Former LSK president demands action against Karen Nyamu for 'demeaning' Grade 10 student
Nominated Senator Karen Nyamu during a past committee session. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Former Law Society of Kenya President Faith Odhiambo has called for the Senate to take sterner action against nominated Senator Karen Nyamu over her remarks about a Grade 10 student that were inappropriate and degrading.
Odhiambo, who referred to Nyamu’s apology about the Grade 10
student who was undergoing her voluntary service scheme at the Senate as
insincere, said the senator was forced to apologise over her comments.
The senator has received an avalanche of backlash and
criticism from Kenyans over the sentiments.
In the statement posted on her X platform, former LSK
President Faith Odhiambo termed the incident, which happened on March 25 this year, as an embarrassment regarding the Grade 10 student from
Nairobi's Braeburn Garden Estate International School.
The former LSK president said, “A young female
student who went to Parliament under the School Voluntary Service Scheme to
learn was met with inappropriate and degrading remarks from Senator Karen
Nyamu. The Senate must be a safe space that affirms the dignity and future of
our children.”
Odhiambo added that the remarks by the nominated senator amounted to harassment and subjected the child to psychological abuse.
She called on the Senate to go beyond accepting what
she termed a theatrical apology and take concrete accountability measures
against the senator. The former LSK boss said Senator Karen Nyamu still
sought to justify her conduct even while purporting to apologise.
“An apology that is read and accepted in minutes is not
justice. If we are serious about protecting the girl child, then our
institutions must reflect that seriousness,” Odhiambo stated.
The UDA-nominated senator has been on the receiving end of the remarks she made one and a half months ago, when she welcomed a Grade 10
student who was in Parliament for a one-week School Voluntary Service Scheme.
During the afternoon session, Nyamu inappropriately called for clarity on what the student’s service was in Parliament, alleging ambiguity.
“Mr Speaker, probably
you should have made it clear which service to the Senate she's offering,
because I saw Senator Cherargei getting very excited when he saw a lady, and
yeah, it's good to clarify it. You might think that she's going to do you
notes. You know, it's good to specify which service she is going to offer the
Senate, so welcome very much to the Senate," Nyamu said.
The senator was forced to apologise on Tuesday this week,
but her apology fell short of what was prescribed.
“I forthwith
call upon the senator to tender the unreserved apology as earlier directed by
the chair to the Senate, the student, the student's family, and the public for
the distress occasioned by her remarks in compliance with the communication
that was issued earlier,"
Nyamu, on her part, said, “Madam Speaker, this apology
has been written for me to read, and parts of it constitute an admission to
what I have been accused of, which cannot be further from the truth. I will go
ahead and read my apology.”
“In the course of her welcoming remarks, Senator Nyamu made utterances that were disrespectful, inappropriate and fell short of the standards of decorum expected of the members of this House," Senate Speaker Amason Kingi added.
“Senator Karen
Nyamu, I want to guide you. Once again, I give you a chance to tender an
unqualified and unreserved apology in the terms that I have guided you. Senator
Nyamu proceed to tender your apology," Ms Maina said.
Nyamu, in response, said: “I hereby tender my
unreserved apology to the Senate, the student under the School Volunteer
Service Scheme, the family of the student, and the public for the remarks I
made on Wednesday, 25th March. This is dated 2027, Nishafika 2027.”
And when she concluded, the senator still went back to try to defend her words.
“Madam Speaker, I was
highly misunderstood, and I am very surprised…” Nyamu said.

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