Author: Margaret Kalekye

  • Covid billionaires to be prosecuted, says Koskei

    Covid billionaires to be prosecuted, says Koskei

    A multi-agency team whose responsibility is to fight corruption in the country has been formed.

    During a consultative meeting of Governance Agencies chaired by the Head of Public Service Felix Koskei, the agencies came up with a stringent collaborative working partnership to curb the vice.

    This follows President William Ruto’s renewed directive to fight corruption in the country.

    “We are all in agreement that this menace need be slayed. Nobody will be protected or victimised in this fight,” he said.

    Mr Koskei said the President has directed him to improve governance and ensure zero tolerance for corruption.

    “It is the  President’s desire and he has directed we strengthen our role without fear or favour while doing our jobs,” he said.

    Mr Koskei said no form of corruption will be tolerated in all Government ranks.

    “We want clear personal responsibility as President has directed. This will be the new approach in town,” said Koskei.

    The newly nominated Intelligence chief Nordin Haji said proper investigations and corporation will ensure successful prosecution.

    The former Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) said his work was made difficult by the former DCI George Kinoti.

    He said he has evidence on how junior investigation officers were directed to subortage his work as DPP.

    “Corruption has become systematic. We will only succeed if we respect the Constitution and work in accordance with the law,”he noted.

    Director of Criminal investigation (DCI)Mohammed Amin said his office was working closely with the office of the Director of public prosecution.

    Controller of Budget Margaret Nyakan’go requested for additional staff to the counties, noting that one officer is currently based in each county.

    Mrs Nyakan’go said many counties misappropriate funds by paying of imprest through corporations not guided by the law.

    Chairperson Public Service Commission Antony Muchiri called for a proper audit of all public servants.

    Mr Muchiri said training and monitoring of accounting officers were crucial in ensuring internal control measures.

    Mr Kosgey noted that the covid billionaires will soon be taken to court to account for the lost funds.

  • Pastor Ezekiel ordered to withdraw, amend main petition

    Pastor Ezekiel ordered to withdraw, amend main petition

    The Mombasa High Court has declined to issue any order that would impede ongoing police investigations into Pastor Ezekiel Ombok Odero’s church’s involvement in the Shakahola massacre.

    Pastor Odero had made an application seeking to “prohibit” state agencies “from closing or shutting down his New Life prayer centre and church ministry”.

    The state, through ODPP’s Senior Prosecution Counsel Maureen Ayumba and AG’s Senior Litigation Counsel Emmanuel Makuto, opposed the application claiming that allowing the petition would jeopardize DCI’s ongoing investigations.

    Lady Justice Olga Sewe directed Pastor Odero to withdraw his petition in its entirety or consider amending it.

    The matter will come up for mention on 13 July 2023.

    The development comes as televangelist Ezekiel Odero accompanied by his lawyers presented himself at the Directorate of Criminal Investigation headquarters in Mombasa County where he had been summoned.

  • Pathologists conduct autopsies on 34 Shakahola bodies

    Pathologists conduct autopsies on 34 Shakahola bodies

    Postmortems conducted Monday on 22 Shakahola victims at the Malindi Sub-County Hospital Mortuary could not establish the exact cause of death.

    Chief Government pathologist Johansen Oduor, said the bodies were severely decomposed.

    Addressing the media, Odour said they had so far examined 34 bodies including 12 children.

    This brings to 79 the number of autopsies done since the second phase of the exercise for 129 victims resumed last week.

    Among the 34 were 21 females and 10 males as well as three whose sex could not be determined.

    He said the team, which had taken a weekend rest due to exhaustion, was unable to determine the causes of death for 20 of the bodies while twelve displayed features of starvation.

    “As for the cause of death, we found that many were very badly decomposed, we were unable to get the cause of death for 22 of them while 12 had features which looked like starvation,” he said

    He said since many of the bodies were unidentifiable, the team took samples for further DNA testing.

    The cult leader Paul Makenzi of Good News International Church who remains in police custody is said to have lured his followers to death through starvation.

    It is likely that the postmortem exercise could end this week, paving the way for a resumption of the exhumations within Mr. Mackenzie’s 800-acre farm in Shakahola, which Interior Cabinet Secretary Kithure Kindiki suspended last week.

    Mr. Kindiki said there were still many more graves on the farm, including about 10 mass graves that had already been identified.

