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Kibaki, Raila talk tough on graft

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President Mwai Kibaki meets with Prime Minister Raila Odinga at his Harambee house office, Nairobi. PHOTO/ PPS

President Mwai Kibaki meets with Prime Minister Raila Odinga at his Harambee House office, Nairobi in a previous occasion. PHOTO/ PPS 

By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU
Posted  Friday, February 5  2010 at  11:25

Education minister Sam Ongeri and his Permanent Secretary, Prof Karega Mutahi, on Friday came under pressure from the top to resign over the scandal of free school funds.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga said he had recommended to President Kibaki that the two senior officials step down. Speaking at a high-level meeting of government officials at Kenya Institute of Administration, Mr Odinga was categorical that the buck stopped with the top leadership of ministries.

“Do not pass the buck. Do not blame your subordinates. Do not blame the donors. Do not blame the press. The buck stops with you,” said Mr Odinga.

Serving the public

As he spoke, Prof Karega Mutahi sat with a side of his face buried in the palm of his left hand, perhaps aware that he was the target. “If your ministry fails, or your staff fails, you take responsibility. If you, or your ministry, lose confidence of the public, then you can no longer serve the public.”

The FPE scandal in which up to Sh100 million in public funds had been stolen, Mr Odinga said, had brought a major confidence crisis in government. He criticised Prof Ongeri and his PS for their “we did not know about it, so we are not responsible” statement, which the two made when the questions were raised over the free learning theft. “People ask how can it be? People do not believe in what the senior officials tell them,” said the PM.

In response later on Friday, Ongeri accused the PM of using the issue to demonise a section of the coalition government. He accused the PM of trying to portray PNU members as inept and corrupt. “Such a statement is not only embarrassing to come from a person of the PM’s stature but is also meant to play to the public gallery to achieve a hidden political agenda,” Prof Ongeri added.

President Kibaki and Mr Odinga told the meeting of permanent secretaries, parastatal chiefs, directors, secretaries, provincial commissioners and university bosses that they must take responsibility for scandals in government.

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No second chance

In perhaps the strongest vow to fight the vice, Mr Kibaki and Mr Odinga told the accounting officers that they ought to fight the vice or take a walk. “If you are thinking of making little money (through corruption), you should be working somewhere else, not in the government,” said President Kibaki.

The President banned the importation of expensive furniture for government offices and directed the PS’s to go for locally-made furniture to help boost job creation for the youth. “There should be no argument about that,” he said.

That officers implicated in the vice will not have a second chance in government was also clear from the President’s speech: “We’ll not allow the practice where corrupt officers are transferred from ministry to ministry to spread the vice of corruption.”

Besides, the Prime Minister sought to de-politicise the fight against corruption by having an integrity scorecard as part of work objectives for all public officers under performance contracting. The Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission was also in hot soup as Mr Odinga termed it a “parking lot of cases.” He said that a “responsible government does not wait until a KACC ruling or a court verdict.”

He added: “... prompt resolution of any charges cannot be expected at KACC under the current circumstances. Cases after cases are piling up at KACC, and the public no longer regards KACC as an effective anti-corruption instrument.” Mr Odinga designated the Efficiency Monitoring Unit, which falls under his office, to be the “neutral” investigator in government corruption.

Having learnt from the stonewalling of government departments whenever they are on the spot over corruption, like was the case with the external audit on the National Cereals and Produce Board maize scandal, Mr Odinga said a Cabinet memo from his office will create a liaison officer to help ease the work for external auditors into government’s malfeasance.

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Add a comment (40 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by jirani

    They should be long gone and to second what angel 2090 has said. Introduction of tough anti-corruption and enforcing them is the way out. we should borrow a leaf from the UK's A.R.A( Assets Recovery Agency.

    Posted  February 06, 2010 04:17 PM  
  2. Submitted by abingoben

    Mr. President and Hon. PM can you plase show us your commitment by action. We have heard enough of this in the past. Ongeri and Mutahi should not turn to PNU for protectio here. The buck stops by the them.

    Posted  February 06, 2010 02:47 PM  
  3. Submitted by harriison

    People talk, talk and talk endlessly but there is one thing people need to know about the current goverment/leadership. Corruption is more higher than during Kanu era and our leaders are dragging their feet to stop it. I stand to be corrected. This hurts too much because the leaders are aware of it and they don't want to take any action. Mere words will take us nowhere!

    Posted  February 06, 2010 01:52 PM  
  4. Submitted by yesuwangu

    Professor ongeri you are not professional in management.Stop dragging the name of coalition government or PNU leadership into your problems.Even if you did not personally take the money you should held responsible as a minister in charge.you resination is necessary for better management of FPE.They should charge you also for allowing your staff to rob the governemt small charges you were showing the press travelling charges etc.you did nothing now you use its still your problem to allow a shilling to be stolen

    Posted  February 06, 2010 12:58 PM  
  5. Submitted by labs

    Coming from the 2 leaders, sounds like a repetetive familiar Genge tune on FM Radio. We heard the same thing when Titron scandal, maize Scandal, Coffe Board Saga, NSSF Funds, Ngano Project, Grand Regency Scandal , Goldenberg saga and lately The Education Funds among many Embezlement and Unethical practices by Top leaders. Can we expect anything more or less than Empty talk?

    Posted  February 06, 2010 11:53 AM  

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