Let me focus on the substance:
1. 400 000 backlog cases:
On its own it appears to be a failure. Until you discover that there were over 1 million such cases by the time he took over. Many of these cases had accumulated under the tenure of ALL past Chief Justices.
By 2014 Mutunga could report that the backlog had reduced from 1m to 485, 976. I do not have the latest figures but that should be under 300K cases.
Crucially a survey (
Survey of Case Backlogs in the Country) was commissioned to determine the cause of these delays and it was established that:
- Parties being unprepared accounted for 44.78 percent of case delays
- courts not being in session (20.22 per cent)
- unpreparedness of probation officers account for 18.34
- lawyers (10.93 per cent).
From the above you can see that the direct role of the courts in this is less than that of the parties. There must be a balance between expediency and justice and that may be the reason for the courts being slow to hurry the parties. I can only speculate.
2. not encumbered by political considerationPolitics never stopped tying up the judiciary. Whether is Njoki moonlighting as Uhuru's consigliere or one or other High Court judge deep in politics. However I don't see how that whether present or absent could have affected Mutunga's job performance.
What did he fail to do given the political goodwill you allude to? I see him having done what he could without overturning the apple cart.
Just to recapitulate: We all saw what happened when he tried to stop Njoki's 30 minute injunction which she certified urgent but set the hearing weeks away! If you thought it was not politics, why then did Ruto block the publication of the vacancies in the Kenya gazette?
3. He was given 17B every year and what does he have to showThey would need to provide five times that amount to bring the courts to the level you are suggesting. There is also the Absorption Capacity which has dogged Kenya for the last 20 or so years following SAPs by the World Bank. I believe he has established the foundation upon which more money can be requested and absorbed in one financial cycle.
It was not about improving ALL courts. There were priority areas as result of limited funds. I am quite satisfied with the prioritization.
4. On 200,000 remanded prisonersHow is the judiciary responsible for that? Only yesterday you wanted MPs to stay remanded for a long time and were disappointed that they made bail. You are not alone in looking at remand as a punitive measure. It should be and it is to a point. Anything else has the potential to provoke the collective and popular perception of justice.
I do however think it should change. Kindly lobby your MP to amend the laws so that one's sentence runs from the minute he is arrested. All such time served must then be deducted from the overall sentence. Mutunga could not single handedly amend the laws to empty prisons.
I also refer you to the survey I mentioned earlier.
5. He never ledPerhaps if you pointed at specific failings of or lack of leadership on his part it would help understand your meaning. Mutunga had is style which some like Njoki underrated but found themselves being stung. Leadership is not being overbearing and imperious complete with the regalia and nyayo stick to boot. Like Nyerere he was simple down to earth but aware of the power he wielded and exercised fairly. If you want a character like Miller why not, but then look at how his silence got the judges and magistrates working.
More lame excuses for somebody who was president of the judiciary and had basically a free reign. He unlikely UhuRuto is not encumbered by political consideration. He had a clean slate. Judiciary was vetted afresh.But what did he do? He never led. He was more interested in the rhetoric and reading speeches all over the world.
The man is a big failure. He was given 17B every year and what does he have to show. Backlog of 400,000 cases, corruption in courts is at same level,our courts are far from being modernized, more than 200,000 kenyans are in prison for crimes such as being drunk and disorderly and those prisons he keep sending people are in deplorable conditions.
http://www.judiciary.go.ke/portal/assets/filemanager_uploads/reports/National%20Case%20Audit%20Report.pdf