Tag: Felix Koskei

  • How A Fake Power Broker Scammed Ex-KRA Manager Sh63M For KURA Chair Job

    How A Fake Power Broker Scammed Ex-KRA Manager Sh63M For KURA Chair Job

    When George Musembi Muia retired from the Kenya Revenue Authority in 2022, he had spent decades in government service and imagined the next chapter of his life would be a comfortable one. Perhaps a board chairmanship at one of the country’s better-paying parastatals. A prestigious exit. The kind of post that rewards a man for years of institutional loyalty. What he got instead was the most expensive lesson of his life, and a High Court case he cannot escape.

    Musembi, a former senior manager at KRA, is now before the Nairobi High Court fighting to recover Sh63 million he claims was swindled from him by a man he describes as a consummate fraud.

    The man in question is one Cosmas Mutati Nzoka, whom Musembi says presented himself as a well-oiled insider with direct access to the innermost rings of the Kenya Kwanza administration.

    Names like that of Farouk Kibet, President William Ruto’s powerful personal assistant, Head of Public Service Felix Koskei, then-Transport Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen and the feared Kapsaret MP Oscar Sudi were allegedly dropped into conversation with the casual ease of someone who actually knew them.

    Musembi did not know any of those men personally. He had never moved in those circles. But he wanted to, badly enough that he would wire millions in cash, hand over dollar-stuffed brown envelopes inside a grey Mercedes-Benz at Muthaiga Square, and keep paying even as the promised appointment failed to materialise. His account before the court reads, as one observer put it, less like a civil case and more like the plot of a financial thriller.

    The Introduction

    The saga began, according to court documents, in late 2023, seeded by a seemingly ordinary connection. While still working at KRA before his retirement, Musembi had come to know a man called David Muema, a clearing agent who operated at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. It was Muema who served as the critical bridge, the man who introduced the retired revenue official to Mutati and gave the introduction the kind of credibility only a trusted mutual contact can provide.

    Muema, Musembi told the court, vouched for Mutati as a well-connected businessman who moved freely through the corridors of government big offices. More specifically, Muema allegedly told him that Mutati could deliver a board chairmanship position at one of the parastatals falling under the then Ministry of Transport and Roads. The position Musembi had his sights set on was the chairmanship of the Kenya Urban Roads Authority, KURA, a body responsible for the development, maintenance and management of urban road networks across the country. The seat, according to Musembi, was vacant at the time.

    The Meeting at a Thika Road Hotel

    The first meeting between Musembi and Mutati was arranged for December 2023, at a hotel on Thika Road at 7pm. It was the kind of hour and venue where deals are discussed without too many witnesses. By Musembi’s account, Mutati arrived brimming with names. He spoke of then-Transport CS Kipchumba Murkomen, whom he claimed to have access to, and through Murkomen he allegedly said he could reach Felix Koskei, the Head of Public Service and President Ruto’s Chief of Staff, the most powerful civil servant in the country. He also invoked Farouk Kibet, the personal assistant to the President whose influence within State House has become the stuff of political legend.

    The name-dropping did not stop there. Mutati allegedly threw Oscar Sudi’s name into the mix as well. Sudi, the Kapsaret MP, is widely regarded as one of President Ruto’s most politically connected and feared allies, a man whose proximity to the presidency was, by his own design and public perception, near absolute.

    Politicians and commentators had long described the Sudi-Farouk axis as the informal gateway to the head of state. For a retiree hunting a parastatal chair with no obvious political connections, Mutati’s name-dropping must have felt like striking gold.

    Musembi told the court exactly what he felt in that moment. “When the defendant dropped those big names I felt like I was dealing with the right team to assist me secure the appointment as board chair of KURA since the defendant kept promising me it was easy as long as I was ready to comply with their demands,” he stated in his testimony.

    Cash in Dollars, Delivered in Envelopes

    The cash demands began almost immediately. On December 21, 2023, just weeks after the first meeting, Mutati allegedly asked for Sh3 million, which he said needed to be handed to Koskei personally as a facilitation fee for the appointment.

    Musembi, by his own admission, complied without hesitation. He withdrew the funds, converted them into US dollars in denominations of 100, counting out 191 notes in total, packaged them into a brown envelope and drove to Muthaiga Square to make the delivery.

