Tag: eCitizen scandal

  • Audit Reveals E-Citizen Collections Don’t Reach Treasury Accounts

    Audit Reveals E-Citizen Collections Don’t Reach Treasury Accounts

    The halls of Parliament echoed with sharp questions and mounting frustration on Tuesday as lawmakers summoned Treasury Principal Secretary Chris Kiptoo to explain a financial scandal that has shaken the foundations of Kenya’s digital payment system.

    The Public Accounts Committee, led by Tindi Mwale from Butere, demanded answers after discovering that billions of shillings collected through the government’s flagship eCitizen platform are not reaching Treasury accounts at the Central Bank of Kenya.

    The controversy has its roots in a damning audit report by Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu, whose findings have exposed systemic failures in the country’s most widely used government payment platform.

    At the heart of the scandal lies a staggering figure that has sent shockwaves through government circles: approximately 44.8 billion shillings in eCitizen collections remain completely unaccounted for, raising serious questions about financial transparency and accountability in President William Ruto’s administration.

    The summoning of Kiptoo represents a culmination of years of mounting concerns that have been largely ignored by successive administrations.

    As Mwale emphasized during the committee session, “The PS must come and shed more light on this matter because it’s an issue that affects government departments.”

    His words carried the weight of parliamentary authority, but also reflected the exasperation of legislators who have watched recommendations gather dust while public funds continue to disappear into what appears to be a financial black hole.

    The scope of the problem became clearer when MPs Joseph Namwar from Turkana, Marianne Kitany from Aldai, and Otiende Amollo from Rarieda took turns expressing their concerns.

    Their questions painted a picture of a system operating with alarming opacity, where money flows in but accountability flows out. Namwar’s statement struck at the core of the issue: “It is not clear whether the money collected through the eCitizen platform ends at the exchequer accounts.”

    This uncertainty about the ultimate destination of public funds represents a fundamental breakdown in financial governance.

    Kitany’s observations added another layer to the unfolding scandal, highlighting that “there are cases of billions of public funds being at the eCitizen,” while noting that “its reporting mechanism is wanting.”

    Her words revealed not just missing money, but missing systems of oversight that should have prevented such a crisis from developing.

    Vanishing cash

    The platform, designed to streamline government services and improve efficiency, appears to have instead created new avenues for funds to vanish without trace.

    The urgency of the situation was perhaps best captured by Amollo, who noted that issues with the eCitizen platform have been raised consistently since 2017, yet remain unaddressed.

    His frustration was palpable as he spoke of “so many queries on this eCitizen platform,” expressing the committee’s intention to issue a special letter to the National Treasury demanding explanations for years of inaction on PAC recommendations.

    The parliamentary inquiry took an even more troubling turn when Solicitor-General Shadrack Mose appeared before the committee, unable to explain how revenue was being collected by the State Law Office through eCitizen.

    His admission that “E-citizen does not give us a report” laid bare the extent to which government departments have been operating blind, collecting money through a system they cannot properly monitor or control.

    Gathungu’s audit findings provide the most comprehensive picture yet of the eCitizen debacle.

    Her examination of marriage centers alone revealed that while 116.83 million shillings was recorded from 15 centers, collections from 19 other centers went completely unrecorded due to missing periodic reports.

    This pattern of incomplete record-keeping appears to be systemic rather than isolated, suggesting that the problems run far deeper than initially understood.

    Treasury PS Chris Kiptoo.
    Treasury PS Chris Kiptoo.

    The Auditor-General’s report pulled no punches in its assessment of the government’s control over the eCitizen system.

    Her finding that the government “lacks full system control, relying heavily on vendors for critical functions” exposes a dangerous dependency that has left public finances vulnerable.

    As she warned, “Lack of full control of the system exposes the government to the risk of revenue leakages, lack of full accountability, system unavailability or downtime, security vulnerabilities and business continuity threats.”

    This vendor dependency has created what appears to be an accountability vacuum.

    The private companies managing critical eCitizen functions wield significant control over system configurations and growth support, including the onboarding of new government services.

    This arrangement has effectively placed public financial systems in private hands, with inadequate government oversight to ensure transparency and accountability.

    The scale of the problem becomes more apparent when considering that the eCitizen platform processes hundreds of millions of shillings daily from various government services.

    Citizens use the platform to pay for everything from passport applications to business permits, trusting that their payments are properly channeled to government coffers.

    The audit revelations suggest that this trust may have been misplaced, with significant portions of these payments failing to reach their intended destination.

    The implications extend far beyond mere accounting errors.

    The missing funds represent resources that should have been available for public services, infrastructure development, and social programs.

