
Audio By Carbonatix
Opposition MPs in Kenya have boycotted the opening of the new parliament to protest against President Uhuru Kenyatta's decision to address it after a court annulled his election win.
They say that parliament should not have been convened until after the election re-run slated for 17 October.
The MPs instead joined opposition leader Raila Odinga for a campaign rally in the capital, Nairobi.
Mr Kenyatta said he still had the power to convene parliament.
"The set term of a president is embedded until a new one is sworn in as per the constitution," he told lawmakers.
"I want to assure every Kenyan and the world that every arm of government is in place and operational," he added.
Mr Kenyatta was declared winner of the 8 August poll, garnering 54% of the vote against Mr Odinga's 44%.”‹
Mr Kenyatta had dared opposition MPs to skip the opening of parliament saying that his Jubilee Party had enough MPs to carry on with parliament's activities.
Only one MP from the opposition was present, according to Kenya's privately-owned Star newspaper.
The Standard publication reports that Supreme Court judges, who traditionally attend the official opening of parliament, were absent.
Chief Justice David Maraga's office however told the BBC that the judges had not been invited.
Written judgement
The judges are expected to make public their written judgment explaining why they annulled Mr Kenyatta's win before the end of next week.
A majority of the six judges who listened to the election petition ruled that there had been some "irregularities and illegalities" in the election.
Mr Kenyatta, who has been critical of the judges, said in his parliamentary speech that their decision had overturned the voters' will.

He also repeated his strong disapproval of the ruling but said he respects it.
He said that he had a track record of respecting the justice system: "I have previously demonstrated this before, when I conceded defeat in 2002 and heeded summons from an international court [ICC ] when I knew I was facing trumped up charges."
His initial reaction to the 1 September ruling was however scathing, with him calling the Chief Justice and his five colleagues " thugs" and promising to "fix" the court after the re-run election.
He was widely condemned for the comments but he has maintained that he has a right to criticise the court.
Meanwhile, Mr Odinga repeated his threat to boycott the election re-run unless some officials of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission ( IEBC), which is in charge of elections, are fired.
He accuses them of deliberately interfering with the electoral systems to favour Mr Kenyatta.
IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati told a press briefing on Tuesday that the commission was reviewing its structures to ensure that it is ready for the re-run election.
Latest Stories
-
Don’t fall for a trap to extend your stay in office – Sammi Awuku cautions Mahama
6 minutes -
GoldBod joins national clean-up exercise, cleans Makola enclave
11 minutes -
WAFCON 2026: Tanzania aim to take the next step
12 minutes -
NACOC, GES strengthen school-based drug prevention in Eastern Region
13 minutes -
Photos: President Mahama joins National General Cleaning Exercise in Accra
22 minutes -
Mahama calls for stricter sanitation culture as Zoomlion deploys logistics for clean-up
28 minutes -
Paying for marks is corruption — Anti-corruption group tells students
33 minutes -
I’ve invested heavily in education across Northern Region – Amin Adam responds to critics over mosque project
39 minutes -
Small Scale Fisheries Academy trains 30 fishers, stakeholders in fisheries on co-management
43 minutes -
Ghana’s Black Volta gold mine standoff: How a $100m transaction ended up in London’s courts
45 minutes -
Drains are not garbage instruments— Mahama urges Ghanaians to change sanitation habits
49 minutes -
Social engineering remains Ghana’s weakest link in digital fraud fight – e-Crime Bureau Chair
1 hour -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Leading with resilience in a changing world
1 hour -
They carried us through life: Who will carry them now? A call to care for the aged
1 hour -
MMDCEs who approve buildings on waterways will lose their jobs – Linda Ocloo warns
1 hour