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Kenya's Government
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Kenya is governed under the constitution adopted at independence in 1963.
Amendments enacted in 1964 made the country a republic within the
Commonwealth of Nations. It has a modified parliamentary form of government. The
constitution was last amended in 1997. |  |
Executive and Legislature
Executive authority in Kenya is exercised by a president—who is both
chief of state and head of government—elected for a five-year term by
popular vote from the members of the National Assembly. A vice-president
and a Cabinet are appointed by the president from members of the
unicameral National Assembly (Bunge), the legislative branch of government.
The assembly consists of 210 directly elected members plus 12 members who are
nominated by the president; the Speaker and Attorney-General are
ex-officio members. |  |
Political Parties
The Kenya African National Union (KANU) was the nation’s sole legal
political party from 1982 to 1991, though Kenya had, in practice, been
a one-party state since 1969. Opposition parties include the three Forum
for the Restoration of Democracy parties (FORD-A; FORD-K; and FORD-People),
the Democratic parties, the National Development Party (NDP), and
Safina. |  |
Judiciary
The Kenyan judicial
system consists of two major courts and several lesser tribunals.
The major courts are the Kenya court of appeal, with a chief justice
and five associate judges; and the high court of Kenya, with seven
judges. The lesser tribunals include the resident magistrates’
courts; the district magistrates courts; and the qadi courts, which
determine questions of Islamic law. |  |
Local Government
Kenya is divided into seven administrative provinces—Central, Coast,
Eastern, North-Eastern, Nyanza, Rift Valley, and Western—as well as
the Nairobi area district. Local government matters are handled by
provincial advisory councils, whose members are appointed by the
president. The provinces are broken down into some 40 districts, all
of which have local councils with administrative functions. The higher
local authorities are divided into two categories, municipalities and
county councils. Below these are various urban councils, township
authorities, area councils, and local councils. Although all these
groups are responsible to the central government, considerable local
autonomy is encouraged within the groups. Many of the councils raise
their own revenues to finance public health measures, road and
construction projects, and social welfare schemes. They also
contribute revenue to local education costs. The Nairobi area is not
included in any other district or province but has a special status
of its own. |  |
Health and Welfare
In 1999 there were 27,667 people per doctor; around 6 per cent of government
expenditure was spent on health care. The country had an infant
mortality rate of 68 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2001. |  |
Defence
In 1998 the Kenyan army had a total strength of about 20,500. The navy,
which is based in Mombasa, had about 1,200 officers and ratings who operated
coastal patrol boats on Lake Victoria and the Indian Ocean. The air
force, established in 1964, had 2,500 personnel, with 20 combat
aircraft and 24 armed helicopters. Military service is voluntary. |  |
International Organizations
Kenya is a member of the UN and the Organization of African Unity,
the Commonwealth of Nations. |
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