Tag: National parliament

  • New Bill in Parliament Seeks to Ban Muguka

    New Bill in Parliament Seeks to Ban Muguka

    A controversial legislative proposal currently before Kenya’s National Assembly could fundamentally alter the legal status of muguka, potentially opening the door for counties to impose bans on the stimulant crop that supports thousands of farmers across the country.

    The Bill, sponsored by Kilifi North Member of Parliament Owen Baya, seeks to amend the Crops Act by separating muguka from miraa (khat) and removing it from the list of scheduled crops—a designation that currently provides legal protection and government support.

    Under the proposed changes, muguka would lose its status as a legally recognized crop, stripping away safeguards that currently prevent counties from unilaterally restricting or banning its trade.

    The amendment specifically aims to “differentiate muguka from miraa and therefore expressly exclude muguka from being a scheduled crop,” according to the Bill’s text.

    The timing of this legislative push comes amid escalating tensions between coastal counties and muguka stakeholders.

    Mombasa, Kilifi, and Taita Taveta counties have already moved to ban the sale and distribution of the crop, citing health concerns including dependency, insomnia, elevated blood pressure, and other adverse effects.

    For Embu County, where muguka cultivation is concentrated, the implications could be devastating.

    The region hosts over 65,000 farmers who depend on the crop, which anchors an economy worth approximately 22 billion shillings.

    The potential delisting threatens not only farmer livelihoods but also significant revenue streams—Mombasa County alone collects an estimated one million shillings daily in levies from muguka trade.

    The economic stakes extend beyond individual farmers to entire market chains.

    In coastal regions, which represent the primary consumer markets, muguka retails between 300 and 600 shillings per kilogram, with prices reaching 1,000 shillings during dry seasons when supply tightens.

    Currently, scheduled crops under the 2013 Crops Act benefit from mandatory quality certification, government subsidies, extension services, research support, and national market structures.

    Removing muguka from this framework would eliminate these protections and support mechanisms.

    The legislative proposal adds a new dimension to an ongoing national debate about muguka regulation.

    Last year, President William Ruto criticized attempts by coastal governors to ban the crops, emphasizing their legal recognition under Kenyan law.

    However, if the current Bill passes, this legal foundation would be removed, potentially validating county-level restrictions.

    The Bill’s progression through Parliament will be closely watched by multiple stakeholders—from Embu farmers whose economic survival depends on continued cultivation, to coastal communities concerned about public health impacts, to county governments seeking greater regulatory control over substances they view as problematic.

    As the National Assembly considers this legislation, the outcome will determine whether muguka maintains its protected status or becomes vulnerable to a patchwork of county-level regulations that could fragment or eliminate key markets for this economically significant but controversial crop.

    The debate reflects broader tensions in Kenya’s devolved governance system, where national economic interests sometimes clash with county-level social and health concerns, leaving Parliament to balance competing priorities that affect thousands of livelihoods and billions of shillings in economic activity.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Unaccounted For Millions To Mount Kenya University And Other Private Universities Triggers Heated Debate In Parliament After Auditor General’s Alarming Report

    Unaccounted For Millions To Mount Kenya University And Other Private Universities Triggers Heated Debate In Parliament After Auditor General’s Alarming Report

    The leader of majority in parliament Kimani Ichungwa recently sparked a debate in parliament about what he termed as takeover by cartels in education education.

    The legislator raised concerns over imbalance in allocation and funds by the government between the public and private universities. He particularly criticized the allocation of Sh730 million to Mount Kenya University which is a private institution while other public universities like Karatina, Egerton are facing financial difficulties and and the verge of closure.

    He claims allocations made to some of the private universities cannot even be accounted for as they’re fraudulently gobbled away.

    Ichungwa’s lamentations comes at a time when the Auditor General Nancy Gathungu report for 2021/22 financial year, Sh3.4 billion disbursed to private universities could not be accounted for.

    The report flagged anomalies including failure by five universities to provide documents despite receiving funds, lack of supporting schedules of students benefitting, duplicated schedules of payment as well as payment of tuition fees to non-existence students.

