ODM removes Edwin Sifuna as party Secretary General
ODM Secretary General Edwin Sifuna during an interview on Citizen TV on July 22, 2025. PHOTO | JASE MWANGI | CITIZEN DIGITAL
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The Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has removed Secretary
General Edwin Sifuna from office with immediate effect following a National
Executive Committee (NEC) meeting held in Mombasa on Wednesday.
The meeting, chaired by party
leader Dr. Oburu Oginga, resolved that Sifuna be relieved of his duties in line
with the party constitution and applicable laws over what the committee termed
as concerns about discipline within the party’s senior leadership.
ODM Deputy Secretary General and
Busia Woman Representative Catherine Omanyo will serve as acting Secretary
General until a substantive office holder is elected.
“The NEC expressed grave concern over the rising levels of
indiscipline within the Party, particularly at the senior leadership level. The
Committee underscored that ODM is governed by its Constitution, the rule of
law, and collective decision-making through its duly constituted organs,” noted
the party in a statement read by Omanyo.
“Having deliberated on matters relating to the conduct of the
Secretary General Edwin Sifuna, the NEC resolved to remove him from office with
immediate effect in accordance with the Party Constitution and applicable laws.
Effectively, the Deputy Secretary General Catherine Omanyo will act in this
position until a substantive holder of the position is elected.”
Beyond the leadership changes, the committee adopted
resolutions earlier passed by the party’s Central Committee, including formally
mandating Oburu to spearhead negotiations on ODM’s pre-election coalition
arrangements with other political parties.
The NEC said the negotiations
would be guided by the party’s ideological foundations, strategic interests and
the aspirations of its membership.
The committee also reviewed
progress on the implementation of ODM’s 10-Point Agenda and the NADCO report,
and urged stakeholders to remove obstacles slowing reforms.
It further directed National
Assembly Minority Leader Junet Mohamed to institute mechanisms to ensure the
proposed allocation of Ksh.450 billion to counties is made mandatory in the
supplementary budget.
On human rights, the party called
on the national government to allocate adequate funds in the forthcoming
supplementary budget to compensate victims of human rights violations,
proposing that the funds be channelled through the Kenya National Commission on
Human Rights (KNCHR) to ensure transparency and accountability.
The NEC also resolved to initiate
the formal process of withdrawing from the Azimio la Umoja One Kenya Coalition,
citing what it described as sustained breaches of the coalition’s Deed of
Agreement by some partners.
According to the statement, the
move is aimed at safeguarding ODM’s autonomy, integrity and strategic
direction.
Oburu dismissed
the recent changes made by former Azimio Chairman President Uhuru Kenyatta,
claiming that ODM, as the majority share in the coalition, was supposed to have
been consulted before any decisions were arrived at.
The ODM NEC resolutions signal a
broader restructuring within the party as it repositions itself ahead of future
political negotiations and alliances.


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