    The scene at Muthaiga Square was, by Musembi’s account, almost cinematic in its understated audacity. “I found the defendant waiting alone in a car, a Mercedes-Benz grey in colour. The defendant took the money in form of dollars and promised me that he was to deliver the money to Felix Koskei the same day,” Musembi told the court. The following day, December 23, 2023, Mutati allegedly returned with an update. The delivery had been made, he said. Koskei had received the funds.

    But a new complication had apparently emerged. Koskei, Mutati allegedly told Musembi, did not work alone.

    The appointment required sign-off from Murkomen, Sudi and Farouk as well. Each of them, Mutati allegedly said, wanted a cut.

    The figure he named was Sh5 million for the trio.

    Musembi’s testimony lays bare just how completely the fraud had trapped him by this point. “Because I had legitimate expectations to become the board chair of KURA, I did not want to delay because the defendant was pushing me so much to give out the money so that I do not miss the chance. I mobilised the money as soon as the defendant wanted and handed over the money to the defendant in cash,” he told the court.

    The Borrowing Spree and the DCI

    With the initial instalments paid and the appointment still not forthcoming, the demands continued to multiply. Mutati allegedly pivoted to a new story entirely, telling Musembi that he was also chasing a Sh3 billion contract with the Kenya National Highways Authority for road construction.

    He needed another Sh3 million for facilitation costs, Mutati said, promising it would all be repaid. The pattern, which courts elsewhere have seen in confidence fraud cases, was classic: each payment was justified by a plausible new development, and each new development required another payment.

    By the time the total losses crystallised at Sh63 million, Musembi had finally turned to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations.

    The DCI, according to court documents, managed to trace Mutati, and he was subsequently arraigned at Kibera Law Courts on criminal charges arising from the matter. But even that development did not close the saga. The civil suit in the High Court runs parallel to the criminal proceedings, and Musembi has had to navigate both simultaneously.

    In a twist that has added a remarkable layer to the proceedings, Mutati has not simply denied the allegations. He has gone on the offensive. According to documents before the court, Mutati turned the tables entirely, claiming that it was in fact Musembi who owed him money.

    Specifically, Mutati allegedly sent a counter-demand through his lawyers claiming that Musembi had borrowed Sh47 million from him and had yet to repay it in full. The demand was sent to Musembi’s lawyers, instructing them to ensure their client settled the debt.

    The Architecture of the Scam

    What the Musembi case lays bare is not just the audacity of the accused but a structural vulnerability in how Kenyans seeking state appointments perceive the route to power.

    Farouk Kibet has for years been publicly described, even by senior Kenya Kwanza politicians, as the de facto gatekeeper to President Ruto.

    Murkomen himself, before his elevation to cabinet, publicly praised Farouk as an indispensable figure, noting that accessing the President required clearing with his personal assistant first.

    Oscar Sudi has cultivated a similar reputation as a political fixer whose endorsement carries real weight. Felix Koskei, as Head of Public Service, holds formal authority over the apparatus through which state appointments flow.

    None of those named have been accused of any wrongdoing in this matter. There is no suggestion in the case that any of them received a single shilling of the money Musembi paid.

    What Mutati allegedly did was exploit the public mythology that surrounds these figures, their proximity to power, their informal influence, the general belief that appointments in Kenya do not happen through merit alone.

    He weaponised reputation, not relationship.

    The Musembi case is not an isolated phenomenon. Kenya has in recent years seen a proliferation of what investigators call appointment brokers, individuals who market their alleged connections to the presidency or key government offices and collect fees from desperate job-seekers willing to pay almost any amount for a foothold in the state.

    The Directorate of Criminal Investigations has handled multiple such cases, though few have involved sums as large as what Musembi claims to have lost.

    A Retiree’s Expensive Dream

    There is a painful human story beneath the legal arguments. Musembi is a man who spent his working life in public service, retiring from the KRA, one of the country’s more technically demanding revenue agencies.

    He was not an obvious mark. He was not naive. He simply wanted something that many retired public servants want, a recognition of his years of service in the form of a prestigious board appointment, and he believed, as many do, that such appointments require navigating informal channels rather than official ones.

