Quantcast
Channel: The Star, Kenya
Viewing all 63229 articles
Browse latest View live

IEBC crisis persists as Chebukati suspends Chiloba yet again

$
0
0

IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati has suspended CEO Ezra Chiloba yet again,  hours after the latter was reinstated by the court.

The chairman in a letter seen by the Star cites the ongoing vetting of procurement officers as ordered by President Uhuru Kenyatta.

Uhuru on June 1 said the officers be subjected to polygraph tests, being part of efforts to end corruption in his administration.

Chiloba was reinstated by the Employment and Relations Court on Thursday pending the determination of his suit challenging his initial suspension from the polls agency.

Read: Court allows Chiloba to go to work, says IEBC decision illegal

But Chebukati said a meeting the commission held after the ruling resolved that the CEO be suspended pending the completion of the audit.

"The commission has resolved to suspend you (Chiloba) with immediate effect pending the audit of all major procurements relating to the August 8 general elections and the repeat elections held on October 26, 2017."

The chair, in the missive, says the suspension is drawn from Clauses 3 and 5 of Chiloba's employment contract which states that the CEO is responsible for the prudent management of the commission's finances.

"The issues under investigation are weighty and touch on your role as the accounting officer. The outcome of the in-depth audit will inform any further action by the commission," Chebukati said.

He further states that Chiloba acted in violation of his contract citing a clause that he says bars the CEO from suing IEBC while in employment and also from disclosing official information.

"Based on the foregoing reasons, you are hereby suspended with immediate effect from your duties for a period of three months," Chebukati told Chiloba.

Read: CEO Chiloba suspended, IEBC in chaos

The latest development mirrors the upheavals at the electoral agency in the wake of boardroom wars that have persisted since last years' vote.

Three commissioners namely Margaret Mwachanya, Vice Chair Consolata Maina, and Paul Kurgat quit the polls body citing difficulties in working with the chairman.

Commissioner Roselyn Akombe was the first to quit days before the repeat election saying the commission was not adequately prepared for the same.

Their exit left only Chebukati, Boya Molu, and Abdi Guliye – a number that has been argued cannot conduct substantive business at the commission.

Among the issues, Chiloba cited in his suit at the Labour court was the commission's incapacity to make key decisions, including his suspension.

Justice Stephen Radido, in his ruling on Thursday, said: "In the view of the court, it would not be proportionate and in public interest to uphold a decision taken without legal or contractual foundation by an employer."

Click here for the latest political news

 

 


Kenyatta: Ruto and I to face lifestyle audit

$
0
0

President Uhuru Kenyatta has ordered a lifestyle audit of all state officers, including himself and and Deputy President William Ruto.

They will be followed by all past and current 47 governors, Cabinet Secretaries and other state officers in an elaborate new plan to enhance the fight against corruption.

Uhuru said no one will be spared in the fight against graft.

He spoke yesterday when commissioning the Miritini-Mwache-Kipevu link road in Miritini.

“We will ask you questions on how you got your wealth. If you don’t have answers, there is someone in Kamiti waiting for you. He will give you the answers instead,” Uhuru said.

The President said the lifestyle audit will be key among other measures put in place by the government to deal with graft.

“Transparency is when all those in authority declare what they own and how they got their property,” Uhuru said. On Wednesday, the President issued an Executive Order requiring all government entities and publicly owned institutions to make public the full details of tenders and awards from July 1.

The publication will allow members of the public to access the information, including details of the items or services purchased, contract prices and the particulars of the suppliers including owners, directors and beneficial ownership.

Yesterday, Uhuru warned politicians against politicising the war on graft, adding that no one will be allowed to hide behind religion, tribe or race once involved in graft.

“Mwizi ni mwizi" ("A thief is a thief"). Whether you are Kikuyu, Kamba, Kalenjin or Digo. You stole alone, you will be jailed alone,” he said.

The President pledged to stop theft of public money, saying it has cost the country fortunes.

 “I swear to God, this will end,” he said. The President shook hands with Mombasa Governor Hassan Joho, previously a fierce critic, and declared they will work together. Uhuru said there is a lot to be achieved with leaders working together.

He said insults and chest-thumping "don’t help. They only bring problems.”

“We must serve Kenyans equally. But we will only do so if we as leaders can sit down and talk out our issues first,” he said. Joho, who is the deputy party leader of ODM, said he is eager to work with the President but said he will still raise issues that need to be raised.

“We will work with you. We will work with your government to uplift the lives of the people of Mombasa and Kenya,” Joho said.

On a light note, he said he was at first scared that he was being followed by the GSU on his way to the function, only to learn that the GSU were actually easing his movement.

He was referring to March 13, when the GSU put him under house arrest to prevent him from attending launch of the Mtongwe Ferry by the President. Joho and Uhuru had been criticising each other and Joho had complained the national government was taking credit for projects launched by counties.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clinic at centre of botched breast boost surgery closed

$
0
0

The clinic in which a botched breast enlargement operation was performed on a 33-year-old patient who later died has been

closed.

June Wanza visited Surgeoderm Health Care, located inside a former residential house on Theta Lane in Kilimani, Nairobi, last

week.

Relatives said the surgeons harvested fat from her lower abdomen and filled her breasts to firm them up.

However, they allegedly punctured her intestines in the process.

A family member said the intestines leaked waste into her blood stream, causing a life-threatening infection called sepsis.

Days after being discharged, Wanza complained of abdominal pains.

She was admitted at the Nairobi Hospital Intensive Care Unit, where she died last Thursday.

Wanza was married with three children.

The Star visited Surgeoderm yesterday and found it locked.

security guard who did not want to be named said it was closed on Wednesday.

“They even put a sign on the door indicating they have closed till Monday. Unfortunately, that sign is no longer there,” he said.

Leading plastic surgeon Stanley Khainga, who reportedly owns the clinic, did not respond to calls to confirm when they would reopen.

Another guard told the Star they had simply closed for the Ramadhan weekend and would open next week.

Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Board CEO Daniel Yumbya yesterday said Surgeoderm will submit its testimony and surrender Wanza’s medical files next week.

The board will form a preliminary inquiry committee to look at its submission and that of Nairobi Hospital before delivering its verdict.

Nairobi Hospital submitted its report on Wednesday.

Child sex for a dollar on Kenya's palm-fringed beaches

$
0
0

Sixteen-year-old Fatma doesn't bat an eyelid when asked what she has been doing since dropping out of school two years ago.