    “The statement of receipts and payments reflects Sh85,016,468,678 in respect of transfers to other Government units which as disclosed in Note 6 to the financial statements includes Sh3,374,791,603 in respect of transfers to private universities. In the circumstances, the accuracy, completeness and regularity of transfers to other government units could not be confirmed,” reads the report

    According to the report, despite the department disbursing Sh265.3 million to five universities, no acknowledgment letters and receipts from the universities were provided to confirm receipt of the funds.

    And while another amount of Sh198.5 million was disbursed to three universities, they only confirmed receiving Sh183.3 million, resulting in un-reconciled and unexplained variance of Sh15.2 million.

    The report also noted that an amount of Sh22.6 million was disbursed to 13 universities for 404 students but analysis of the supporting schedules revealed that these students had been duplicated in the schedules, resulting in an overpayment of the entire amount totaling Sh22.6 million.

    “A transfer to private universities of Sh136,295,811 was made for 3,357 students who had graduated by November, 2021 and, therefore, Management may have disbursed funds for students who had already completed studies and exited the universities.”

    In addition, the report reveals that an amount of Sh376.99 million was disbursed for a total of 8,964 students who were not active in the period July, 2021 to June, 2022 as they had not registered to sit for the scheduled exams in their respective universities while an amount of Sh337.2 million was disbursed for a total of 7,828 students who had been in the universities for more than four years which is the normal period undertaken for most undergraduate programmes.

    According to the report, the management may have disbursed funds for students who had deferred or quit the universities as well as paid tuition fees to non-existent students in private universities.

    The report comes hardly months after MPs directed Gathungu to carry out a special audit of all funds sent to 31 private universities that have been receiving exchequer funding.

    Of the 30 universities among the top beneficiaries include Mount Kenya that gets Sh552.3 million for 12,479 students, Kabarak, Sh357.9 million for 7,715 students, Catholic University of East Africa Sh196.9 million for 4,685 students, Kenya College of Accountancy  gets Sh223.9 billion for 5,142 students, university of Eastern African Baraton Sh183 billion for 4222 students and Zetech University Sh115.4 million for 2,836 students.

    According to documents from Universities Fund in the 2017/18 Financial Year, private universities received Sh1.6 billion as grants for 18,587 students, in 2018/19FY they received Sh1.98 billion for 29,729 students, in 2019/20 FY they received Sh2.5 billion for 43,676 students while in the 2020/21 Financial Year they received Sh2.7 billion.

    In the last four years, private campuses have received grants worth Sh8.7 billion from the government at the expense of public universities.

    MKU is also a major beneficiary of the previous regime where in 2021, it cut a deal with the Teachers Service Commission (TSC) to offer professional courses for teachers.

    This was after the teacher’s employer enforced that the refresher courses will be a requirement for teachers to enable them to renew their practising certificate every five years.

    Mount Kenya University Vice Chancellor Prof. Deogratius Jaganyi holding a copy of the contract signed with Teachers Service Commission.

    In this state-private sector deal, the institution stood to earn billions. It’s unclear how the process of choosing the suitable institutions were done and of it was an open process.

    Nancy Gathungu, the auditor-general, in the report faults the state department of education for directly financing universities, contrary to legislation that requires that financial allocations be done through the fund.

    Lately, there have been claims within the corridors of higher education that universities get funding directly from the state based on their managements’ capability to lobby for allocations.

    But, the Universities Act (2012) established the fund and mandated it to finance universities. Section 53 (3) spells out the functions of the fund.

    However, Gathungu says in the report: “The fund has only been advising the State Department for University Education on [how] to allocate and disburse to the public universities.”

    Gathungu is, therefore, concerned that the fund is not discharging its lawful mandate: “In the circumstances, it has not been possible to confirm whether the fund has been carrying out its mandate required by the Universities Act, 2012.”

    In the report, Gathungu says that a review of the records showed that the fund has not been allocating funds to universities as required by the law.

    The fund, in its operations, adopted the 2016 Differential Unit Cost (DUC) principles for distribution of funds to universities. This has been deployed since 2017-18 in the allocation of funds to universities.