    That belief, it appears, cost him Sh63 million and his peace of mind. He is now crisscrossing Nairobi’s courts, pursuing a man who has flipped the narrative and is demanding money back.

    The KURA chairmanship, meanwhile, has long since been filled through other channels. The seat that was supposed to be his remains, for him, permanently out of reach.

    The case continues before the High Court in Nairobi.

  • The Behind Scenes and State House Hand That Forced Prof Amukowa Anangwe to Resign as UoN Council Chair

    The Behind Scenes and State House Hand That Forced Prof Amukowa Anangwe to Resign as UoN Council Chair

    High-level government intervention and faculty pressure culminated in the dramatic exit of the embattled university leader

    The resignation of Professor Amukowa Anangwe as Chairman of the University of Nairobi Council on Monday represents the climax of a carefully orchestrated campaign involving Kenya’s highest offices of power, revealing how State House and senior government officials moved decisively to end months of institutional chaos at the country’s premier university.

    Sources close to the negotiations reveal that Anangwe’s departure was far from voluntary, emerging instead from intense behind-the-scenes pressure that escalated to the highest levels of government when conventional ministry interventions failed to resolve the crisis.

    The professors’ gambit

    The turning point came when the University of Nairobi Professors’ Association (UoNPA), initially serving as mediators between the embattled council and the Ministry of Education, found themselves transformed from peacemakers to power brokers in a high-stakes political drama.

    UoNPA Chairman Peter Wasamba’s revelation that the association “escalated the matter to the Office of the President” after failing to broker a solution marks a significant moment when academic disputes crossed into the realm of executive intervention.

    “When we were unable to find a solution, we escalated the matter to the Office of the President and sought audience with the Head of Public Service Felix Kosgey,” Wasamba disclosed, underlining how the university crisis had reached a level requiring presidential attention.

    The Koskei meeting: A diplomatic ultimatum

    The crucial meeting on Thursday, May 22, 2025, between UoNPA representatives and Head of Public Service Felix Koskei appears to have been the decisive moment that sealed Anangwe’s fate. While sources remained tight-lipped about the exact content of discussions, the message delivered was unambiguous.

    One insider’s stark assessment that the council “didn’t have an option but to resign” suggests that what transpired was less negotiation than notification of an irreversible decision already taken at the highest levels of government.

    Koskei’s carefully worded public statement, emphasizing “the government’s commitment towards streamlining matters University of Nairobi,” carried the weight of executive authority behind what appeared to be a final directive rather than mere consultation.

    Ministry’s public disavowal

    The government’s strategy became clearer when Principal Secretary Beatrice Inyangala issued her devastating May 9 statement, systematically dismantling Anangwe’s authority by disowning key council decisions, including the controversial appointment of Professor Bitange Ndemo as Vice Chancellor.

    Inyangala’s assertion that “no council meeting was ever convened” for these appointments represented more than administrative correction—it was a public stripping of legitimacy that made Anangwe’s position untenable.

    The legal squeeze

    The timing of criminal charges filed by the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) on May 16—exactly seven days after Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba’s promise to resolve the crisis “within a week”—suggests coordinated pressure designed to leave no avenue for resistance.

    The charges against Anangwe and council members Ahmed Sheikh and Carren Kerubo over the allegedly unlawful reappointment of Brian Ouma as Chief Operations Officer created legal jeopardy that made continued defiance politically and personally costly.

    Faculty pressure and reputation damage

    Perhaps most tellingly, the professors’ association—Anangwe’s natural constituency—had turned against him. The growing sentiment among faculty that “the hardline stance taken by Prof Anangwe was negatively affecting their reputation and that of the university” represented the collapse of his academic support base.

    This institutional isolation, combined with State House intervention, created an impossible position for the embattled chairman.

    The orchestrated nature of Anangwe’s downfall sends a clear signal about the limits of institutional autonomy when governance failures threaten Kenya’s flagship educational institution. The involvement of State House through the Head of Public Service demonstrates how university crises can escalate beyond ministry-level interventions when institutional stability is at stake.

    Education CS Ogamba’s acceptance of the resignation letters on Monday afternoon marked not just the end of Anangwe’s tenure, but the success of a multi-pronged strategy that combined legal pressure, political isolation, and executive authority to restore order to Kenya’s most prestigious university.