  • Ex-Mungiki leader Maina Njenga released on bail

    Ex-Mungiki leader Maina Njenga released on bail

    Former Mungiki sect leader, Maina Njenga, has been released on a cash bail of Ksh50,000 after he denied seven criminal charges levelled against him.

    Njenga was Monday arraigned at the Nakuru Law Court to answer seven charges including being a member of an organized criminal gang.

    He was represented in court by a team of lawyers including Ndegwa Njiru, Narc-Kenya party leader Martha Karua and Prof. George Wajackoyah.

    Njenga denied the charges and was released on a bond of Ks100,000 with an alternative cash bail of Ksh50,000.

    Principal Magistrate, Kipkirui Kibelyon, warned parties in the suit not to comment on the case.

    The former Laikipia County Senatorial candidate is also alleged to have been found in possession of government store wares, narcotics, and a military backpack strap which is the property of the National Police Service that is suspected to have been stolen or unlawfully obtained.

    he case will be mentioned on 20th June 2023 for pre-trial.

  • Kephis official charged with forging academic certificates

    Kephis official charged with forging academic certificates

    A senior Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS) has been charged with forging four academic certificates to secure a job.

    Mr Zinje Jumaa Mwadama, an assistant inspector with the parastatal was Friday arraigned before the Milimani Anti-Corruption Court Chief Magistrate Felix Kombo where he faced four counts of forgery.

    This follows his arrest Thursday by officers from the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC).

    It was established that some of the certificates were awarded by nonexistent colleges.

    “ He was charged with forging four (4) academic certificates to secure his job purporting them to have been issued by various academic institutions, including some that do not exist anywhere in the world,” said EACC.

    The Commission has lately expressed concern over the widespread forgery of academic certificates.

    The anti-graft agency regretted workers were forging academic certificates to secure employment and job promotions, especially in the counties.

    “This trend is appalling and if untamed, it could adversely affect the national economy and compromise the integrity of Kenya’s education system which is currently rated highly at the global and regional levels,” EACC said.

    EACC said it is investigating over 150 cases of forgery of academic certificates held by persons serving in the public service while 13 cases are pending before court.

  • Staff transfers to continue despite resistance, Lands PS Korir says

    Staff transfers to continue despite resistance, Lands PS Korir says

    Lands and Physical Planning Principal Secretary Nixon Korir has said that reforms being implemented at the State Department are yielding positive results.

    The PS said reforms including resolving pending issues with the Ardhisasa platform, fighting land cartels through collaboration with the DCI and improving service provision through the revamping of the customer service desks will contribute to enhance the performance of the department.

    PS Korir spoke against the backdrop of a renewed pushback against transfers being implemented at the State Department which are meant to improve service delivery.

    The PS maintained that the ongoing reforms including the staff transfers will continue no matter the amount of pushback.

    He made the statement as it emerged that some of those affected in the transfers have been strategizing to mobilize powerful forces to fight on their behalf while some have moved to court and served the State Department of Lands and Physical Planning with suit notices.

    The court cases have raised eyebrows because it has been observed that Ardhi House employees, unlike other Government workers, have a tendency to file cases at the Industrial Court to resist routine transfers.

    While speaking during a radio interview recently, the PS said all civil servants agree and sign up to work in any station in any part of the country and there are no special categories.

    “No one is immune to transfer. Transfers are mandatory for any civil servant, so when you see people going that far to block their transfers there is something there and that’s how cartels work,” said Korir during the radio interview.

    While the transfers have touched different cadres and departments including clerks, records officers and registrars, it seems that the transfer of some senior Land Administration staff has elicited the strongest pushback. Some of the staff transferred from the Land Administration department in Nairobi have served in the same position for the last 15 years.

    The transfers are part of a raft of reforms which the PS is implementing to improve staff morale and service delivery. The customer service desks on the ground floor of Ardhi House are being revamped to enhance service provision and reduce congestion. Unlike in the past, long queues and the habit of brokers loitering within Ardhi House, order has been restored and visitors to the Government building are served quickly.

    The State Department is also working on resolving a few pending issues with the Ardhisasa platform. Ardhisasa is an online platform that allows citizens, stakeholders and interested parties to interact with land information held and processes undertaken by the Government.