    The DUC operates on the basis of the cost to an institution to teach one academic programme per student per year. DUC lumps specific programmes in terms of their cost into 18 clusters, ranging from the lowest that is KSh144,000 (US$1,260) for humanities and the highest being KSh720,000 for dentistry.

    However, universities in the past four years have been advocating for the revision of the DUC to do away with disparity between public and private universities.

    Investigations by relevant agencies will unearth and determine the extent of alleged fraud and address the loopholes.

    Additional reporting by the people.

  • Parliament rejects poverty eradication Bill

    Parliament rejects poverty eradication Bill

    The National Assembly has shot down a Bill that intended to establish an exclusive fund to fight poverty in Kenya, arguing that treasury already has the Biashara Fund which is a merger of all existing State-backed funds to eliminate poverty.

    Parliament’s Finance Committee claimed the Poverty Eradication Authority Bill, 2020 was a duplication of what other state agencies had been established to do including Uwezo Fund, Women Enterprise Fund, the Youth Enterprise Fund, and Equalization Fund which are all meant to stem poverty.  The National Treasury Treasury and the State Department for Labour and Social Protection also opposed the enactment of the Bill.

    “The proposed Poverty Eradication Fund should be incorporated in existing funds for efficiency and minimisation of duplication of functions within the public sector,” Ms Gladys Wanga, Chair of finance committee said.

    The unpopular Bill was sponsored by Sirisia MP John Waluke who was pushing for the formation of Authority to coordinate national economic empowerment and poverty reduction agenda through Poverty Eradication Fund.

    The Bill proposed that the creation of the authority would replace the Poverty Eradication Commission which ended on May 26, 2015, as it was recommended by the National Assembly’s Budget and Appropriations Committee (BAC) report in 2013/14 financial year.

    Poverty in Kenya has been fought with mixed success through various programs, education and health initiatives over time but its reduction and eradication has remained complex.

    By 1981 Kenya’s poverty was “officially” estimated at 48% and 51% in 1997 after a more credible survey from the Welfare Monitoring Survey and the 2005/6 Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey which presented a 46.6% poverty headcount.

    The data was the updated in 2015/16 which remains the country’s most recent official poverty data where overall poverty headcount fell from a CPI-adjusted 46.8% in 2005/06 to 36.1% in 2015/16.

    Meaning the headcount fell from 16.6 to 16.4 million while extreme poverty dropped from 19.6% to 8.6% during the period and food poverty from 44.4 to 32%.

     

     

     

     

  • Public Accounts Committee Uncovers 150 Billion Insurance Scam

    Public Accounts Committee Uncovers 150 Billion Insurance Scam

    The National Treasury has been financing a lot of ghost projects with Billions of taxpayers money falling into the hands of corrupt civil servants and once again, the National financier has been alleged to orchestrate another massive scandal after the Arror and Kimwarer dam scam that saw the former Finance CS, Henry Rotich sacked.

    According to information before the Public Accounts Committee, the National Treasury has allocated over Sh150 billion as insurance cover for all government and public servants.

    In the records, The National Treasury has been allocating Sh15 billion annually to the self-insurance fund under Group Personal Accident (GPA) policy and Work Injury Benefits Act (WIBA) for all public servants for the past 10 years. The scheme that the Treasury has been financing has not received any claims nor issued a penny in compensation to those entitled to benefits from the said cover.

    One wonders, Does the National treasury ever bother or even follow up on how has the fund been utilised and who are the beneficiaries in most of the schemes and projects it funds?

    According to the National Treasury’s operating policy framework of 2009, the formula of allocating funds is 2.25 per cent of the annual wage roll of all public servants and our searches indicate that the average annual wage earnings of public servants is Sh694.981 billion.

    The said insurance cover was rolled out through the May 2006 Human Resources Policies and Procedures manual for public service policy designed to cover permanent bodily injury or death arising from an accident.

