By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU
Government departments and constitutional
commissions marched to Parliament Tuesday to appeal to MPs to rework the
national budget and increase the money allocated to them.
The Attorney General’s office
and the Department of Justice through the permanent secretary Gichira
Kibara appeared before the Justice and Legal Affairs Committee seeking
money to ensure that the training of lawyers and management of cases in
court had value to the taxpayers.
The Registrar of Political
Parties Lucy Ndung'u, also appeared before the committee and accused the
Treasury of flouting the law, when it allocated Sh216 million for the
political parties fund; whereas the law was clear that the amount should
not be less than 0.3 per cent of the national revenues. As per the
calculations, the Fund ought to have been given Sh3.1 billion.
The grouse of the State
officers was that the officials at the Treasury had ignored their
requests putting the crucial function of implementing the Constitution
in jeopardy.
For instance, Dr Kibara said
the Treasury had not allocated any money for the implementation of the
Truth, Justice and Reconciliation report, yet the law was clear that the
recommendations ought to be implemented to ensure healing in the
country.
Dr Kibara told the MPs in a
committee meeting at Nairobi’s Parliament buildings that without the
money, it will be impossible for the recommendations of the report to be
implemented.
“If it has zero funding, it is
as if somebody somewhere is trying to sabotage the report to make sure
that whatever is mentioned in there does not ever get implemented,” said
William Cheptumo (Baringo North, URP).
The Kenya Law Reform
Commission –the body charged with drafting laws to give effect to the
Constitution—also lamented that its plan to deliver services to the
counties had also been defeated, after the Treasury ignored its request
for Sh820 million to help county governments develop laws.
The Treasury gave the commission Sh100 million.
Joash Dache, the chief
executive of the KLRC, said the Commission for the Implementation of the
Constitution was mistaken when it told MPs that they need to pass 23
laws by August 27 this year as per the constitutional timelines.
Mr Dache said only four bills were necessary, and the CIC tally of 23 was ill-informed.
The CIC too came before the
commission seeking Sh157 million. The CIC said it had put in a request
of Sh573 million to the Treasury but they had been allocated Sh399
million.
The CIC had a tough time
trying to convince the MPs that it actually needed the money at a time
when the commission spends a lot of money on advertisement and foreign
travel.
The commission, according to
its budget presented for scrutiny by the House team shows that CIC has
spent a further Sh39 million in printing, advertising and information
supplies and services and intends to spend Sh20 million in the financial
year starting July 1.
MPs also tasked CIC vice
chairman Elizabeth Muli and commissioner Kamotho Waiganjo to explain why
$4.15 billion it received and which includes outstanding pledges from
donors in the last financial year is held and managed by the UNDP on
behalf of the commission.
Members of the committee
chaired by Anaibkoi MP Samuel Chepkonga accused the commission of
engaging in wasteful spending including the expenditure of Sh59 million
in public advertising last year.
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