    In early April, Cabinet Secretary Zachariah Njeru and PS Korir chaired a meeting that brought together department staff, Law Society of Kenya, Institution of Surveyors of Kenya, Kenya Bankers Association and the Association of Private Surveyors of Kenya.

    The meeting held at the Geospatial Data Center in Ruaraka, Nairobi, agreed to form a technical team representing all the groups to audit the platform and work together in formulating solutions.

    The technical team has already resolved several issues and is expected to present its final report to the CS and the PS within the first two weeks of June.

    To make the platform work at its optimum, the Ministry has taken over the running of the system which was previously managed by officers from the security sector.

    PS Korir said the State Department is now working hard to educate the public on the use of Ardhisasa because it was realized that one of the biggest problems has been limited public awareness.

    PS Korir has also pushed land registries across the country to be treated as critical infrastructure that should be given enhanced security.

    In March, Internal Security PS Raymond Omollo issued a directive designating all land registries as vital installations.

  • Government to double school meals budget

    Government to double school meals budget

    The Principal Secretary (PS) State Department for Basic Education, Dr. Belio Kipsang, has announced that the National Government, will in the next Financial Year 2023/2024, double funding for schools’ meals programme, from Ksh 2 billion to 4 billion and work closely with County Governments, in order to increase the feeding and retention of children in schools.

    He indicated that food and nutrition play a very critical role in the wellbeing of the learners in terms of the development of their cognitive abilities.

    The PS was speaking when he presided over the launch of the School Milk Programme in Uasin Gishu County.

    He alluded that the overall call for the school feeding programme, is to support the government towards attaining universal primary education and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals, which is in line with the Kenya Kwanza Education Charter.

    “The school meals programme is a powerful way of incentivising our young ones into enrolling in our schools and increasing the numbers of those who are in school and reducing those who are out of school,” he said.

    He noted that the school meals programme, had become an important strategy for reaching to the marginalized and the vulnerable communities and those who are in the buffets of poverty and the urban poor.

    PS confirmed that the National Government provides porridge in the early learning institutions in the informal urban settlement, to support learners.

    Dr. Kipsang said that it is a collective responsibility to partner at all levels of government, to make sure that the children are able to be in school as he reaffirmed the government’s commitment and determination, to provide school milk in all the ASAL areas, informal settlement areas, special needs children and sub urban areas.

    The Education PS  noted that, to ensure sustainability of the feeding programme, the government, through the Ministry of Education, will work together with the governors on what is called the Home-Grown School Meals Programme, where the local communities will provide the necessary ingredients such as milk and grains, to facilitate the programme.

    The Home-Grown Programme will benefit both the education and the agricultural sectors.

    “For instance, our local farmers in Uasin Gishu are dairy farmers, so we are buying milk from our farmers and therefore giving them an income. The household is benefiting twice by getting an income from milk and also benefiting by their children getting a meal in school,” explained the PS.

    He called on governors across all the 47 counties to support the initiative, which is a win-win for the agricultural and the education sectors, noting that it is key for it will increase enrolment, stabilize the learner’s attendance to school, increase gender parity because children of both genders will be in school and improve transition and at the same time contribute to improve the health and nutrition sector for the children.

    On the agriculture side, it will link the school meals to the local agricultural production, it will also increase the smallholder farmers’ access to the school feeding market that is there.

    PS noted that the programme will encourage and improve production practices among the small-scale farmers and increase direct purchase for the smallholder farmers.

    “I would also want to encourage our other governors, that let’s work together, in area where you can provide fortified porridge, let’s do it, if you are in area where you can provide milk let’s do it so that at the end of the day, we are supporting our local communities, to be able to move on,” he said.

    He commended the step the County Administration has made to provide school milk for the ECDE schools in the County, which he said, will increase retention, transition and ensure there is success in access to quality education.

    “Children at this particular age are at the stage of fastest growth and development of their brain and for the brain to develop, we need proper nutrition and what they would get from this milk, will be able to assist them to be the future that they would be,” said. Dr. Kipsang.

    Calling on the other governors to emulate the step governor Chelilim had made in introducing school milk, the PS reiterated the importance of investing in foundational learning, which is the ECDE, noting that it serves to reduce in future the investment government will put in higher levels of learning.

