By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU,
The Speaker of the National
Assembly Justin Muturi has said the Salaries and Remuneration Commission
and the Commission for the Implementation of the Constitution should
not "threaten" Parliament.
Mr Muturi, who is the chairman
of the Parliamentary Service Commission (PSC) said that the SRC and CIC
were “speaking per incuriam”.
“The SRC derives its mandate
from the Constitution, but the method that it shall then follow when
doing its job is in the SRC Act. She (SRC chairman Sarah Serem) is
supposed to bring her proposals to Parliament. Read section 26(2) of the
SRC Act,” Mr Muturi told the Nation Wednesday.
The Speaker, who is in Turkey, issued a veiled threat to the two commissions not to “threaten Parliament”.
“They should tread carefully.
They should not threaten Parliament. Are they out of their minds?
Parliament will take action and we’ll see where they will go,” said Mr
Muturi in a telephone interview.
He said the PSC will sit to
determine how it will execute the House resolution, which some MPs such
as the Deputy Leader of Minority Party Jakoyo Midiwo and PSC member
Jimmy Angwenyi had asked for immediate implementation.
“I am seized of this matter,” said Mr Muturi.
The Speaker’s comments came as
the SRC invoked the name of President Uhuru Kenyatta, his deputy William
Ruto and the civil society for backing the push to reduce the public
wage bill.
Ms Serem said there was no division in the commission as alleged by MPs.
Peter Oloo Aringo who was picked
by the PSC to sit in the SRC added: “We are unanimous in the policy
position. We must rise beyond politics and become statesmen.”
Ms Serem said the salaries
commission will not be intimidated because the truth is, the public wage
bill had to be brought to “fiscally sustainable levels”.
“It is a job we have to do and
we’ll do it to the best of our ability. It is a task that requires the
cooperation of every Kenyan who has the interest of the country at
heart,” said Ms Serem.
She added: “The task we are
handling is not about SRC. It is about Kenya and its sustainability. It
is about our ability to use the resources of this country to benefit the
majority of Kenyans. It is about the posterity of this nation. It is
about the future of our children and the legacy we want to leave to the
future generations.”
Ms Serem said the commission’s doors were open for dialogue.
The focus is now on the
Parliamentary Service Commission and the Clerks of Parliament to see if
they will pay MPs Sh851,000 as per the National Assembly Remuneration
Act, or if the payment will be Sh532,500 as prescribed by the SRC.
No comments:
Post a Comment