gachagua, the deputy president of the Republic of Kenya,” Senate speaker Amason Kingi said after the vote.
“Accordingly his excellency Rigathi Gachagua ceases to hold office.”
Gachagua had denied all allegations against him as “nonsensical” and “outrageous” and claimed he was being treated like a “spent cartridge”.
Read more on FRANCE 24 English
Read also:
At least 17 children killed in ‘devastating’ primary school fire in Kenya
China to give Africa $50 billion over next three years, says Xi Jinping
Female genital mutilation survivors increase to more than 230 million