    According to the insurance manual, Public servants include those in civil service, National Police Service, Judiciary, Kenya Defence Forces, county governments, public universities, parliamentary service, State corporations and all statutory bodies. The manual defined the nature of claims as those related to accidents while riding on motorcycles, including pillion passengers, accident out of exposure to banditry and similar risks in the course of duty, government drivers deployed to drive privately registered donor partner vehicles.

    In the manual, if it is as it says, then all public servants who have died or have been injured in the line of duty since 2009 have rather, are supposed to have valid claims.

    “Any claim is required to be reported by the insured, dependants or nominee in writing and submitted within a year of the injury or death,” the manual reads.

    This is a massive scandal and people need to go home and some be held up behind bars because as the records show, to date no rather many public servants have never been compensated through the GPA and WIBA, and there are no records of those who have claimed.

    Public Accounts Committee Chair Ugunja MP Opiyo Wandayi, stated that his committee will probe into the allegations and unravel those behind the scandal and masterminds of the entire scheme.

    “Definitely, this is an issue that catches the attention of any watchdog entity, be it EACC or DCI. We shall be liaising with the Office of Auditor General to have a special audit done,” Mr Wandayi said.

    Treasury Chief Administrative Secretary Nelson Gaichuhie admitted the existence of the GPA and WIBA annual budgetary allocations, in his response, Gaichuhie stated that the government was planning to use the kitty to enhance the NHIF cover once the systems are in place.

    “This is going to be the first time the money will be going to NHIF so that victims can file claims and get compensated,” he told local media.

    Mr. Gaichuhie denied responding to why the allocation has not been benefiting victims and why public servants have not been sensitised about it.

  • Why A Professor Has Filed A Petition To Make Luo A National Language

    Why A Professor Has Filed A Petition To Make Luo A National Language

    Professor Sammy Gwada Ogot, or as he’s popularly known, weed activist, has filed a petition in the National Assembly to have Luo language classified as an official language in Kenya.

    Prof. Gwada Ogot is remembered for his push for the legalisation of the medical production and use of bhang.

    According to Gwada,Chapter two of the Constitution should be amended and the Luo language given official status that, according to him, believes it does.

    Prof. Gwada stated that his petition is a way of promoting the development and use of indigenous languages in line with constitutional provisions.

    Last week, In a petition submitted to the Clerk of National Assembly, Gwada argued that the Dholuo, Luo Language, has a capacity to not only generate but also record, translate, instruct and transmit knowledge scientifically.

    Ogot stated that Luo language is the foundation of universal knowledge hence should be recognised and given the status it deserves.

    “That this petition identifies Luo as the first language for scientific and liturgical instructions of the world and as the root of all others, including Kiswahili and English, both which enjoy national and official status in the Constitution,” Gwada’s petition says.

    According to Gwada, Article 7 of the Constitution has identified Kiswahili as the national language while listing the same Kiswahili and English as the official languages.

    Ogot wants the Parliament to amend the article so that Luo is included alongside Kiswahili and English, which he states that it is part of the government policy to promote and protect the diversity of language of the people of Kenya.

    Gwada states that his petition is a step towards realising the national ideal of self-sufficiency in language and aligns to the policy guidelines formulated by the Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development (KICD) as well as tenets of the new competency based education system.

    Mr Ogot states in his petition that Luo and Luhya are the two greats lights of language upon which knowledge is constructed.

    “Luo is the language of light in which the Holy Bible was written and is therefore the key to deciphering meanings of identities, expressions and contexts of all other faiths universally since all primarily constructed on Luo morphemes,” Gwada stated in a petition.

    According to Gwada’s petition, Luo baptismal language of the world is exclusive scholastic basis for universal study of the history and origin of proper names, especially personal names and Philosophy.

    In his petition, Ogot provides a range which includes all ostronyms, astronyms, hydronyms, oronyms, eponyms, toponyms and anthroponyms in the universe since all agglutinate from Luo morphemes and phrases.

    “The facts I have presented recognise language as the singular vanguard, voice and van for protecting, promoting and conveying culture and knowledge and in the shared pursuit of developing, promoting, protecting local languages, I pray that Article 7 of the constitution be amended to include Luo as official language.”