    As the University of Nairobi prepares for new leadership, the Anangwe affair stands as a case study in how power operates when institutional governance breaks down—and how far the state will go to protect its premier educational assets from internal dysfunction.

  • Pressure Mounts on CS Mbadi to Freeze Pay to Insurance Boss Whose Term Expired but Still Draws Salary

    Pressure Mounts on CS Mbadi to Freeze Pay to Insurance Boss Whose Term Expired but Still Draws Salary

    Legal challenge threatens Treasury action as Insurance Regulatory Authority CEO continues in office three months past constitutional limit

    Nairobi, Kenya – May 22, 2025 – Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi is facing increasing pressure to halt payments to Godfrey Kiptum, the Commissioner of Insurance at the Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA), whose second term officially expired on February 28, 2024, yet continues to draw a full salary and exercise authority.

    A lawyer, Suleiman Bashir, has issued a seven-day ultimatum to the Treasury, demanding an immediate stop to Kiptum’s remuneration and the initiation of a recruitment process for a new commissioner, threatening legal action for misuse of public funds if no action is taken.

    The controversy centers on Kiptum’s extended tenure at the insurance regulator, which has now stretched beyond nine years across multiple appointments.

    His current predicament stems from what Bashir describes as a clear violation of Kenya’s Insurance Act, which explicitly limits commissioners to two three-year terms.

    Kiptum first assumed the role in an acting capacity in 2016, serving for three years before his confirmation for a full three-year term.

    In 2022, he secured what should have been his final reappointment for a second term that officially concluded on February 28, 2025.

    “The continued occupation of this office beyond the statutory limit not only violates the Insurance Act but represents a flagrant misuse of taxpayer resources,” Bashir stated in his legal notice.

    “Every day Mr. Kiptum remains in office and draws a salary is a day of illegal expenditure of public funds.”

    Insiders suggest Kiptum’s prolonged stay may be facilitated by high-level political protection.

    Sources familiar with the matter indicate he maintains close ties with Head of Public Service Felix Koskei, with whom he allegedly shares village roots.

    Head of Public Service, Felix Koskei
    Head of Public Service, Felix Koskei

    This connection is believed to have shielded him from previous attempts to remove him from office.

    The protective influence became apparent in 2024 when former IRA Board Chairman Mwanga Mabonga attempted to place Kiptum on compulsory leave pending investigations into alleged irregular dealings.

    The move was swiftly reversed, Mabonga was subsequently removed from his position, and Kiptum remained firmly in place.

    The standoff represents more than just an employment dispute—it highlights broader concerns about institutional integrity and adherence to constitutional term limits across Kenya’s regulatory landscape.

    The Insurance Regulatory Authority, established to oversee Kenya’s growing insurance sector worth billions of shillings, has found itself at the center of a governance crisis that could undermine public confidence in financial regulation.

    Bashir’s legal challenge has been strategically copied to multiple oversight bodies, including the Public Service Commission, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, and the IRA Board itself, effectively putting all relevant institutions on notice about the irregular situation.

    The pressure on Treasury CS Mbadi intensifies as the seven-day ultimatum approaches its deadline.

    The lawyer’s notice explicitly demands the immediate cessation of all salary payments, allowances, and executive benefits to Kiptum, along with the commencement of a proper recruitment process to fill the position legally.

    “The Treasury cannot continue to facilitate what amounts to theft of public resources,” Bashir warned. “If they fail to act within the stipulated timeframe, we will have no choice but to seek judicial intervention to protect taxpayer interests.”

    As the legal deadline approaches, all eyes are on Treasury CS Mbadi’s response.

    Failure to act could result in court proceedings that may compel immediate action while potentially exposing the Treasury to claims for restitution of funds paid during Kiptum’s illegal tenure.

  • Senior State House Official Resigns Citing Frustrations

    Senior State House Official Resigns Citing Frustrations

    Peter Mbae, Head of the Government Delivery Service (GDS), has officially announced his resignation, citing unresolved concerns with Head of Public Service Felix Koskei.

    In a letter addressed to the appointing authority, Mbae highlighted persistent challenges that have hindered his ability to fulfill his mandate effectively since his appointment in June 2023.