    “Research has confirmed that when we give a proper foundation, when we invest well in ECDE and foundational learning, the cost of education in the future, will go down by up to 15 percent,” he noted.

    “By doing so, you are investing and making it easy for the rest of us who manage education at higher level from primary, secondary and into the university to a very substantial extent to reduce the investment that we shall put in the next level of learning, because you would have facilitated that particular aspect,” he added.

  • Attack on Isebania police station leaves five protesters dead

    Attack on Isebania police station leaves five protesters dead

    A protest against insecurity in Kuria West, Migori County turned deadly after five people were shot dead by police.

    Mourners carrying the body of a businessman killed by robbers a week ago stormed Isebania Police Station, Migori County where they attacked the police officers.

    According to a police report, the violent rioters with crude weapons overrun police officers manning the gates.

    Their attempts to torch the station and free suspects in police custody is what prompted the officers to open fire.

    “A group of rioting mob escorting the body of one Kikuyu male from St. Akidiva Mindira Mabera hospital mortuary attacked the station while in a pickup full of stones, matches and pangas. They smashed the windows of the station armoury, OCS office and other offices with stones. They started destroying the gates of the cells demanding the release of all in custody” the report reads.

    Police say the attack was premeditated.

    “After overrunning the officers manning the report office, armoury and cells, this prompted the officers to defend the forceful rescue of prisoners in custody and theft of firearms by use of live ammunition. Unfortunately, this resulted in the death of four unidentified goons” the report states.

    Kuria West OCPD Cleti Kimayio confirmed the incident adding the bodies had been moved to St. Akidiva Mindira Mabera Hospital Mortuary.

    A police officer is nursing injuries.

    Reporting by Celestine Mwango

  • Over 15,000 litres of illicit brew destroyed in Nyahururu

    Over 15,000 litres of illicit brew destroyed in Nyahururu

    Administrators in Nyahururu have destroyed over 15000 litres of illicit brew.

    The latest raid brings to 100,000 liters netted so far in the county since a nationwide crackdown on illicit liquor and psychotropic substances was launched early this year.

    The brew was being brewed at a temporary distillery inside Shamanek forest, on the banks of Shamanek river.

    The officers combed the forest and found two metallic boilers used for distilling.

    Also recovered in the forest were 30 metallic and plastic containers, 250 litres each, buried underground.

    The containers had raw brew locally identified as Kangara used to make chang’aa.

    The authorities led by Maina village Senior Chief, Waithaka Muraya also spilled 150 litres of chang’aa destined for sale.

    The area chief and his assistants put illicit brewers on notice saying their days are numbered.

    “We have been engaging in a cat-and-mouse game with the brewers here. Every time we raid their operation bases, they change tactics and boiling areas. Recently, they have found refuge in the forests but we are going after them in their hideouts until we paralyze their operations”.

    “We must ensure that killer brews are a thing of the past, especially in this area of Nyahururu. We thank the public for always alerting us on time and giving us pointers to where the illicit brews are being prepared,” said Muraya.

    The administrators also called for a multi-agency approach to win the war against unregulated brews.

    He said concerted efforts bringing together stakeholders including the Kenya forestry officers would bear much fruit.

    The area chief however pointed out that the judiciary was the weak link for imposing lenient fines and sentences hence thwarting the fight against alcoholism.

    Reporting by Lydia Mwangi

  • Government pledges to upgrade school infrastructure

    Government pledges to upgrade school infrastructure

    The Government will intensify funding in schools to upgrade their infrastructure and human resource.

    President William Ruto said this will enhance learning experience and improve student living.

    “Better learning facilities will also help deliver a more holistic education,” he noted, adding that learning environment matters.

    He said the Government is committed to building a modern, dynamic and inclusive education ecosystem that is student-centred.

    Such a system, he added, moulds minds, shapes character and transforms young people into agents of progress.

    The President stressed that Kenya’s education system must equip “our children” with the skills and values they need to thrive.

    “Our goal is to create an education system that matches requirements of the market and prepares them for the threats and opportunities of the future.”

    He spoke on Thursday during the commissioning of a new dormitory and the laying of the foundation stone for a new Science Laboratory in Nairobi School, Nairobi County.

    President Ruto said the Government will do what it takes to achieve modern-day education.

    “We are investing in new technologies, developing new curricula and improving teacher training to ensure that our children receive world-class education,” he observed.