Humble educationist from Samburu exits the hot seat at TSC
Gabriel Lengoiboni. ILLUSTRATION | STANSLAUS MANTHI
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO, aodhiambo@ke.nationmedia.com
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In Summary
Bio data
- Gabriel Lengoiboni has been working in the public service for the last 30 years.
- He boasts of two degrees, a Bachelor of Science Education from the University of Nairobi and a Master of Science from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
- Prior to his appointment to the current position on July 22, 2004, Mr Lengoiboni served as senior deputy director of Education in charge of universities at the Ministry of Education.
- He also served as the country’s Education Attaché in India between 1994 and 1999 under the Foreign Affairs ministry.
When Gabriel Lengoiboni exits as the secretary of the
Teachers Service Commission on Tuesday he will certainly be a relieved
man.
The soft-spoken career administrator has not had it easy
during his ten-year tenure at the helm of the giant commission, which
caters for more than 280,000 teachers.
He has battled many biting teachers’ strikes as well as litigations by retired and serving teachers and unions.
Lengoiboni has worked in the public service for the
last 30 years. He gave an emotional farewell to thousands of secondary
school teachers who were attending their annual conference in Mombasa
last week.
While working with teachers was part of his joy, it
was also part of his headache. “It is time for someone else to continue
with the reform agenda we have vigorously pursued together for the last
decade,” he said.
March this year perhaps marked one of his most
trying moments when the High Court in Nakuru issued a warrant for his
arrest for failing to pay retired teachers Sh16.7 billion as pension and
salary arrears.
For several weeks, Mr Lengoiboni was one of most
wanted high profile individuals in the country, destined to cool his
heels at Kamiti Maximum Security Prison for six months for failing to
pay the retired teachers.
His legal team would argue that the TSC boss’s
hands were tied – that he was more than willing to make the payments but
he’d come up against a tardy government bureaucracy that tied up all
his efforts in red-tape – but the court was hearing none of it.
Deputy Inspector-General of Police Samuel Arachi
was swiftly summoned by the High Court to explain why Mr Lengoiboni was
not chewing beans and ugali in Kamiti.
Mr Arachi said the administrator had last been
sighted in North Africa but he had issued firm instructions to the
Immigration Department to promptly arrest him once he set foot back on
Kenyan soil. And to ensure Mr Lengoiboni did not slip through the
dragnet, Mr Arachi assured the court that he had also placed additional
officers at the airport and at the TSC offices. It appeared like the
boss’s goose was well and truly cooked.
But Mr Lengoiboni somehow managed to slip back into
the country and carry on with his life. Talk about hiding in plain
sight! The court would later give Inspector-General of Police Joseph
Boinett 60 days to find his way around his office before he was also
supposed to deliver the administrator to the warders on Kamiti Road.
Despite these challenges, Mr Lengoiboni has
maintained a characteristic calm; always pushing for arbitration. It is
an indication of the wide experience he picked up as a public
administrator for nearly three decades.
Hailing from the rural plains of Samburu where the
pastoralist lifestyle has for decades hindered formal education, he
opted to remain in the classroom, moving on to attain a First Class
Honours degree in Science Education from the University of Nairobi.
His education exploits did not end there; he
proceeded to obtain a Master’s of Science in Statistics from the London
School of Economics and Political Science.
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