    He previously served as Secretary for Investments Promotion in the Ministry of Investments, Trade, and Industry.

    “Despite my passion, focus, and consistency, for reasons and issues I have consistently brought to your attention and which remain unresolved, it has not been possible to carry out my duties as intended. My position is no longer tenable,” he stated in his letter.

    During his tenure, Mbae was responsible for overseeing government programs and projects across Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs). His role included enhancing synergies, eliminating duplications, and tracking progress on national priorities and presidential directives to maximize socio-economic impact.

    In his resignation letter, Mbae expressed frustration over the lack of resolution to the issues he raised, despite his efforts to drive sustainable transformation under the Kenya Kwanza Government manifesto.

    “To remain accountable to the people of Kenya, given the public nature of my appointment, I hereby formally disengage to pursue other interests,” he concluded.

  • State Splurges Sh27B On Foreign Trips, COB Says

    State Splurges Sh27B On Foreign Trips, COB Says

    When President William Ruto issued a directive banning non-essential foreign travel for all state officials in October last year, it was expected that this would significantly reduce the amount the country spends on paying for overseas trips that give little value for money for taxpayers.

    It, however, appears that these were mere words or government officials blatantly ignored their boss, with travel expenditure for the year to June 2024 going up 34 per cent compared to the previous financial year.

    A new report by the Controller of Budget (COB) shows that spending on both domestic and foreign travel increased by Sh6.97 billion over the financial year to Sh27.34 billion from Sh20.37 billion in the financial year to June 2023.

    On October 2 last year, President Ruto’s Chief of Staff and Head of Public Service Felix Koskei issued a circular that suspended non-essential foreign travel.

    Among the categories of travel banned through the circular included benchmarking and study visits, training and capacity-building initiatives, conferences and meetings of general participation and research and academic meetings.

    However, the circular allowed foreign travel for critical engagements such as “fulfilment of state obligations, under the conduct of critical state party engagements” and “to fulfil a statutory leadership or membership role in which critical decisions impacting the country’s position are under consideration.”

    The guidelines were part of President Ruto’s bid to have civil servants tighten their belts, a gospel he has all along preached, noting that he does not intend to lead a bankrupt country or one in debt distress.

    The directives also limited spending on essential travel such that a delegation headed by Cabinet Secretaries would only have four persons who would only spend a maximum of seven cumulative days away per travel, 15 days per quarter, and 45 days per year.

    An analysis by the Office of the Controller of Budget, however, shows numerous instances where different government agencies sent staff to forums, many of them non-essential, and in some instances, staying away for weeks.

    According to the COB report on the government’s spending over the financial year to June 2024, expenditure on domestic travel grew by a third to Sh18.15 billion from Sh14.04 billion in 2023. Since the 2019-2020 financial year, spending on local travel by government officials has nearly doubled.

    Spending on foreign travel increased 45 per cent to Sh9.19 billion from Sh6.33 billion in the 2022-23 financial year.

    The COB also noted the reluctance among government officials to break down their spending abroad, a possible pointer to their frivolous spending.

    “Expenditure on domestic travel has grown from Sh10.82 billion in the 2019/20 financial year to Sh18.15 billion in the 2023-24 financial year. The percentage increase between the 2022/23 financial year (Sh14.04 billion) and 2023-24 financial year (Sh18.15 billion) was 29 per cent,” said CoB in the report.

    “Similarly, the expenditure on foreign travel registered a 45 per cent increase between the 2022/23 financial year (Sh6.33 billion) and 2023/24 financial year (Sh9.19 billion) despite the efforts to reduce non-essential travel in FY 2023-24.

    “In the 2023/24 financial year, the Office of the Controller of Budget requested details on MDAs’ foreign travel to review compliance with the circular. However, some MDAs did not submit a detailed breakdown of foreign travel expenditures. Further, there were discrepancies in the amount reported on foreign travel by economic line vis-a-vis the detailed breakdown.”

    Many of the foreign trips, according to the COB, were non-essential travel, with many government officials attending capacity-building meetings, training or benchmarking trips. These are the same kind of meetings whose attendance had been banned in the October 2, 2023 circular by the head of public service.