    In a country grappling with budget constraints and development challenges, the loss of billions in public revenue represents not just financial mismanagement, but a betrayal of public trust.

    The parliamentary investigation has also highlighted the broader governance challenges facing Kenya’s digital transformation agenda.

    While the eCitizen platform was meant to modernize government service delivery and reduce corruption through digitization, it appears to have instead created new opportunities for financial irregularities.

    The promise of transparency through technology has been undermined by inadequate oversight and control mechanisms.

    As the controversy unfolds, questions are being raised about the selection and management of the vendors responsible for the eCitizen platform.

    The extent of their control over critical government systems, combined with the apparent lack of proper oversight, has created conditions conducive to the current crisis.

    The fact that key government officials, including the Solicitor-General, cannot access basic reports from the system they rely on for revenue collection illustrates the depth of the institutional failure.

    The timing of these revelations is particularly significant as the Ruto administration has placed digital transformation at the center of its governance agenda.

    The eCitizen platform was supposed to exemplify the benefits of embracing technology for public service delivery, but the audit findings suggest that insufficient attention was paid to establishing proper controls and accountability mechanisms alongside the technological infrastructure.

    The current crisis demonstrates that technology alone cannot solve governance problems; it must be accompanied by robust institutional frameworks and accountability mechanisms.

    For the millions of Kenyans who use the eCitizen platform daily, the audit revelations raise fundamental questions about the security and reliability of the system they have come to depend on.

    The knowledge that billions in payments may have gone astray will likely undermine public confidence in digital government services, potentially setting back Kenya’s digital transformation agenda by years.

    As Parliament prepares to scrutinize Kiptoo’s responses and demand concrete action to address the identified irregularities, the eCitizen scandal has already achieved one significant outcome: it has forced a long-overdue reckoning with the governance challenges posed by Kenya’s rush to digitize public services. The question now is whether this crisis will catalyze meaningful reforms or simply join the long list of government scandals that generate headlines but produce little lasting change.

  • Private Firms Could Shutdown eCitizen At Will, House Told

    Private Firms Could Shutdown eCitizen At Will, House Told

    The eCitizen platform risks abrupt shutdown if the developers’ contract is terminated, sparking fresh concerns over acess control over the system and its security implications.

    Contractual documents tabled before the National Assembly’s Departmental Committee on Administration and Internal Security reveal that, despite repeated assurances from senior government officials, the platform is not fully owned by the state.

    The contract, signed on May 25, 2023, stipulates that the private developers retain proprietary rights and reserve the legal authority to withdraw the platform’s infrastructure in the event of termination.

    “In the event of termination, howsoever occurring, the suppliers shall be entitled to rescind, withdraw or otherwise uninstall all their proprietary infrastructure and resources, including all technical infrastructure whether software or otherwise,” the contract reads in part.

    The firms behind the platform—Webmasters Kenya Ltd, Pesa Flow Ltd, and Olive Tree Media Ltd—are also shielded from liability.

    The agreement indemnifies the developers against any claims arising from data loss, system downtime, or service disruption.

    “The purchaser shall… fully indemnify the suppliers against any claims against, loss of data, system downtime or unavailability,” the document states.

    Parallel probe

    These revelations have sparked alarm among lawmakers, with two parliamentary committees now launching parallel investigations.

    Legislators fear that Kenya’s digital infrastructure and financial systems could be compromised or held hostage by private interests.

    Homa Bay Town MP Peter Kaluma described the situation as a serious national security and financial risk, especially considering the billions invested in the system.

    “This is very scary. The government has put itself in a vulnerable position. If this contract stands, the suppliers can switch off the entire system and walk away,” Kaluma said.

    Lari MP Mburu Kahangara questioned the government’s past assurances regarding E-Citizen’s ownership in light of the newly disclosed contract.

    “We’ve repeatedly sought clarity from the ministry, and we were told the platform is state-owned. But the contract tells a different story,” Kahangara noted.

    The committee also raised governance concerns after discovering that the contract was not signed by the ICT Principal Secretary, who is the official accounting officer for the ministry.

    Instead, the document bears the signature of ICT Authority CEO Stanley Kamanguya.

    “Where is the PS’s signature? This is a contract of significant magnitude. Why are the signatories limited to a CEO? It raises serious questions about governance and accountability,” said Vice Chair Dido Raso (Saku).

    Committee Chair Gabriel Tongoyo criticized the ICT department for allegedly withholding the contract for more than two months.

    “This document should have been availed much earlier. The delay appears intentional, as though someone was trying to avoid scrutiny. We will not tolerate such evasiveness,” he stated.

