President Uhuru Kenyatta (R) and Deputy President William Ruto. The
Deputy President Wednesday admitted that President Uhuru Kenyatta was
misadvised in making some appointments that contravened the law. PHOTO |
JARED NYATAYA | FILE
Deputy President William Ruto Wednesday
admitted that President Uhuru Kenyatta was misadvised in making some
appointments that contravened the law.
Reacting to a
question on the recent appointments of parastatal heads that have
sparked criticism, Mr Ruto said “hard questions” will be asked to those
who advised the President to approve them.
“(This) should not have happened,” he said when he appeared on Citizen TV’s morning talk show, Cheche. “We will be asking them very hard questions.”
Among
the appointments that had provoked heated debate was that of gadfly
2013 presidential candidate Abduba Dida as chairman of the CDF board,
and Mr Francis Muthaura as chairman of the Lamu Port Southern
Sudan-Ethiopia Transport (Lapsset) board.
The gazette
notice appointing Mr Dida said he would hold the job from tomorrow until
September 9. It also revoked the appointment of Ms Jennifer Barasa.
Opposition
leaders criticised Mr Dida’s appointment, saying the position required
vetting by Parliament. Other leaders criticised Mr Muthaura’s
appointment, arguing that the position should have been given to a
youthful candidate. There were also murmurs among some URP legislators
who claimed that Rift Valley had gotten a raw deal in the appointments.
But
speaking in Kericho later in the day, Mr Ruto, who is also the URP
leader, said: “We cannot give all the jobs in government to two tribes
alone... Our major aim is to enhance unity.”
He criticised Rift Valley MPs who had complained about Mr John Mututho’s appointment as head of the anti-drugs agency, Nacada.
“We
have given you so many jobs and some are still complaining that John
Mututho is the chairman of Nacada. What do they want? I don’t
understand,” he said.
Mr Mututho’s initial appointment
was revoked because the law had not been followed. He was later
re-appointed after the process was regularised.
Mr
Ruto’s statement that the President could have been misadvised is bound
to turn the spotlight on some of Mr Kenyatta’s key advisers on legal
matters who include Attorney General Githu Muigai, Solicitor General
Njee Muturi and State House constitutional and legal affairs adviser
Abdikadir Mohammed.
Said Mr Ruto: “In the case of
Mututho, the advice given to him was not correct because the process of
appointing the chair of Nacada requires a certain process….Dida’s
appointment also required the approval of Parliament.”
Mr Ruto, however, said the confusion could have arisen from the fact that different laws were used to effect the appointments.
Later
in the day, an official at the State Law office who declined to be
named, said the responsibility of advising the President on appointments
lay with the respective ministers.
“If, for instance,
the President wants to make an appointment to a parastatal in the
Ministry of Tourism or that of Industrialisation, the minister in charge
of the docket is the adviser,” said the official.
The
latest appointments to parastatal boards have been signed off by the
respective Cabinet secretaries while the bulk of those made on December
27 and 31 had been signed by the President.
Mr Ruto
also said the President should not be criticised for getting only two
out of more than 50 appointments he has made so far wrong.
“If
you are to mark these appointments, the President has only got two out
of the 50 wrong. He has been right in the 48 others, meaning that he has
scored an A,” said Mr Ruto.
The Deputy Head of State
also defended President Kenyatta over accusations that he ignored the
youth while appointing the chairs of various parastatal boards. He said
the energy of the youth could better be utilised in other jobs.
“Chairmen
are non-executive positions. They only hold four meetings a year. You
cannot give an energetic young man such a job,” Mr Ruto said, while
claiming that 70 per cent of positions in government had so far been
given to the youth.
“We are progressively bringing the youth to these institutions,” he said.
With
regard to the appointment of Mr Muthaura to head Lapsset, Mr Ruto said
the decision was made bearing in mind that Mr Muthaura played an
important role in setting it up.
He said it was felt
that the previous chair, Prof Ali Abdulrazak Shaukat, already had
another job at the National Council for Science and Technology. “It was
then decided that Mr Muthaura should be given the job, which is not a
Lamu project…it is a major transport artery for the region.”
Later
in the day, he said that he and the President were working towards
making sure that the national cake was shared out across all the
communities of Kenya to ensure that the constitutional requirement of
regional balance was met.
Additional reporting by Wycliffe Kipsang
No comments :
Post a Comment