"Sex," she replied, giggling into the layers of her bright red headscarf. "It's easy to get men. I find them at the market, concerts, weddings and on the beach."

"Most girls in my village do it. I can get Sh100 ($1) to Sh500. Sometimes a tourist will give Sh1,000 ($10)."

Welcome to Kenya's idyllic palm-fringed beach resort of Diani: where the sands are pearl white, the waters clear turquoise - and you can have sex with a child for a dollar.

From Thailand and the Philippines to the Dominican Republic and Brazil, sex tourism is common in developing countries where poverty and discrimination push millions of women into commercial sexual exploitation.

Read: Brazilians fight sex tourism and child prostitution

Kenya is no different.

But the extent to which child prostitution is not only prevalent, but also socially accepted, in towns and villages along the East African nation's coast has left local authorities and charities struggling to halt the illicit trade.

According to the latest data available, one in three girls aged between 12 and 18 in Kenya's coastal area is engaged in casual sex work, a 2006 report by the UN children's agency Unicef and the Kenyan government states.

That is an estimated 15,000 girls.

While these figures date back over a decade, little has improved, say campaigners and government officials. A lack of development, few job opportunities and weak law enforcement has, in fact, allowed the trade to thrive.

"It's getting worse. In about 90 percent of families in a village, you will find at least one girl who is a victim of commercial sexual exploitation," said Athuman Jiti, a public administrator in Kwale county, where Diani is located.

"Sometimes it's the parents telling them to go out and bring home food, sometimes the girls do it on their own - the problem is, it's highly normalised."

FERTILE GROUND

Offering everything from big game safaris to sandy white beaches, Kenya attracts more than a million visitors annually from countries such as China, Germany, France and Britain.

Tourism is a vital economic pillar, providing millions with employment and accounting for about 10 percent of the country's gross domestic product.

But in cities and towns such as Mombasa, Diani, Kilifi and Malindi dotted along the Indian Ocean coastline, foreign and Kenyan visitors have for years stoked demand for sex with young women - and minors.

Kwale county - where almost half the population lives on less than $1.50 a day - is fertile ground for exploitation.

Deep-rooted sexism ensures deep-seated and daily discrimination, while engrained customs from polygamy to early marriage leave girls and women disproportionately vulnerable.

Some children are trafficked from other areas of Kenya expressly for sexual slavery, but most victims are locals who are pushed into the trade more subtly, say campaigners.

"Often friends or family members are involved in it and they initiate them into it, or they are approached by a man who gives them attention and a few hundred shillings after sex," said Dorcas Namwaya Mwachi from the Coalition on Violence Against Women, a charity working in communities around Diani.

"Their families are poor and cannot afford to look after them, so the girls continue to do it to get money to contribute to the home, or buy themselves small things like a new dress, or even sanitary pads, which they cannot otherwise afford."

Many girls know the risks - pregnancy, violence, disease - but without other options, continue to sell sex, Mwachi added.

More on this: Lobby asks state to end sex tourism

Also read: Gay sex rampant in Malindi resorts

COMMUNITY COMPLICITY

Even on a weekday evening in off-peak season, the scene at one of the popular tourist nightclubs on the Diani Beach Road is as cliched as it is true.

On the dance floor, adolescent girls gyrate to the rhythmic beat of Congolese rumba as two elderly European men in tropical shirts and Bermuda shorts watch on. Within an hour, the men leave with the two girls - both look barely 16.

No one raises an eyebrow - not the waiter who collects their bill, nor the bouncers who open the door as they leave, nor the taxi driver waiting outside.

Tour operators say it is difficult to crack down as the girls often lie about their age and carry no identification.

"The tourism sector has taken some steps to stop child sex tourism, but they tend to find a way around it," said Francis Mkala from the South Coast Association of Local Tour Operators.

"The hotels, for example, have a code of conduct banning guests from taking minors to their rooms. But the tourists are now renting out private villas, where they take the children and carry out their business undisturbed."

The child sex trade has become so widely accepted that girls no longer just have sex with tourists for money, but also with local men for anything from a ride home to a pair of shoes, or even a bag of sugar, say campaigners and officials.

Edward Wanjala, a probation officer in Kwale's Msambweni constituency where Diani is located, says prosecutions are few due to complicity within the community.

"Everyone is benefiting in some way - the families get some money from the girls, the bars and nightclubs get customers because of the girls, the taxi drivers get something for taking the customers to the girls," said Wanjala.

"The social acceptance means people don't even see it as a crime, and the girls being exploited do not see themselves as victims. So who will report the case? Who will testify?"

Raising awareness about the harmful impact of child prostitution is not enough, he admitted, adding that vocational training and jobs were needed to curb trade.

Eighteen-year-old Saumu, who began selling sex at 15, holds out little hope of a better future: she has a 3-year-old son from one client, and is eight months pregnant by another.

"I had wanted to become a doctor, but my mother couldn't pay the school fees so I dropped out and started going with men for money," she said, sitting in a community centre in Kombani town, 12 km (7 miles) from Diani.

"It's not where I wanted my life to be. But when there is no option, you do it and slowly it becomes a habit." 

Click here for the latest political news

Corruption threatening to engulf government, my reports ignored - Edward Ouko

$
0
0

High-level corruption across all levels of government in Kenya threatens the integrity and basic functioning of the state, the Auditor General told Reuters on Thursday.

The media have reported on dozens of graft scandals involving public officers conspiring to steal from state coffers since President Uhuru Kenyatta took office in 2013. Some officials have been tried, but none have been convicted.

"If we don't watch out, it will engulf us," Edward Ouko told Reuters in an interview, describing the level of graft as shocking.

His audits suggest that collusion by civil servants and other officials to steal billions of shillings annually is coordinated at a high level, he said.

More on this: Parasatals in eye of a storm as Uhuru escalates war on corruption

Also see: Kenyatta: Ruto and I to face lifestyle audit

Ouko, an accountant appointed in 2011, said that overhauling a Byzantine procurement and payments system that is easily tampered with is central to halting the looting.

The mandate of his office is to promote accountability and transparency in the public sector.

He expressed frustration that the recommendations he made in 2014 for reforming that system were ignored by Parliament and never implemented.

"It makes me angry that the weaknesses which we had revealed about IFMIS' potential abuses were not acted upon," Ouko said, using the acronym for the government's payments system, the Integrated Management Information System.

Kenya is currently being roiled by a new spate of scandals involving bogus tenders and suppliers that allegedly resulted in the theft of hundreds of millions of shillings by state officials from several government bodies.

