Ababu Namwamba

Hon. Ababu Namwamba taking the oath of office as Minister for Sports and Youth Affairs before President Mwai Kibaki at Harambee House, Nairobi

Ababu-Terrah (previously known as Pius Tawfiq Ababu Namwamba) is a Kenyan politician and international lawyer trained in Nairobi and Washington, DC. Since 2016 he has been the leader of the Labour Party of Kenya.

Biography

Ababu-Terrah was born in Jinja, Uganda to Kenyan parents on 23 December 1975, and raised in Uganda and later Kenya.[1] Outside politics he is a public interest attorney specializing in international human rights and constitutional law, and a former columnist with leading newspapers in Kenya.

Ababu-Terrah trained as a lawyer in Nairobi and Washington, DC, United States. Before his election to Parliament in 2007 on his first attempt, he had already built an impressive profile as a public interest attorney and crusader for accountable government. He was Chief Counsel at The Chambers of Justice, a public interest trust he founded in 2002 and ran alongside his law firm, Ababu Namwamba Attorneys-at-Law.

Ababu is among pioneers in public interest litigation for the defenseless. In 2004 he won a landmark legal battle in which his client, a Kenyan-born Pakistani, had been wrongfully accused of terrorism. It was the first case of its kind in Kenya.

In 2003, he secured a historic ruling in a constitutional case that affirmed the right of children living with HIV/AIDS to attend public schools unfettered. He filed the case for Chambers of Justice and Nyumbani Children's Home after two schools in Ngong’ and Karen barred children from Nyumbani for their HIV status. This case won Ababu international acclaim, winning him the 2004 Global Justice Award which he received in Amsterdam, Netherlands. He was inducted onto the roll of Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum in 2009.

As counsel for Swiss national Marianne Brynner, Ababu was again in the public eye in 2004/5 as he played a central role in the last probe into the mysterious death of former Kenyan Foreign Affairs Minister, the late Dr. Robert Ouko.

This was also the period that saw Ababu-Terrah active on the international lobbying circuit, strongly advocating for international human rights, fair trade practices and debt relief for Africa through platforms like the World Social Forum in such far flung locations as Mumbai, India and Porto Alegre, Brazil. Locally, he pressed for responsible governance through the unique "After the Promise" annual governance report card. An avid reader and consummate writer, the Hubert Humphrey Fellow/Fulbright alumnus was also a regular columnist with the Sunday Nation and later Standard on Sunday, Kenya's top two newspapers, where he wrote weekly political analysis for over five years.

In 2003, he initiated the Ababu Namwamba Foundation (ANF), a charity that supports education, talent growth and economic empowerment for hundreds of young Kenyans. He calls ANF his ‘payback’ to Kenya, himself a beneficiary of a Jomo Kenyatta Foundation scholarship in high school.

Political career

Namwamba was first elected to parliament in the Kenyan parliamentary election, 2007 as a member of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), representing Budalang'i Constituency in the National Assembly of Kenya.[2] He was Parliamentary Secretary of the ODM from 2008 to 2013,[1] and served as Minister for Sports and Youth Affairs from 2012 until the ODM lost office in the 2013 election.[3]

In 2016, Namwamba quit ODM where he was serving as Secretary General. He felt that the party leader Raila Odinga (who had stood for the presidency twice) was no longer capable of convincing voters to support him. He joined the newly relaunched Labour Party of Kenya, and since September 2016 he has been the leader of the Labour Party.[4][5] In March 2017 the Labour Party announced that it would support the presidential candidacy of Uhuru Kenyatta in the election of August 2017.[6] Namwamba lost his Budalang'i seat in that election.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 "Ababu Namwamba Biography". Softkenya.com. 17 August 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2017.
  2. Members Of The 10th Parliament Archived 16 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine.. Accessed June 19, 2008.
  3. "Sports Bill; Namwamba's priority". Nairobi Digest. 22 September 2012.
  4. "Ababu Namwamba named Labour Party leader", The Standard (Kenya), 22 September 2016.
  5. Ndonga, Simon (26 September 2016). "Kenya: Ababu Namwamba Relaunches Labour Party of Kenya". Capital FM (Nairobi). AllAfrica.
  6. "Ababu Finally Announces Support for Uhuru". Kenyans.co.ke. 11 March 2017.
  7. "Namwamba floored in Budalang'i". Daily Nation. 11 August 2017.
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