  • Sonko Threatens To Storm The Parliament If Duale Remains Reluctant In 14 Days

    Sonko Threatens To Storm The Parliament If Duale Remains Reluctant In 14 Days

    Mike Sonko on Monday issued a 14-day ultimatum to Aden Duale to withdraw the proposed salary and allowances increment or he gives the public a go ahead to storm the Parliament.

    Sonko warned Duale throught his Facebook page that he will call a mass demonstration to storm the National Assembly if Duale does not comply within timeline he has issued.

    “I do hereby seek for historic support from members of the public, civil society, comrades and religious leaders in storming the National Assembly if Aden Duale does not withdraw the proposed salary and allowances increment at the expense of taxpayers within the next 14 days,” reads part of Sonko’s post.

    On the Post, Sonko emphasized that the demonstration will be legal and within the confinements of the new constitution.

    “We shall comply with all the due constitutional and legal requirements to ensure the success of this demonstration and protect the rights of the people of Kenya,” Assured Sonko’s Facebook post.

    Here’s Governor Sonko’s full post

    STORMING OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY.

    We believe that sovereign power belongs to the people, and only donated to elected leaders as enshrined in Article 1 of the Constitution of Kenya which states as follows:

    (1) All sovereign power belongs to the people of Kenya and shall be exercised only in accordance with this Constitution.

    (2) The people may exercise their sovereign power either directly or through their democratically elected representatives.

    I do hereby seek for historic support from members of the public, civil society, comrades and religious leaders in storming the National Assembly if Aden Duale does not withdraw the proposed salary and allowances increment at the expense of taxpayers within the next 14 days.

    We shall comply with all the due constitutional and legal requirements to ensure the success of this demonstration and protect the rights of the people of Kenya.

    The Jubilee majority leader Aden Duale is leading MPs who are pushing for a salary increment.

    Earlier last week, Rarieda MP Otiende Amollo had said He’s has never been bankrupt like this before while on her part Suba MP, Millie Odhiambo, blamed her constituents for making her go broke.

    Member of Parliament are alleging that their salaries are stretched to the limit because of contributions and handouts.

    Which, on my opinion, is a total bluff from what we elected expecting to be our leaders and protectors.

    Most of our MPs have fixed their lives in an extremely flashy superstar lifestyle that exceeds their pay.

    Sonko rants and angry attack on Duale are over the delayed funds supposed to be allocated to counties by the National Assembly.

    Sonko while speaking at Alladina Grounds in Jomvu, Mombasa County on Sunday attacked Duale and his plot to undermine devolution.

    In a video doing rounds on the internet,that was shared by Sonko, Nairobi Governor is heard ranting to Duale “I want to tell Aden Duale that hii pesa ya devolution si pesa ya mama yako.”

    Sonko’s rants are coming at a time when Governors, led by Council of Governors Chairperson, Wycliffe Oparanya,
    forced their way into the Supreme Court buildings to submit a petition seeking to compel parliament to pass the Division of Revenue Allocation Bill 2019.

    The Division of Revenue Allocation Bill stipulates how money should be disbursed to counties.

  • House of Thugs: Most Sitting MPs Are Battling Criminal Cases In Kenya

    House of Thugs: Most Sitting MPs Are Battling Criminal Cases In Kenya

    Have you seen, interacted or even heard of your Member of Parliament?

    Probably no, because they are busy in corridors of courts seeking their freedom and ‘justice’.

    Our August house is full of crooks and masterminds of fleecing the coffers.

    Chapter Six of the our new constitution that basically entails Leadership and Integrity Act, looks like a printed joke.

    Almost every elected member of parliament or even the senate has a case or piles of cases to answer, defend and mostly, clear their names.

    Kenya’s economy has been crippled by massive fraud, multi-billion graft and high-end forgeries all courtesy our elected and appointed officials.

    Francis Ole Kaparo, the chair of the now dysfunctional NCIC has also not been playing his role.

    This has created a niche that encourages hate speech and incitement to violence from the mouthy government officials.

