By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
State corporations, whose chief executives were
suspended in President Uhuru Kenyatta’s corruption purge, remained
rudderless after only one announced a replacement for the top jobs by
Monday evening.
Geothermal Development Company (GDC) chief executive Silas
Simiyu became the first parastatal head to officially step aside to pave
the way for investigations.
The company’s board subsequently appointed Godwin
Mwawongo, previously GDC’s technical services manager, as the acting
CEO. Faisal Abbas, who chairs the GDC board, said in a statement that Dr
Simiyu had agreed to step aside.
“Godwin Mwawongo, a reservoir engineer, is an
accomplished geothermal expert with 20 years’ experience in the energy
sector,” said Mr Abbas. Boards of eight other agencies that Mr Kenyatta
had directed to name acting CEOs were yet to do so by Monday evening.
These include Agricultural Finance Corporation,
Nzoia Sugar Company, NSSF, National Water Conservation and Kenya
Pipeline Corporation. Others are Kenya Airports Authority, Tourism
Fund/Catering Levy Trustee and Kenya Trade Network Agency (KenTrade).
At GDC, the EACC is investigating alleged
irregularities in the award of tenders worth more than Sh10 billion,
including procurement of drilling rigs, staff mismanagement and
financial improprieties.
The board of Kenya Airports Authority (KAA), whose
managing director Lucy Mbugua is yet to officially step aside, has yet
to settle for an acting MD.
“We are yet to meet and make a decision. We (board
members) were all away when the President issued the directive,” KAA
chairman David Kimaiyo said on Monday.
Uncertainty, however, surrounds KenTrade which has
not had a board since expiry of the previous one’s term in June,
presenting a challenge in naming an acting official to stand in for the
chief executive Alex Kabuga, who is expected to relinquish office.
“We have not had a board since June 30,” KenTrade former chairman Joseph Kibwana told the Business Daily.
Gen (Rtd) Kibwana said the lack of a board had left
confusion in the naming of an acting CEO “Since KenTrade falls under
the National Treasury, I expect them to handle the matter,” he said.
It is not yet clear what allegations the KenTrade
CEO is facing. The state corporations’ heads are among 175 senior public
officials named in the list of corruption that is expected to be made
public and debated in parliament on Tuesday.
KenTrade is the custodian of electronic single
window system, which allows submission, receipting and processing of
cargo documents electronically at a single entry point to speed up
import and export trade.
The portal hosts multiple government agencies
involved in clearing cargo and issuing import and export documents
including Kenya Revenue Authority and Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs).
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