Dozens of officials and business people are in custody over theft at one agency, the National Youth Service, which aims to train young people and help create jobs.

The auditor said he produced a report for Parliament on a scandal that emerged at the same agency in 2015 in which he documented how roughly Sh1.6 billion ($16 million) "had gone out of the window" and named officials and companies involved in the phoney contracts.

Parliament studied the report for months but to his knowledge no action was taken to tackle what Ouko identified as the enabler of the theft: faulty procurement and payments systems.

"My report was completely ignored," he said.

Read: Keep EACC, replace Wabukala with Edward Ouko to end corruption - Wandayi

Nearly two dozen officials were ultimately tried over the alleged theft of a fraction of the total documented by the auditor. All were acquitted earlier this year.

Kenyatta, who was elected for a second term after a protracted elections season last year in which more than 100 people were killed by police during protests, has spoken out recently against graft and urged the judiciary "to ensure fair trials and justice".

"The tone is correct right now," said Ouko.

He expressed scepticism, however, that the various institutions involved in the investigation and prosecution of corruption-related crimes would achieve justice or reform the system.

He said this was because some of the institutions, such as the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, are poorly run with too wide a remit to operate effectively and also because of threats from vested interests.

In 2014, Ouko said, lawmakers launched an investigation into him that led to allegations of procurement fraud when he introduced software that allowed his office to track suspect transactions through IFMIS.

"The intention was to remove me", he said, explaining that the investigation highlighted the resistance to change from some camps.

Related: There's no evidence to prosecute corruption cases, DPP tells Senate

Also read: EACC files on three governors not actionable due to gaps - DPP

Click here for the latest political news

Stop ethnic profiling, Kenyan Somalis can do business anywhere - Duale

$
0
0

National Assembly Majority Leader Aden Duale has refuted claims that most Somali businessmen are involved in illegal trade.

Duale said this on Friday, while noting that Muslims support President Uhuru Kenyatta’s directive for public servants to undergo lifestyle audits.

The Garissa Town MP noted that Islam does not condone the illegal accumulation of wealth.

"Just like [other people], Kenyan Somalis are free to do business across the country, so that should not be used to profile them," he said.

"Kenyan Somali’s thrive in business across the country because they are hardworking. Continued ethnic profiling, by propelling propaganda that we are taking up the CBD, should stop. 

“As we tighten the fight on corruption, let us all remember that every family has evil elements. This is what the government should crackdown on."

Duale said the community will continue to invest in businesses in the Nairobi central business district and will not apologise for that.

“We have a right under the Constitution ... those contravening the law are individuals, not Muslims or Somalis, who must be dealt with in accordance with the law," he said.

"We are no longer in 1963. We shall be in the forefront to implement Uhuru’s directive to fight graft," he also said, adding state officers must explain how they accumulated their wealth.

More on this: Kenyatta: Ruto and I to face lifestyle audit

Muslims during prayers at Sir Ali Muslim Club in Nairobi to mark the end of the holy month of Ramadhan, June 15, 2018. /COURTESY

Duale spoke as Muslims prepared for Idd-Ul-Fitr celebrations on Friday, following the end of the holy month of Ramadhan. He was one of the many who gathered at Sir Ali Muslim Club in Nairobi for prayers.

The lawmaker asked Muslims to carry forward the lessons they learned during the period and said they should be commended on uniting to break the fast. There were disagreements in the past on the sighting of the moon.

"This show of unity must continue going forward," he said.

Related: Uhuru praises Muslims for inspiring devotion, asks for prayers

Ramadhan is the ninth month of the Islamic lunar calendar. It begins with the sighting of the new crescent after which all physically mature and healthy Muslims are obliged to fast for the complete month.

Between dawn and sunset, the faithful abstain from all foods, drinks and conjugal relations as an act of worship and obedience to God. 

This is with the exception of the underage, those on a journey, the sick, the elderly, menstruating women as well as expectant and breastfeeding mothers.

The spiritual aspects of the fast include added emphasis on refraining from slander, lies, obscenity and other profane acts.

Fasting is a universal custom that is common in many faiths.

More on this: Keep lessons learnt beyond month of Ramadhan

Click here for the latest political news

Arati backs war on corruption, claims MP behind contraband sugar

$
0
0

The war on counterfeit products will "wipe out an entire generation" if not taken seriously, Dagoretti North MP Simba Arati has said.

Arati said this on Friday while urging President Uhuru Kenyatta to crack the whip on individuals behind runaway corruption.

He cited the confiscation of contraband sugar in Eastleigh, Nairobi, and claimed a "well-known parliamentarian" was linked to it.

"Sisi tunajua na tuko na ushahidi kwamba hiyo sukari ni ya mmoja wetu katika bunge (We know and have evidence showing that the sugar belongs to one of us in Parliament)," he told his constituents.

"It is unfair for parliamentarians to betray the electorate, who braced the morning cold to vote for them, by selling expired goods to them."

He added: "Hatuwezi kukubali muamke asubuhi kutupigia kura kisha tupitie mlango wa nyuma kuwauzia bidhaa ghushi zilizo na madini kama mercury. Sasa nyinyi wote mkikufa nani ataamka kupiga kura ule wakati mwingine (We cannot let you wake up very early to vote for us and then use the back door to sell you products with elements such as mercury. If you all die, who will vote for us next time)?

"We would rather eliminate individuals with the intention of killing us all."

The MP did not give details and the investigation has not been completed.

Inspector General of Police Joseph Boinnet earlier said that three Somalis were the suspects in the illegal trade. They were taken to court, where the prosecution asked for more time to finish investigations.

Interior CS Fred Matiang'i assured that all those behind the crime will be punished.

Details: Matiang'i at war with contraband traders selling 'chemicals, poison' to Kenyans

Arati asked the DCI to speedily reveal the owners of companies in Eastleigh said to be transporters of the sugar. He said that once the report is handed to the President, he and others will demand its tabling in Parliament where "it will not be business as usual".

Arati also backed Uhuru's directive for lifestyle audits on all government officers including MPs.  He demanded stringent measures by the government against those found to be behind corruption deals.

Arati's sentiments came after National Assembly Majority leader Aden Duale refuted claims that most Somali businessmen are involved in illegal trade

Duale said this earlier today, while noting that Muslims support Uhuru's directive for public servants to undergo lifestyle audits.

The Garissa Town MP noted that Islam does not condone the illegal accumulation of wealth.

