The Kenyan Senate has impeached Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua.
The legislators voted Thursday evening regardless of a plea from Gachagua’s lawyer, Paul Muite, to postpone the proceedings.
Muite said Gachagua was hospitalised after falling very sick hours before the vote was set to hold.
The senate speaker, Amason Kingi, stated that the vice president had until 5pm local time to show up.
The lawmakers impeached the vice president after his health kept him away from the hearing.
The 59-year-old becomes the first deputy president to be impeached in Kenya’s history.
At least 53 senators voted to uphold the first charge.
The deputy president, who faced 11 charges, was impeached on five counts.
The charges include ground one of shareholding, ground four of undermining the independence of judges, ground five of the National Cohesion and Integrity Act 4, ground six of crimes under the National Cohesion Act, and ground nine of gross misconduct (public attacks on the national security intelligence service).
In June, Gachagua blamed the head of the intelligence agency for not properly briefing President William Ruto and the government over the magnitude of mass protests against unpopular tax hikes.
The vice president’s action was seen as an act of undermining the president.
In total, 281 MPs voted in favour of the ouster motion against 44. One MP abstained from voting.