Lawrence Simiyu Sifuna (23 January 1946 – 3 December 2023) was a Kenyan politician who was Member of Parliament for Bumula, the first MP of that constituency.[1] He was first elected to the Kenyan Parliament on 8 November 1979 in the then larger Bungoma South constituency. Sifuna was re-elected in 1983 too. He lost to former North Eastern Provincial Commissioner Maurice Makhanu in the 1988 Kenyan general election after Bungoma South constituency was renamed Kanduyi. Sifuna recaptured the seat during the first multi-party 1992 Kenyan general election on a Ford Asili ticket.
Sifuna went to Sang'alo School and Nalondo Intermediate School before he moved to Mariri College in Uganda, where he sat for the Cambridge General Certificate of Education (CGCE) examination. He was a fully trained chartered accountant, a Fellow of Chartered Accountants (FCA) and a Fellow of the Association of International Accountants (FAIA). Sifuna was a household name in Bungoma County popular for defending the welfare of sugarcane growers.
On the national stage, Sifuna was remembered as one of the left-wing members of parliament in the 1980s (a.k.a. the seven bearded sisters) who persistently attacked Attorney General Charles Njonjo and government policies that clamped down on the basic human rights of Kenyans. Others included Koigi wa Wamwere, James Orengo, Abuya Abuya, Chibule wa Tsuma, Onyango Midika, Mwashengu wa Mwachofi and Philomena Chelangat Mutai. They were part of the larger group that fought for Kenya's second liberation, Omumutilu, Kenya's Second Liberation Fighter and a member of the bearded sisters.
Sifuna died on 2 December 2023, at the age of 77.[2]
References
edit- ^ KUSIMBA, SIMBI (12 December 2002). "Kenya: Bumula Poised for a bruising two-horse race". AllAfrica. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
- ^ Former Bungoma South MP Lawrence Sifuna dies