    “This spending pattern suggests that the Circular was not fully complied with,” said COB Margaret Nyakang’o in the report.

    “The analysis indicates that large delegations were common. This indicates non-adherence to the Circular’s emphasis on minimising delegation sizes and calls for more robust controls to enforce adherence.

    “Multiple trips to the same destinations by different MDAs suggest a lack of coordination, leading to redundant travel. For example, numerous departments travelled to Italy and France for similar purposes, incurring avoidable costs.”

    Ms Nyakang’o recommends that the government adopt a rigorous pre-approval process for all foreign travel, requiring clear justifications aligned with the Circular.

    “MDAs should provide evidence that the travel either fulfils a state obligation or is essential,” said the COB, adding that the government should also establish a centralised unit to review and approve all foreign travel across MDAs to prevent duplication and redundancies.

    “This body would ensure that similar trips by different departments are consolidated or eliminated, reducing unnecessary expenditure. Periodic audits of foreign travel should be conducted to ensure compliance with the circular.”

    The Circular by the Head of Public Service, had, according to COB, presented a critical shift towards optimising foreign travel expenditures by focusing on essential travel aligned with state obligations.

    “However, the success of these guidelines depends on strict enforcement, centralised coordination, and periodic audits,” said the COB in the report, adding that “the government can significantly reduce unnecessary travel costs and ensure that all foreign engagements provide tangible benefits to the country.”

  • We Will Not Join Doctors Strike, We Believe In Diplomacy, Nurses SG Panyako Announces

    We Will Not Join Doctors Strike, We Believe In Diplomacy, Nurses SG Panyako Announces

    Kenyan nurses have maintained they are on duty and will not join the ongoing countrywide strike by doctors and clinicians.

    The medics through the umbrella body Kenya National Union of Nurses (KNUN) said they will not give in to pressure to down their tools since the government has already shown goodwill by engaging the union concerning pressing issues.

    The union stated its position after a meeting of the National Executive Council. KNUN Secretary General Seth Panyako told journalists that the meeting was called to address issues of Collective Bargaining Agreement signing, Interns posting and stipend payment and UHC nurses’ absorption.

    “With regards to the current disruptions in the Health Sector in the country pertaining to the posting of interns and the absorption of UHC employees to Permanent and Pensionable Terms, the Kenya National Union of Nurses has been keen on handling the issues with relevant institutions” he said.

    “Therefore, it is important to note that, despite the demands from pre-nursing interns, the union has not issued a strike notice yet as we believe in diplomacy and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms” he added.

    While reading their resolutions after wider consultations with their officials drawn from across the country, Panyako emphasized that the issues are pertinent and need immediate action.

    The union expressed optimism with ongoing negotiations. “There is good progress at both levels of government towards signing the Collective Bargaining Agreement with the union, and they are planning for a meeting next week for conclusion” he said.

    The statement also signed by the National Chairman and Treasurer urged pre-nurse interns to remain patient as the officials deal with the issue of their posting and review of stipend payment to conform with the Schemes of Service.

    “Additionally, we will proceed to take other legal measures, if need be, in relation to the circular that reduced the intern’s pay from the previous job group K to a lower stipend pay” the union assured.

    “ To make this process more open, effective and efficient, we ask the nurse interns and UHC nurses to appoint two representatives each, to accompany us to MOH for our forthcoming meeting” he said.

    Panyako further welcomed a move by the government to approve the employment of UHC nurses into Permanent and Pensionable terms effective 1 June 2024.

    “Through our engagement, the government has agreed to hire more nurses and other health workers”, he said.

    However, the union is urging the two levels of Government to immediately pay the March 2024 salary and release all pending statutory and third-party deductions.

    The latest development comes hot on the heels of a government offer aimed at ending a week-long doctors strike that has severely disrupted health services in public hospital.

    The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Union (KMPDU) has turned down the Ksh 2.4B offer.

    State House Chief of Staff and Head of the Public Service Felix Koskei on Tuesday announced that the monies will allow for the posting of all eligible medical student interns, inviting those eligible to pick letters from Thursday.