Read: Stop ethnic profiling, Kenyan Somalis can do business anywhere - Duale

Click here for the latest political news

Uhuru NIS tracking, Cuban doctors, Water towers : Your Breakfast Briefing

$
0
0

NIS tracks lifestyles of top state officials agents

President Uhuru Kenyatta has directed the National Intelligence Service to put top government officials, especially those handling corruption cases, under closer surveillance. READ

Why Cuban doctors may not treat Kenya’s malaise

Kenya’s healthcare system has been a headache for successive governments since Independence. The founding fathers identified it as one of the major challenges facing the nation. READ

Project fights drug abuse and crime spree at the Coast

In the past, Mombasa was known for its coolness. Residents used to walk around in the middle of the night without having the fear of being robbed or attacked. READ

Agency begins process to gazette additional 70 water towers

The government is in the process of gazetting additional 70 water towers. The Kenya Water Towers Agency said on Friday it will soon roll out a Sh2 billion programme to protect the water catchment areas. READ

Rotich defies MPs proposals to cut Judiciary budget

Treasury CS Henry Rotich ignored MPs proposals to cut the budgets of state departments for the 2018-19 financial year. In the budget read out on Thursday, Rotich snubbed House recommendation to reduce the Judiciary’s budget by Sh2.5 billion. READ

 

Click here for the latest political news


Uhuru orders NIS to track lifestyles of top state officials

$
0
0

President Uhuru Kenyatta has directed the National Intelligence Service to put top government officials, especially those handling corruption cases, under closer surveillance.

Many senior officials in the anti-corruption chain itself are under intensified surveillance and Big Brother is watching virtually all officers handling the NYS case, the Star was told yesterday.

Those being monitored include Judiciary staff ranging from judges to magistrates and court clerks, investigating officers at the Directorate of Criminal Investigations and Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission and prosecutors in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.

Read : Uhuru orders lifestyle audit of state officers, says will take lead, Ruto to follow

The President wants anyone taking bribes or being influenced in any way to compromise the fight against corruption arrested, charged and dismissed from work altogether.

“The President is not taking chances with this fight. He has resourced key institutions fairly well so as to facilitate their work,” said a senior official at Harambee House.

“He has made it clear that those who have stolen must face the law, money must be recovered and proceeds of corruption repossessed. He has personal faith and trust in some of the people driving the fight,” the official in the presidency said.

The NIS, according to various sources, is briefing the President regularly on the response to his onslaught on corruption.

When he spoke on Thursday in Mombasa upon his return from overseas, the President rebuffed claims that had surfaced while he was away that the crackdown was targeting certain individuals.

“A thief is a thief. Whether you are Kikuyu, Kamba, Kalenjin or Digo. You stole alone and you will be jailed alone,” he said. He proceeded to direct that a lifestyle audit be carried out on all state officials beginning with himself, Deputy President William Ruto, Cabinet Secretaries to governors, all the way down.

 In the case, 51 people including Gender PS Lillian Omollo and NYS director general Richard Ndubai, who stepped aside, are facing numerous charges regarding the loss of nearly half a billion shillings by the National Youth Service.

Milimani chief magistrate Douglas Ogoti denied the suspects bail, citing threats to national security. He said the offences affect the country's economy.

On Thursday, the President swore that he will end corruption that is costing the country a fortune.

“I swear to God, this will end,” he vowed. “We will ask you questions on how you got your wealth. If you don’t have answers, there is someone in Kamiti waiting for you. He will give you the answers instead,” Uhuru said.

“Transparency is when all those in authority declare what they own and how they got their property,” he added.

The lifestyle audit is the latest in a series of radical measures announced by the government to deal with graft.

On Wednesday, the President issued an Executive Order requiring all government entities and publicly owned institutions to make public the full details of tenders and awards from July 1. The order was echoed in the Budget Statement by Treasury CS Henry Rotich on Thursday.

It requires all tender information to be published — the names of the bidders, the bid sums, the winning firm and details of the directors, as well as the beneficial owners.

See this  : Uhuru issues Executive Order compelling state agencies to publish details of tenders

Rotich also announced that the government will set up a Common User Agency which will set standard prices for common supplies in a bid to eradicate the overpricing of goods supplied to government entities.

The government will also set up a e-procurement platform effective January 2019, to eliminate human contact in the processing of tenders which provides the opportunities for corruption.

On Madaraka Day, the President had announced that public servants will be vetted and they will have to take polygraph tests.

Three days later, procurement officers and accounting officers in government were sent on compulsory leave for a month and asked them to submit a raft of documents to the Head of Public Service to be vetted afresh.

The government termed the move the first phase of an exercise that is expected to be cascaded across all levels of the national and county governments.

Undercover agents have been collecting intelligence on the procurement officers which the vetting team will use when they are called up for interview.

It is understood that the President will issue a new executive order next week to explain how lifestyle audits will be carried out.

He will also state who will undertake the audit, the extent of the audit and how long it will take.

Lifestyle audits are often used as a tool by government to investigate claims and or suspicion of corruption.

Besides the obvious question of how one acquired their unusual or mismatched wealth and lifestyle, it is understood that the government will be seeking to determine remittance of t taxes.

Three years ago the EACC team led by Mumo Matemu tried unsuccessfully to introduce lifestyle audits as part of the fight against corruption.

Then vice chair Irene Keino and and deputy CEO visited a number of countries to learn how the audit is done. But when they briefed their colleagues at the commission, the idea was shot down by a senior official, according to EACC sources.

Weeks after he succeeded Matemu as chairman in 2016, Philip Kinisu announced that the commission was planning to subject public officers to a lifestyle audit to combat graft in the country. He promised to formulate an appropriate plan to vet workers in all the 47 counties.

But the same forces at EACC and outside fought the audit plan and conspired to kick Kinisu out in a well-executed plan. He resigned in disgrace in August 2016, four months after he had assumed office, after his company Esaki, was linked to the first NYS scandal.

Interestingly, it was his fellow commissioners who were on the front line, piling pressure on Kinisu to leave, urging him to take personal responsibility for Esaki's dealings with NYS.

They warned that he faced suspension unless he voluntarily stepped aside to pave the way for investigations.

Read : Uhuru orders procurement heads in all ministries to step aside

Click here for more political news

Lifestyle audit will 'expose us', Murkomen jokes on Uhuru's call for wealth review

$
0
0

Lifestyle audit will expose some of us who are enjoying perceived status of rich men, Elgeyo Marakwet Senator Kipchumba Murkomen has said.

