By EDWIN MUTAI, emutai@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Legislators are threatening to cut the Sh922 million budget that the Treasury has allocated SRC for the year starting July should it fail to reverse the cut in foreign travel per-diem rates.
Parliament is pushing for higher foreign travel perks
for legislators as MPs threaten to slash the Salaries and Remuneration
Commission’s (SRC) Sh922.8 million budget by half.
SRC vice-chairperson Daniel Ogutu said the salaries team was
reviewing a request by the Parliamentary Service Commission (PSC) after
the House team visited their offices two weeks ago to seek a review of
the night out allowances.
Travel allowances for MPs were slashed by the
salaries team in December to be in line with global benchmarks and help
the State curb rising recurrent expenditure.
The legislators are now threatening to cut the
Sh922 million budget that the Treasury has allocated SRC for the year
starting July should it fail to reverse the cut in foreign travel
per-diem rates.
“The PSC came to our offices two weeks ago for
consultation on this matter. We are looking into your matter of per
diem,” Mr Ogutu told the Finance Planning and Trade committee chaired
by Anamoi MP Benjamin Langat.
In the fiscal year ending June 2014, MPs spent Sh3 billion on both local and foreign travel, which stood at Sh632.4 million.
Travel is one of the key perks including sitting
allowances that MPs draw as part of their earnings in the course of
their service.
Though each of the 416 Members of the National
Assembly and Senate earn a basic monthly salary of about Sh550,000,
allowances push their monthly take-home to more than Sh1 million,
highlighting their position as some of the best paid legislators in
Africa.
The lawmakers have argued that they deserve higher
salaries because their constituents expect them to provide charitable
support.
Many Kenyans view MPs as symbols of a greedy
political culture, seeking public office as an opportunity for personal
gain at the expense of a country struggling with an unemployment rate
that stands at more than 40 per cent.
Mr Ogutu defended the decision to slash the per
diems saying it conducted research and compared them with allowances
granted to members of Parliament in the UK, US, Canada, Finland and
South Africa in coming up with new rates.
He said the MPs’ new per diem was way above what the United Nations and the World Bank offer their staff.
According to the new rates introduced by the SRC,
allowances for Senators and National Assembly members travelling to
Canada have been slashed from Sh101,319 ($1,053) to Sh67,546 ($702).
The new rates for travel to the US are Sh63, 312
($658) from Sh115, 079 ($1,196) and to the United Kingdom from Sh106,
611 ($1,108) to Sh74,185 ($771).
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