  • The eCitizen Scandal: Kenya’s Billion-Shilling Digital Heist

    The eCitizen Scandal: Kenya’s Billion-Shilling Digital Heist

    eCitizen was supposed to revolutionize Kenya’s access to public services. It promised to end long queues, kill corruption, and simplify lives through digitization.

    But behind the slick interface lies one of the most shocking scams in modern Kenya. Billions have vanished.

    The same players—under different names—have stayed in charge. And government silence has fueled suspicion.

    From Webmasters to Goldrock Capital and Pesaflow, a group of insiders may have hijacked Kenya’s digital future for personal gain.

    This is the eCitizen Scandal—a tale of tech, theft, and betrayal.

    Ayugi’s bold statement in 2014 foreshadowed the scandal. He posted on social media that he’d make a billion shillings in five years. Nearly a decade later, with the juicy contracts Webmasters secured, he may have been right. [Photo: Nation]

    Inside the eCitizen Scandal: How a National Digital System Became a Private Cash Cow

    eCitizen launched as a public digital platform to centralize access to government services. It was built with Sh70 million from the World Bank. But somewhere along the way, public ownership faded. Private hands took over.

    At the heart of the scandal sits James Ayugi, CEO of Webmasters Kenya and Webmasters Africa. His companies built the original eCitizen system.

    Then, in a shocking twist, they demanded Sh1.5 billion from the government to hand it over—claiming intellectual property rights.

    This claim makes little sense. The platform was created for public use with donor funds. So how did a public portal suddenly become a private asset?

    Ayugi’s bold statement in 2014 foreshadowed the scandal. He posted on social media that he’d make a billion shillings in five years. Nearly a decade later, with the juicy contracts Webmasters secured, he may have been right.

    The deal was never clean. The government failed to clarify ownership from the start—either by incompetence or design.

    This allowed Ayugi and his network to sink their claws into a vital national resource. The deeper you dig, the murkier it gets.

    Goldrock Capital and The Questionable Middleman

    To manage eCitizen payments, Webmasters outsourced the job to Goldrock Capital. Citizens sent money for passport applications, business registrations, and more.

    Goldrock was supposed to forward these funds to the government’s account at KCB. But the truth was far from clean.

    In 2017, the Treasury uncovered that Goldrock had no license to handle public money. Worse, millions—Sh127.8 million—were stuck in mobile wallets like Paybill 206206. Suspicion of fraud exploded.

    Shockingly, no one at Goldrock was held accountable. There were no prosecutions. No arrests. Instead, the government made a quiet move—it replaced Goldrock. But the replacement wasn’t really new.

    Pesaflow: New Name, Same Faces

    Enter Pesaflow. Registered in August 2017, during Goldrock’s legal troubles, Pesaflow looked like a clean slate. But it wasn’t.

    A closer look showed that Pesaflow’s directors were all ex-Webmasters Africa staff: Evid Araka Sibi, Frank Weya, Charles Sewe, and Larry Agoro. The same crew. Just a different name.

    Without any open tender or public bidding process, the government appointed Pesaflow as the new payment processor.

    In short, when Goldrock got too hot, the insiders regrouped under a new company, and the cash continued to flow.

    This is the blueprint of a classic shell game. When exposure hits one entity, the masterminds simply switch names, stay in business, and keep milking taxpayers.

    Even today, Pesaflow remains shrouded in secrecy. There’s no transparency about how much money flows through it or where the money goes before it reaches public coffers.

    Why the Government is Silent on eCitizen Scandal

    President Ruto’s administration has stayed largely mum about the scandal. That is, until former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua recently accused Ruto directly on KTN of minting billions through the eCitizen platform.

    Gachagua made bold claims:

    • That eCitizen doesn’t belong to the government

    • That billions are being pocketed

    • That the platform is controlled by unknown entities

    While Gachagua did not name names or prove ownership links, his outcry added fuel to a scandal that the public and media have started to investigate.

    Despite the red flags, despite court records, and despite public money being at stake, no official audit has been published, and no criminal case has been concluded. Is this silence protection, or is it complicity?

    A National Shame Hiding in Plain Sight

    The eCitizen scandal is a slap in the face to every Kenyan taxpayer. What started as a promise of digital transformation has become a tool for elite theft.

    From Webmasters to Goldrock Capital to Pesaflow, the same actors have danced around accountability. And the government has let them.

    Billions have passed through this system. Who owns it? Who benefits? And why haven’t we followed the money?

    If Kenya wants to fight corruption, it must start with transparency in its digital backbone. Anything less means the thieves will keep dancing—and we’ll keep paying.