This was in reaction to President Uhuru Kenyatta's orders that NIS conducts a lifestyle audit for public servants, including himself and Deputy President William Ruto.

Uhuru said all state officers will be asked to explain the source of their wealth adding that all those found to have plundered public coffers will be put to task to explain the source of the same.

More on this: Uhuru orders lifestyle audit of state officers, says will take lead, Ruto to follow

"I have only one problem with lifestyle audit. We will 'lose' our helicopters, highrise buildings, NYS tenders etc. There is nothing a Kenyan voter hates than a poor politician," Murkomen said via twitter on Friday night.

"Just let us fake it till we get it."

Murkomen's post, which was seen as a sarcastic talk, elicited mixed reactions with his followers saying he should stop his actions.

"Sarcasm sometimes falls flat when overpowered by truth my friend," @I_am_Gathoni said.

@chokemandada1 said: "Tell him the sarcasm is out of context..nikama joke haichekeshi watu."

"We saw your prank from very far. In anycase, a successful crash in one of your so called helicopters would reduce corruption in Kenya by 70 per cent with the right occupants inside....of course assuming there are no survivors," @KiokoMathew3

@OozBurning said: "The devil is a liar......now I see somebody who wants the NCPB,NYS scandals to continue,he doesn't want the audit so much as he wishes farmers to continue suffering, May God punish you for trying to protect your corrupt wealth at the expense of Kenya."

Others users said the handshake between Uhuru and Opposition leader Raila Odinga was taking a different direction.

"But this time round after the handshake which his boss was against, Uhuru seems to be very serious with this issue," @lilechikenya said.

@Maggietenacious said: "The end times are here with you.I applaud President Uhuru for that action...Hata anachelewa.Kipchumbu we Kenyans will fund our person as long as he/she has the qualities and we give out the Manifesto yetu vile tunataka."

@LipukaS said: "This lifestyle audits ought to cover from 1963 and June, 2018. Ama namna gani my friend?"

"I will be proud since most of you will tell us how you acquired a 1.2 billion chopper with 1.2 million salary per month. Karma," @oywaya7 said.

Last week, Uhuru issued an Executive Order requiring all government entities and public owned institutions to publish full details of tenders and awards from the 1st of July 2018.

The publication will allow members of the public to access the information including details of the items or services purchased, contract prices, and the particulars of the suppliers including owners, directors and beneficial ownership.

Read: Uhuru issues Executive Order compelling state agencies to publish details of tenders

Click here for the latest political news

 

[VIDEO] Lifestyle audit should include Jomo Kenyatta, MP Sudi tells Uhuru

$
0
0

Kapseret MP Oscar Sudi has backed President Uhuru Kenyatta's directive on lifestyle audit of civil servants.

However, the second-time legislator challenged the president to also include his late father Mzee Jomo Kenyatta in the wealth review.

Jomo was Kenya's first president until his death in August 1978. It remains unclear if the dead or former presidents will also be subjected to the audits.

The president, when he gave the order, said Deputy President William Ruto and himself will also face the vetting.

Read: Uhuru orders lifestyle audit of state officers, says will take lead, Ruto to follow

"We are with the President on this, in fact, more than 100 per cent. We ask everyone to submit to the audit including political leaders and their families."

"We will start with Mzee Jomo, then follow with him and the rest of us," Sudi said adding that he is ready to speak of what he owns since his days as a tout.

He spoke during the burial of Raymond Kipchumba - a GSU officer, at Chepkoiya village in Uasin Gishu county on Saturday.

Rift Valley MPs present said they were ready and willing to provide crucial documents showing how they acquired their wealth.

Sudi said he will account for what he owns as well as what his father, who worked as a cook at Moi University, owns.

His Kesses counterpart Dr Swarrup Mishra said the audit will help in tackling runaway graft in the country.

Mishra said civil servants should not undermine Uhuru’s efforts to fight graft. "Let us submit to the audit instead of planning how to avoid telling the truth."

He said that it is the obligation of all Kenyans, irrespective of their status or political affiliation, to ensure public funds are safeguarded.

"As politicians, we should support all efforts to fight graft so that we grow our economy to create jobs, improve food production, housing and general welfare of Kenyans," Mishra said.

Sudi further said the fight against corruption will enable the Jubilee administration to implement Uhuru’s Big Four agenda.

"No one should have fears over the lifestyle audit if they acquired what they have genuinely," he said.

The call for wealth audit has arguably unsettled some politicians.

Elgeyo Marakwet Senator Kipchumba Murkomen on Friday joked that "the audit will expose some of them who are enjoying a perceived status of rich men."

"I have only one problem with lifestyle audit. We will 'lose' our helicopters, highrise buildings, NYS tenders etc. There is nothing a Kenyan voter hates than a poor politician."

Read: Lifestyle audit will 'expose us', Murkomen jokes on Uhuru's call for wealth review

Already, the NIS is tracking the source of wealth owned by key state officers, especially those handling corruption cases.

Those being monitored include Judiciary staff ranging from judges to magistrates and court clerks.

Investigating officers at the Directorate of Criminal Investigations and Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission and prosecutors in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions are also on the radar.

More on this: Uhuru orders NIS to track lifestyles of top state officials

In response to Sudi, Nyeri Town MP Ngujiri Wambugu said his Kapseret counterpart is 'not speaking for himself'.

"Oscar Sudi doesn’t speak for himself. So when he says that the lifestyle audit must start from Uhuru's father - he’s speaking for others. Personally I think others is 'tanga tanga squad'."

"So, what they need to tell us is; What do they expect us to do if we are to find that Jomo was corrupt? If Jomo was corrupt, do they now believe that they have the right to be corrupt too?," he asked on his Facebook page.

He added that those calling for the audit on Kenyatta's wealth should not imagine they "can threaten Uhuru with such stupid demands."

"Let them know that lifestyle audits are simple; we check what you have now, and what you had before you got into public office. If the figures don’t add up .. you are corrupt! Period."

Click here for the latest political news

 

 

 

 

Where's Sh1bn for floods? 5,000 marooned Tana Delta locals cry out to state

$
0
0

A major humanitarian crisis has hit residents of Kipini West ward in Tana Delta sub-county after the area was completely cut off by floods.

Emergency response teams have approximated that over 5,000 people have been displaced and have no access to food and health services.

This followed after the only road heading to the area was cut off, making it hard for rations to be distributed in the area.