    The corruption that is in this country is unbelievable.

    All scandals are linked from one member of the parliament to another corrupt deal cleared by a member of Senate to another fraud that touches the Executive which leads to another corrupt clearing by the Judiciary.

    In a working democracy, The Leadership and Integrity Act laws are supposed to be governing the government officials.

    Also, Public Officer Ethics Act is supposed to be working according to our new constitution.

    Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission was crippled when the President appointed a retired Archbishop, Eliud Wabukala, to leader and govern corrupt government officials.

    Actually, our constitution has well thought out Laws that can actually work to make our country better and great.

    These acts are supposed to be governing our members of the national house of laws.
    a) Parliamentary Privileges and,
    b) Parliamentary Powers 2017,
    c) National Assembly standing
    Orders and,
    d) Speaker’s Rules.

    Over 50 Legislators in the August house and another 30 from the Senate have active cases of Criminal Offences.

    But the most affected ones are members of the parliamentary committees.

    These legislators have active cases and allegations of extortion, bribery, corruption, breach of parliamentary acts and national assembly orders.

    Parliamentary committee members are the master chiefs of all major fraud and scandal not forgetting the massive bribes they collect to clear corrupt dealings within the houses.

    Samuel Kimeu, the Executive Director of Transparency International says very little has been done to realise the full functions of the Constitution.

    “Until we get a way in which State officers can lose benefits and stature when charged in court, we may not make much constitutional progress,” Mr Kimeu told a local press.

    National Council of Churches in Kenya Secretary General Peter Karanja also said that a rogue legislature, couple of selfish politicians and their cronies enacted laws that washed out the much needed Chapter 6 of the Constitution.

    An allegation that the National parliament speaker Justine Muturi refused to comment about when he was contacted by the investigators of this site.

    The National Assembly published last year that, there is an overlap between the Parliamentary (Powers and Privileges) Act 2017, the Leadership and Integrity Act and
    the Public Officer Act.

    With that out and aside, Nakuru Town East MP David Gikaria was charged today with assault, incitement, resisting arrest and causing disturbance at a Nakuru based Police Station.

    The Police said that the MP slapped a deputy sub-county commander when he was being questioned about the land grabbing allegations.

    David Gikaria was on 28th of January arraigned in court on eight counts of land fraud.

    On 25th June this year, Nakuru Town West MP Samuel Arama was also arraigned in Nairobi’s Milimani anti-corruption court on charges of conspiring to defraud Mr Ahmed Muhammad land in Nakuru Municipality in August 2015.

    Mr Arama was also charged of Misleading Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission investigators.

    The notorious Bahati MP, Kimani Ngunjiri was on also arrested arrested for assaulting a lady traffic officer in Nakuru Town.

    He was later released by the court after they agreed to settle the matter privately.

    Bobasi MP Innocent Obiri is still fighting in the corridors of justice after he was charged with breach of peace by a Kisii High court.

    Mr Obiri was arrested and charged alongside his bodyguard Charles Nyakweba, who was charged separately of assault and malicious damage to property.

    Former president of Lamu County Issa Timamy was also charged with terrorism in 2014. A case that has been mentioned for over 4 years now.

    Changamwe MP Omar Mwinyi was earlier last year sentenced to four years in prison with an alternative fine of Sh1 million.

    He was charged and found guilty of assaulting two police officers during ODM party nominations in April 2017.

    Lugari MP Ayub Savula has a case to answer on charges of fraudulently obtaining Sh122 million from the Government Advertising Agency (GAA).

    Embakasi North MP James Gakuya was last year charged jointly with 12 others, of acquiring fraudulently Sh39.9 million from National Government Constituency Development Funds.

    The mouthy Sirisia MP John Waluke was arrested over corruption allegations that he denied at preliminary investigation but later a city court said he has a case.

    The controversial Nandi Hills MP Alfred Keter was charged alongside two businessmen with multiple counts related to forgery of Sh633 million Treasury Bills.

    Mwingi Central MP Gideon Mulyungi, who was a principal secretary, was in October last year charged with hate speech against the Presidency.