Politics and policy
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Questions arise over the value to the taxpayers of President’s frequent travels abroad.
President Uhuru Kenyatta has made at least 24 foreign
trips in the past one year, underlining his frequent-flier status that
has turned the spotlight on the cost to the taxpayer.
Nine of the trips have been in the past three months causing
a strain on the Presidency’s budget that became apparent in January
when Treasury secretary Henry Rotich sought Parliament’s approval for an
extra Sh50 million to cater to Mr Kenyatta’s local travel needs.
Official data shows that the Presidency has already
exceeded its recurrent budget allocation for the fiscal year ending
June 30 by Sh300 million with travel spending as the main driver.
Concerns over the cost of the President’s foreign
trips mounted last week after it emerged that 84 people would be
accompanying him to the inauguration of Nigeria’s president-elect
Muhammadu Buhari.
Mr Kenyatta’s foreign trips have particularly come
under scrutiny because the majority have been made to countries Kenya
trades the least with, bringing into question what value the taxpayer is
getting for the money spent.
The President’s travels, which at times have lasted
for a week, have not escaped the attention of keen followers of the
country’s diplomacy who expected them to be aligned to the pursuit of
economic agenda that the Jubilee government set upon coming to office in
May 2013.
“Foreign trips should be minimised, not just
because of expenses, but also because they create an impression that our
leaders are running away from problems at home,” said XN Iraki, an
economics lecturer at the University of Nairobi.
Mr Iraki said the President’s many trips abroad are
not only hurting in terms of the direct costs to the taxpayer but also
because they set the tone for other public officials to waste public
funds on foreign trips.
During his travels, Mr Kenyatta is usually
accompanied by large delegations, including the security detail and
senior government officials who draw hefty sums in travelling
allowances.
Senior members of a presidential delegation
reportedly receive a daily out-of-pocket allowance of up to $400
(Sh40,000) while the government directly pays for their food and
accommodation.
The Controller of Budget’s (COB) half-year report
for the period ending December 2014 indicated that the Presidency
consumed Sh75 million in foreign travels — Sh15 million more than what
was spent during a similar period the previous year. The Presidency
consists of the offices of the President and the Deputy President.
But the budget-bursting impact of Mr Kenyatta’s
frequent-flier lifestyle lies in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs which
in the corresponding period spent Sh604 million on foreign travel, a
huge growth over the previous year’s Sh416 million.
The Foreign affairs ministry is the one that foots
the bill for the members of the President’s delegation during a foreign
trip. This year alone, Mr Kenyatta has travelled thrice to Tanzania and
twice to Ethiopia to attend regional summits, mostly to resolve
political crises in South Sudan and Burundi.
On February 2, the President was in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia, as the rapporteur of the Intergovernmental Authority on
Development (Igad), to witness the two warring South Sudanese factions
sign a peace deal following months of bloodshed.
No comments :
Post a Comment