Children stand near some of the flooded houses at Handaraku village which is among the worst hit by the flooding crisis in Tana Delta, June 16, 2018. /ALPHONCE GARI

The area has also been affected by a cholera outbreak, which has been worsened by the lack of medicine at the health facilities.

Locals are forced to use herbal extracts from Neem tree leaves for their survival.

Areas worst hit by the disaster are Handaraku, Odole, Samicha, Mwanja, and Kikono, all of which have turned into an island.

Some of the  flooded house at Odole village which is among the worst hit by the disaster in Tanadelta. Victims have no access to relief food, drugs, and sanitation on June 16. Currently there is an outbreak of water borne diseases./ALPHONCE GARI

Victims, who were living in camps, were forced to return to their homes for lack of basic provisions like blankets and tents. The homes are surrounded by water.

Journalists who toured Odole and Handaraku areas on Saturday came face-to-face with the disaster, which is getting worse each day.

Locals said they have not received any support from the county or national government for the past two months since they were displaced.

The said only Red Cross supplied them with a few non-food items "which could not assist all the victims hence forcing them out of the camps."

A number of them returned to areas near their flooded homes where they have built temporary shelter.

At Odole village, which has 365 households, residents are surrounded by water and have no sanitation facilities.

Some of the  flooded house at Odole village which is among the worst hit by the disaster in Tanadelta. Victims have no access to relief food, drugs, and sanitation on June 16. Currently there is an outbreak of water borne diseases./ALPHONCE GARI

Bakari Wario Sangale - a headman at Odole, said residents are suffering and do not have any support from the authorities.

"We have not received any relief food. Up to date, there is no intervention. We need food and drugs. The dispensaries are empty," he said.

Currently, the IDPs said they are forced to buy a kilogram of unga at Sh100 due to the high costs of transporting goods to the area.

Ari Iyesa, a Handaraku village elder, said they fear that the outbreak of cholera could lead to deaths if quick action is not taken.

The affected region is not very far from the area where river Tana meets the Indian Ocean.

Area MCA Musa Wario, who was present during the tour, said he wondered where the Sh1 billion allocated by the government to assist flood victims went.

The money was to mitigate effects of floods in Tana River, Kilifi county, and Nakuru - following the Solai Dam tragedy.

He blamed both the county and national government for neglecting the flood victims in the ward.

"There is an outbreak of Malaria and typhoid. One has to travel to Oda, which is 20 kilometers away, at a cost of Sh1,600," he said.

Wario called on the government to intervene to prevent loss of lives "even if it means distributing relief food and drugs using helicopters."

The affected families are expected to stay in the flooded area for another three months as the delta is flat and ocean water level is rising daily.

Equipment worth Sh2 million donated to Murang’a disabled

$
0
0

People living with disability in Murang’a have received equipment worth Sh2 million from the National Fund for the Disabled of Kenya (NFDK).

The equipment, including wheelchairs, tricycles, crutches, artificial limps and white canes, were distributed by the funds officer Tabitha Mihari on Friday.

NFDK also distributed sewing machines, barber kits and welding machines.

Mihari said the machines will boost incomes of small scale traders.

“We donate equipment every year. Those living with disability should pick forms from their chiefs and apply

for the equipment,” Mihari said.

Samboja won’t pay Sh541m pending bills

$
0
0

Taita Taveta Governor Granton Samboja has refused to pay more than Sh500 million pending bills inherited from his predecessor.

Payment is not justified because a report has revealed there’s no documentation, he said on Wednesday on receiving the report.

The county will forward the Task Force and the Pending Bills Committee reports to the government agencies for advice and possible action, including prosecution.

The Pending Bills Audit committee was set up to investigate and verify the pending bills, following the varying amount raised by the task force report that indicated a pending bill of Sh978,716,286 contrary to the Sh724,065,736 that was presented by the Assumption of Office Committee.

They were also to advice the Governor on the appropriate actions to undertake.

Samboja attributed some malpractices to limited policy and legislation.

“Weak systems and processes are a result of poor policies and regulations. As I receive this report, I undertake to ensure that as a county and in consultation with the assembly, we explore avenues of quick policy formulation,” he said.  

The report states that Sh541,052,588 could not be confirmed for any payment as there were no documents forwarded to support the alleged pending bills.

Samboja said his administration will pay Sh21,552,528 pending bills that are supported by documents.

“We shall not pay out the Sh541,052,588 as recommended by this committee, because it is evident no paperwork and documentation has been produced by the contractors and suppliers to support the allegations of the existence of such bills,” the Governor said.

The Governor promised to makechanges in his administration to guarantee public confidence in management of public resources.

“A total of Sh21,552,528 qualify to be paid and Sh271,860,813 can be paid, subject to provision of the missing documents. It should be noted Sh85,000,000 had been paid out prior to the commencement of activities of this committee,” team chairperson Leonard Kalama said.

Elders draw List of Shame of VIP Mwea landgrabbers

$
0
0

Embu elders have prepared a ‘list of shame’ of prominent people they accuse of landgrabbing in the disputed Mwea Settlement Scheme.

Nyangi Ndiiriri Council of Elders chairman Andrew Ireri yesterday said the beneficiaries include MPs, civil servants, prominent farmers and traders — not deserving squatters. They are to present the list to the authorities today.

Ireri said 30  high-ranking citizens are among the more than 9,000 ‘undeserving’ recipients who received allocations.

Some of the 54,000 acres are registered in the names of spouses, children and or clans, he said.

In April, the government suspended resettlement and called for a review of allocation following consultations between Cabinet Secretaries Farida Karoney (Lands) and Fred Matiang’i (Interior).

This came a day after clashes that left at least four people with gunshot wounds. One victim, Kennedy Muvevi, died days later.

Ireri said the individuals on their list used their influence to illegally acquire large parcels. He said many squatters who have lived in the scheme for decades were left out.

Their position contradicted the county government’s.

Embu Land executive Josphat Kithumbu has previously denied some individuals own more than six acres. The scheme was fairly demarcated, notices were published in the media and the public and  government officers were involved, he said.

Kithumbu said all deserving individuals were considered. The complainants are self-seekers, he said.

Politicians and people who have been farming free tracts fanned the violence for their selfish interests, Kithumbu said. They want things to remain they way they are so they can continue raking in profits, he said.

Ireri said they will present the list to Interior CS Fred Matiang’i, his land counterpart Farida Koroney, the Attorney General, the National Land Commission, the Embu county commissioner and the National Intelligence for a probe.

