Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Mugabe was right; We are leaders in graft

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe gives his official address during celebrations held to mark the country's 34th independence anniversary on April 18, 2014 in Harare, Zimbabwe. PHOTO/AFP 
By Harrison Misiko
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I have never imagined speaking on behalf of Kenya in a foreign country. But this unlikely job fell on me recently when one of my editors at The Washington Post engaged me on the unsavoury subject of graft in government.

He wanted to know how endemic the problem is, and if there are any “practical” steps being taken to deal with it.

His interest was aroused by Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s use of Kenya and Nigeria as the yardstick to explain the levels of malfeasance his government should not engage in.
Mugabe was recently quoted as asking his military chiefs: “Are we now like Nigeria and Kenya where you have to reach into your pocket to get anything done?”
Like many Kenyans, I was at first taken aback by the remarks considering that Zimbabwe in more corrupt than Kenya, based on last year’s Transparency International’s corruption index.
Kenya, with 26 points out of 100, was ranked 136 out of 177 countries surveyed while Zimbabwe, with 21 points, was placed at position 156.

But on second thoughts, I am convinced that inasmuch as Mugabe’s salvo is a classic example of the pot calling the kettle black, it has an iota of truth. Corruption is still rampant 13 months after Jubilee came into power.

For the last one year, we have witnessed the government’s failure to bring to book people who made millions on Kenyans’ backs during the Moi and Kibaki years.

UNDER THE PRESIDENT'S NOSE
President Kenyatta and his deputy, Mr William Ruto, have presided over questionable deals involving billions of shillings, including the Sh425 billion Standard Gauge Railway tender, the Sh20 billion-plus school laptops bid, and Sh13 billion National Social Security Fund Tassia housing project tender.
Questions have been raised over the procedures used to award these contracts, with allegations about exaggerations and cooked up figures.
The seriousness of this rot cannot be ignored after it emerged that some people working right under the President’s nose are the chief architects of these scandals.
Other beneficiaries are the ghost workers who have infiltrated the civil service right from the counties to the Office of the President. These criminals, the government has admitted, take home a staggering Sh1.8 billion every year.
What is more heart-rending, though, is response of President Kenyatta and Deputy President Ruto to this criminality — empty warnings.
The two leaders are busy telling people who have stolen taxpayers’ money not to dip their hands into the cookie jar again, instead of stopping them from swallowing the loot they are already chewing.
What are courts and jails for? And why is Mr Mumo Matemu and his team at the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission drawing millions in taxpayers’ money every month if thieves are to be sweet-talked like this?
It is equally shocking that the President has thrown his weight behind the railway project bid in spite of endless protests.
The government’s inaction is contributing to the negative image corruption has caused Kenya. If its leaders do not replace rhetoric with action, Kenya will soon become the undisputed continental leader in rank corruption.
Mr Misiko, a Sub-Editor with the Nation, is an Alfred Friendly Press Partners’ 2014 Fellow at ‘The Washington Post’. (Harrison.Misiko@washpost.com)

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