  • Govt Allocates Sh2.4B For Medical Interns, Urges KMPDU To Call Off Strike

    Govt Allocates Sh2.4B For Medical Interns, Urges KMPDU To Call Off Strike

    The government has urged the Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Union (KMPDU) to end the ongoing strike by medical professionals following the allocation of Sh2.4 billion for the deployment of medical interns.

    Head of Public Service Felix Koskei said the government has secured Sh2.4 billion to facilitate the immediate deployment of the 2023/24 cohort of medical student interns, as per the guidelines set by the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC).

    “In light of this development, the leadership of the KMPDU is urged to adhere to its obligations as outlined in the Court’s Orders by promptly suspending the ongoing industrial action,” Koskei said in a statement Tuesday.

    The strike, which commenced in March, has severely disrupted operations in public hospitals nationwide as doctors demand the deployment of medical interns and appropriate remuneration for them.

    Koskei disclosed that the government will offer grants and scholarships to eligible postgraduate medical officers.

    “In this regard, all eligible medical student interns are encouraged to collect their posting letters from the Ministry of Health’s offices starting from Thursday, 4th April, 2024,” he added.

    Koskei reiterated the commitment of both the government and its agencies, as well as institutional stakeholders, to resolving the ongoing dispute and putting an end to the cycle of industrial action in the Health Sector.

    The priority, he said, remains fostering constructive dialogue, addressing concerns, and ensuring the health and well-being of all Kenyans.

  • How Kikuyus Dominate Appointments In Top State Departments

    How Kikuyus Dominate Appointments In Top State Departments

    The head of Public Service Mr. Felix Koskei has been challenged to ensure equitable distribution of jobs across all government ministries and parastatals among all the 42 tribes in Kenya to reflect the true face of country.

    This comes after revelations that Members of Mount Kenya mainly from the Kikuyu community, dominate most of the lucrative State jobs as they occupy plum positions in the departments of accounts, procurement and human resources.

    The other 41 tribes are left to grapple and occupy lesser positions in the key departments that make up 21 ministries in the administration of President William  Ruto.

    Data from the ministries reveal that in accounts department, 55% of those holding key positions in the ministries are from the Kikuyu community, while in procurement and human resources departments, the same favored community holds 34% and 57% as its heads in government ministries.

    The deputy CEO at the Public Service Commission, Jane Chege, is the one who assisting civil servants from her community to ascend to the top positions in the key departments in the government. Most of these senior officers who benefited from Chege’s ‘generosity’ have been accused of bullying a section of junior officers under them.

    Some of the said senior officers even threaten their juniors with transfer, demotion or sack if they do not heed to their sexual demands or instructions to aide corrupt activities.

    Chege influences the posting of her kinsmen to the most lucrative positions in government ministries and departments where most of them overstay and loot from public coffers while non-Kikuyu officers are transferred frequently.

    Below is a list of some of the HR directors in some ministries in the government from the Kikuyu community who call shots.

    1. Foreign Affairs – Mr Gitu
    2. Treasury -Susan Mucheru
    3. Interior- Mr Giuthua
    4. Infrastructure- Joyce Gichomo
    5. Environment – Rosemary Wamoto
    6. Immigration -Christine Nyambura
    7. Labour – Owen Mwaniki
    8. CBC- Rosebell Wainaina
    9. Asal-Ann Kareithi
    10. Youth- Zipporah Mutahi
    11. Housing and Urban Development -Susan Wangare
    12. Shipping and Maritime – Rosemary Gichoi
    13. Correctional Services – Mary Mugure
    14. Broadcasting and Telecommunications- Miriam Gitau
    15. Devolution -Leonard Ngotho
    16. Maritime Academy-Francis Muraya (on contract)
    17. KNBS- Ann Mburu 19. Petroleum-Alice Maina
    18. Water-Carol Mugwe 21. East Africa -Macharia Kibe
    19. ICT and Digital Economy -James Muriuki
    20. Training and Development-David Njoroge
    21. Mining-Agnes Njer

    Kenya Insights has also learnt that most of these officers were teachers before they were appointed by PSC to boost capacity in ministries and state departments in the civil service to enhance training and development (HRD) between 2005 and 2012.

    The same is the case across other cadres (technical), whereby it is only one community that dominates the most lucrative ministries and departments. Most members of kikuyu community are posted to key ministries and departments as an avenue of corruption.