Kenya's new deputy president sworn in after legal challenges
NAIROBI (Reuters) -Kenya's new Deputy President Kithure Kindiki was sworn in on Friday after a court lifted orders barring his inauguration following weeks of legal challenges by his predecessor, who was impeached by parliament last month.
The Senate voted to remove Rigathi Gachagua, the previous deputy president, from office in October on charges including gross violation of the constitution and stirring ethnic hatred - accusations that he rejects and has dismissed as politically motivated.
Kenya's High Court had put Kindiki's inauguration on hold after Gachagua and his supporters filed over 30 court challenges to prevent his dismissal and replacement.
But the stay order was lifted on Thursday, with judges saying that the deputy president position should not remain vacant according to the constitution.
Gachagua's legal battles extended months of political turbulence in the country, East Africa's largest economy, that began with nationwide protests against unpopular tax hikes in June.
President William Ruto invited opposition members into his cabinet to create what he called a unity government in July in an attempt to ease tensions after demonstrators stormed parliament.
The political realignment also sidelined Gachagua, who during Ruto's election campaign helped secure a large block of votes from the populous Mount Kenya region. The two men have since fallen out.
Ruto has not commented on the impeachment proceedings but last month called for national cohesion and an end to "tribalism and exclusion".
Gachagua has compared the government to a shareholding company, suggesting that those who had voted for the ruling coalition deserved preferential access to government jobs.
Speaking after Kindiki's swearing-in, Ruto told his new deputy to "serve the people of Kenya equally, those who voted for us and those who did not vote for us. The government of Kenya equally belongs to all the people."
Kindiki was a leading contender to be Ruto's running mate during the 2022 election and was appointed interior minister shortly after the president took office in September that year.
(Reporting by Hereward Holland and Ammu Kannampilly; Editing by Sonali Paul, Angus MacSwan and Barbara Lewis)