He said most squatters were denied land after it was allotted to more than 9,000 people and title deeds provided before the controversial subdivision began.

The elders want fresh and fair distribution. Squatters must be considered before anyone else and the public must be involved, they said.

Dissatisfied squatters protested against the allocation and tried to block attempts to have beneficiaries shown their land. They confronted police officers who were escorting beneficiaries.


Western miller boss arrested in probe of contraband sugarr

$
0
0

Four companies in western Kenya are under investigations after police found 130,000 bags of suspected contraband sugar at the weekend.

A manager of one of the sugar milling factories was arrested and is expected before either a Webuye or Kakamega court today.

The senior factory manager will face charges of among other things improper storage of goods.

Officers from the Flying squad unit under the command of Musa Yego raided three go downs in the region and recovered the 130,000 bags of sugar.

The sugar, which is suspected to have been imported from Brazil, was being repackaged into paper bags similar to those used to package locally manufactured sugar.

 The repackaged sugar is then released into the market with labels as those of locally manufactured sugar.

Yego declined to comment on the latest burst by the police when reached for a comment yesterday.

Sources within the Western region police command said some sugar barons in the region had imported close to 340,100 bags of sugar and that the search for the unrecovered bags had been spread across western Kenya.

The recovered sugar includes bags of raw sugar (from Brazil) and others from Sugar millers in Western Kenya, the sources said.

The investigators said samples of sugar had been submitted to the Government lab for testing and analysis after past cases of harmful chemicals were reported by the Government lab.

“What we see here is a case of unscrupulous traders bringing in sugar from Brazil and repackaging it to look like locally manufactured sugar “said a senior officer in Western Kenya.

“We are also looking for a director of one of the companies linked to the importation of sugar from Bbrazil “said the senior officer.

The Directorate of Criminal investigations has stepped up the hunt for Sugar imported from Brazil and which is said to have found its way into the local market.

 Tonnes of the contraband sugar have been recovered from several go-downs spread across the country including Nairobi, Ruiru , Western Kenya and Kitui.

Last week , Interior CS Fred Matiangi visited DCI headquarters, Kiambu road where he inspected close to 50,000 tones of sugar found in a godown in Ruiru.

1,000 bags of 50 kilogram’s of contraband sugar was y recovered from a godown in Ruiru.

The sugar was recovered by officers from Parklands DCI who raided the warehouse on the Eastern-bypass.

A prominent Kirinyaga businessman said to be the owner of the warehouse was arrested. The recovery comes barely a week after the same team recovered 1,500 bags of sugar said to be unfit for human consumption.

The previous recovery happened in Eastleigh, Nairobi. The operation was headed by Parklands DCI boss David Chebii. He has been coordinating operations against contraband goods.

Investigators have since expanded the probe on the illicit sugar to a warehouses in Mombasa where unscrupulous traders are believed to have stored the sonsignment.

 

 

 

 

 

Elders give Muriithi mandate to unite communities, push growth

$
0
0

Laikipia Governor Ndiritu Muriithi was installed as a senior elder by four communities on Saturday.
The communities are Kikuyu, Turkana, Kalenjin and Maasai.
The colourful and elaborate cultural ceremony was conducted in Rumuruti, Laikipia West subcounty, in a secluded place on the banks of River Ngare Narok.
The elders mandated him to improve development, and promote peace and harmony among communities in the region.
Kikuyu elders from Murang’a, Kiambu, Nyeri, Nyandarua, Nakuru and Uasin Gishu were the first group to instal Muriithi as a senior elder of the Agikuyu Kiama Kia Ma. They gave him the traditional symbols of authority during the day-long ceremony.
They adorned the governor with Kikuyu traditional regalia, handed him a special staff and a three-legged traditional stool to symbolise leadership, authority and unity of communities living in Laikipia.
“You are now in another rank, where you can engage elders and participate in national ceremonies on behalf of the community,” elder Dominic Ng’era said.
Elders from Turkana, Kalenjin and the Maasai communities also installed the governor as a senior elder by handing him their cultural items. They included a sword, traditional stool, a fly whisk and staff, which also symbolise leadership and authority.
 The items, they said, are for courageous leaders and have a lot of meaning within leadership of the community.
“We are empowering you to go out and serve Laikipia people, especially in ensuring security and sustenance of your people,” David Chesang from the Kalenjin community said.
Muriithi said he will use his new position to promote mindset change and self-belief among Kenyans.
“We have a lot of locally manufactured products and as elders, we have the responsibility of changing the entrenched belief that imported products are better than ours,” he said.

Use of untreated lake water blamed for diarrhoea cases

$
0
0

Hundreds of Kasarani residents in Naivasha have asked the government to help solve a water problem after cases of diarrhoea were reported.
This has been attributed to the use of untreated water from Lake Naivasha after electricity supply to the boreholes were disconnected over Sh270,000 debt. The problem started last week.
Health worker Jane Wairimu yesterday said the shortage had affected the area public health centre.
She said they have recorded cases of children with diarrhoea, but said the cases were not serious.

Ruto’s allies want Uhuru family audit

$
0
0

Deputy President William Ruto's allies are jittery over the lifestyle audit ordered by President Uhuru Kenyatta and are pushing for similar scrutiny of the President's family.

The effort to expand the scope of the lifestyle audit, and look back as far as 1963, is seen as a strategy to undermine or scuttle the new anti-graft war, which Ruto's lieutenants have publicly protested is selective and targets the DP's allies.

Ruto lieutenant Kapsaret MP Oscar Sudi wants the lifestyle audit ordered by the President to include an inspection of the wealth acquired by Uhuru's father, founding President Jomo Kenyatta.

The statement by the two-term lawmaker is considered a dig at the President, since his family is among the wealthiest in Kenya.

“I saw the the other day that the President said we should do a lifestyle audit. We are supporting the President 100 per cent. Even me Sudi, I should be audited from the time I was a tout till now when I am MP. They should also audit my father when he was a cook at Moi University till now. Everybody should accept that audit,” he said on Saturday.

“Let it [the lifestyle audit] start with Jomo [Uhuru's father] himself, then come right up to you [Uhuru]”.

More on this: Kenyatta: Ruto and I to face lifestyle audit

Also see: [VIDEO] Lifestyle audit should include Jomo Kenyatta, MP Sudi tells Uhuru

Ruto is among the Kenyans who have amassed great wealth within a relatively short period.

