Inside the structure of bipartisan
After the group negotiated and signed the framework, the bipartisan dialogue committee is scheduled to resume discussions.
Otiende Amollo, the co-chair of the Bipartisan Dialogue Committee, said in a statement that the group is prepared to go quickly.
Other factors include issue statements, the location of the negotiation, cost payment, formalization, dispute resolution, deliverables, and timetable.
The group will deliberate on the safeguarding of consensus, protocol, adjournment, suspension, and dissolution of the talks.
Others include debates of media, broadcasting, and public participation.
Both parties put their disagreements on hold, according to Amollo on Wednesday.
The organizational structure includes the members of the secretariat, specialists, and technical teams.
We clarified and resolved the pertinent concerns, and we created an opportunity for them to be laid forth. Azimio and Kenya Kwanza have both put their issues on the side, he said.
The bipartisan discussions are currently being contested by a Jubilee section, which wants them to be suspended until the party is represented.
In a letter dated May 9, secretary general Kanini Kega stated, “We write to protest the exclusion of Jubilee Party in the proposed membership of your committee.”
Kega said after Keynan stepped down following Azimio leadership’s protest over his inclusion, Jubilee remained without a representative.
Inside the structure of bipartisan
However, Amollo said Jubilee is still in Azimio and should address its issues with the coalition.
Kenya Kwanza replaced Keynan with Saku MP Dado Rasso (UDA) after Azimio claimed that the Eldas MP could not sit in the talks as Jubilee is a member of Azimio.
According to Rarieda MP Otiende Amollo, Jubilee is a member of the Azimio and should address any issues with the coalition.
His comments come in response to complaints from a division of the former ruling party about being excluded from the bipartisan negotiations.