150 State accountants moved in corruption fight

Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • The officials must report to their new stations not later than December 3, 2018
  • Procurement and accounting officers were in June asked to hand over to their deputies and subject themselves to fresh vetting
  • The majority of the officials have received their letters to report to work, while others are awaiting communication.

At least 150 procurement and accounting officers have been moved to new work stations in a swoop the Treasury said is aimed at taming corruption in government departments and State–owned firms.

The officials must report to their new stations not later than December 3, 2018, the Treasury says in an internal memo dated November 2.

Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge said the deployments, which have seen some procurement, finance officers and accountants moved to satellite stations outside the capital Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu cities, are meant to dismantle cartels in line ministries.

'CARTELS'

“It is also our way of contributing to the fight against corruption. Our aim is to destabilise and dismantle entrenched cartels in line ministries,” Dr Thugge said in a short text message on Tuesday.

The Treasury’s director-general for accounting services and quality assurance, Benard Ndung’u, says in the memo that an accounting officer who was serving in Narok East will move to Gatundu North while another who was in Bondo will be deployed to Rachuonyo South.

The notice also names an official who has been serving in Murang’a South but has been transferred to Mbeere South. His counterpart who has been serving in Keiyo South will go to Nandi South.

Dr Thugge said the transfers started about three years ago with the aim of ensuring accountants and procurement officers do not stay long in one location to develop corruption networks.

Procurement and accounting officers were in June asked to hand over to their deputies and subject themselves to fresh vetting as part of President Uhuru Kenyatta’s renewed fight against corruption following his re-election in the October 26, 2017 poll.

The officers were required to submit information on their assets, liabilities and previous work records to State House through Head of Public Service Joseph Kinyua.

Mr Kenyatta said the officers would also take polygraph or lie detector tests in the vetting exercise that was meant to clamp down on corrupt civil servants.

'FRESH VETTING'

The civil servants were required to submit to the vetting committees certified copies of their mobile money statements, including those of their spouses for the past six months and driving licence numbers.

The officers were also required to submit KRA PIN, ID card numbers, passport numbers, email addresses, and mobile phone numbers among other personal details details.

About 400 procurement and accounting officers, who were subjected to fresh vetting, have been cleared and told to resume duty.

The majority of the officials have received their letters to report to work, while others are awaiting communication.

Only a few officials from the group are yet to receive any communication after several inconsistencies were found in their documents.

“The Presidency has forwarded the list of officers, who successfully went through the vetting exercise and were cleared. The purpose of this letter therefore, is to forward the following names of officers under your entities who are expected to resume duty with immediate effect,” said a letter to senior officers who were suspended in the Ministry of Mining and Petroleum.