It is understood that Ruto has considerable interests in the hotel industry and owns the Weston Hotel, Nairobi. He is also a major shareholder in the Africa Merchant Assurance Company, Amaco, and is said to have recently acquired controlling shares in a local multimedia company.

Ruto also owns the Easton Apartments in Eastlands, flats in Ongata Rongai, a palatial home in Eldoret and tens of acres countrywide.

According to the Salaries and Remuneration Commission, the President and Deputy President earn monthly gross salaries of Sh1.4million and Sh1.2million, respectively.

Apart from Ruto's allies, a section of ODM lawmakers and civil society activists want Uhuru to fully implement the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Report as part of his anti-graft war

“Now that the President has directed a lifestyle audit for everyone, including himself and Ruto, can he also direct that the TJRC report be implemented fully? Stop selective wars against corruption,” the ODM Senator Ledama ole Kina of Narok told the Star on Sunday.

According to the TJRC report, Jomo Kenyatta's regime was riddled with land grabbing perpetrated by him for his benefit and that of his family members.

The report said between 1964 and 1966, one-sixth of European settlers’ lands that were intended for settlement of landless Africans were cheaply sold to the President, his wife Ngina and his children.

“Kenyatta himself appears to have benefited immensely from irregular allocations of land that should have benefited those who lost land to Arab and British colonisers,” the TJRC report states.

“By 1965, Kenyatta is reported to have been using his position as president to buy numerous settler farms in the White Highlands and also excising and allocating to himself and family government forest land in Kiambu.”

Opposition leader Raila Odinga has thanked Uhuru for accepting a lifestyle audit and dared DP William Ruto to undertake a lifestyle audit in what is likely to renew their political rivalry.

Using an analogy, Raila said there are some prey that cannot be hunted by dogs and urged the President to use a lion.

Speaking in Mombasa yesterday, Raila hit out at an unnamed politician — a clear reference to Ruto whom he accused of roaming the country aimlessly and dishing out big money to become President in 2022.

Read: Uhuru orders NIS to track lifestyles of top state officials

Also read: Parasatals in eye of a storm as Uhuru escalates war on corruption

Raila said the politician was clearly living beyond his means because his salary is known.

“Wacha kurandaranda hapa na pale, kutangatanga ati wewe utakuwa rais mwaka 2022,” ("Stop roaming around aimlessly that you will be President in 2022).

“How do you know [that you will be President?" It's Kenyans who elect their President. Then you pour money here and there and then say 'we do a lifestyle audit'.”

But yesterday in Kiambu Ruto's allies told off the former PM.

Three governors and more than 10 MPs said Raila, whom they described as “a leader with bad manners”, should stop arrogating to himself the duty to speak for Jubilee.

They spoke at the Pentecostal Church of East Africa and St Benedict's Catholic Church in Thika, Kiambu, attended by DP Ruto. They described Raila as an insincere leader who wanted to wreck Jubilee the way he has ruined opposition parties he has been in.

The lawmakers, who issued a statement, were Governors Ferdinand Waititu (Kiambu), Granton Samboja (Taita Taveta), Muthomi Njuki (Tharaka Nithi) and Deputy Governor James Nyoro (Kiambu).

Others were Senate Deputy Speaker Kithure Kindiki (Tharaka Nithi), Kimani Ichungwa (Kikuyu), Githua Wamashukuru (Kabete), Patrick Wainaina (Thika Town), Dindi Nyoro (Kiharu), Wanjiku Kibe (Gatundu North), Moses Kuria (Gatundu South), Ng’ang’a King’ara (Ruiru), Mpuri Apuri (EALA), Gathoni Wamuchomba (Woman Rep, Kiambu), Jude Jomo (Kiambu) and Ndia’s George Kariuki.

“I want to tell Raila Odinga not to extend the confusion and wrangles, which have torn NASA into tatters, to Jubilee because we are organised as far as leadership is concerned,” Kindiki said.

The Star has established that there is a cold war between associates of Uhuru and Ruto.

This stems from concerns that the President is no longer committed to backing  Ruto for the top job in 2022, as he had promise.

The unease rocking Jubilee since the March 9 handshake is hushed, as most leaders adopting a-wait-and-see strategy.

On Friday however, Nyeri Town MP Ngunjiri Wambugu declared that Mount Kenya does not owe any political debt to Ruto.

“So let’s understand something. Ruto and the Kalenjin did not support Uhuru Kenyatta for nothing. They did it because Uhuru Kenyatta made certain promises to them and they believed him. Uhuru then delivered on these promises. Kalenjin interests have been taken care of since Uhuru got into office,” Ngunjiri argued.

A week ago, Nandi Senator Samson Serargei alleged that there could be a political witch-hunt in the graft war intended to derail Ruto's journey to State House.

Related: Raila urged anti-graft war long before Uhuru

Click here for the latest political news

Raila dares Ruto, Probing poison sugar, City Hall wars: Your breakfast briefing

$
0
0

Ruto’s allies want Uhuru family audit

Deputy President William Ruto's allies are jittery over the lifestyle audit ordered by President Uhuru Kenyatta and are pushing for similar scrutiny of the President's family. The effort to expand the scope of the lifestyle audit, and look back as far as 1963, is seen as a strategy to undermine or scuttle the new anti-graft war. READ

Raila dares Ruto on lifestyle audit

Opposition Chief Raila Odinga has dared DP William Ruto to undertake a lifestyle audit in what is likely to renew their political rivalry that thawed a few weeks ago. Last Thursday, President Uhuru Kenyatta called for scrutiny of state officers' wealth, saying he was ready to take the lead. READ

Four western kenya companies, factory under probe for contraband sugar

Four companies in western Kenya are under investigations after police found 130,000 bags of suspected contraband sugar at the weekend. A manager of one of the sugar milling factories was arrested and is expected before either a Webuye or Kakamega court today. READ

Government eyes a cut of employees salaries to mitigate rising housing deficit

Second among President Uhuru Kenyatta's Big four plan, Affordable Housing targets to make 500,000 new home owners in the next 5 years. In his budget speech last week, Treasury CS Henry Rotich an amendment of the Employment Act for both an employer and employee shall contribute to the National Housing Development Fund. READ

Speaker, Clerk clash over investigations at City Hall

Nairobi County assembly speaker Beatrice Elachi and clerk Jacob Ngwele have fallen out over investigations at the assembly.  The purchase of a Sh150 million Karen residence for the speaker has also put them at odds. READ

Click here for the latest political news

Viewing all 63229 articles
Browse latest View live