By ALLAN ODHIAMBO
In Summary
- Besides the hefty Sh2.5 million spent on phones, the county managers are at pains to explain the procurement of a Sh2,250 per plate lunch for guests of the county Speaker.
- The costly meals were bought for 20 visitors who were entertained by the official last year.
On two occasions this week, mobile phones graced
national news headlines. The first instance was on Monday during the
launch of M-Akiba, the country’s maiden exclusive sale of bonds worth
Sh5 billion on mobile phones.
A day later, mobile phones were back in the news but for all
the wrong reasons, following revelations that Kajiado County had bought
its executives handsets worth up to Sh90,000 each, in breach of the
law.
The law caps purchase of phones for public
officials at Sh30,000, in line with a circular issued by the Office of
the President. However, Kajiado officials in the fiscal year 2013/14
procured two batches of Samsung Galaxy Note III at Sh90,000 and
Sh80,000.
Auditor-General Edward Ouko has questioned the
purchase of the 24 phones at Sh2,490,000, terming it suspect. He
documents that 17 phones were bought at Sh90,000 and another batch of
seven units at Sh80,000.
“The prices came down by Sh10,000 mainly due to the
fact that electronic items prices rapidly fluctuated downwards after
they had been released to the market. Quotations for the two sets were
issued in different times thereby resulting in the price deferential,”
Kajiado Governor David Nkedianye told the Senate’s Public Accounts
Committee (PAC) on Tuesday amid growing public outrage over reckless
public expenditure in some of the counties.
Besides the hefty Sh2.5 million spent on phones,
the county managers are at pains to explain the procurement of a Sh2,250
per plate lunch for guests of the county Speaker. The costly meals were
bought for 20 visitors who were entertained by the official last year.
These contentious expenses have thrust Dr Nkedianye into the spotlight, even culminating in a grilling session by PAC.
The Senate has since ordered for fresh
investigations into allegations of wastage of funds by Kajiado Members
of County Assemblies (MCAs), especially on travel and training costs
after it emerged that about Sh27.9 million could not be accounted for.
Of this, Sh8 million was paid to four firms as
training fees whereas Sh19.9 million was the cost of foreign travel
allowances during the training abroad, according to a report by the
Auditor-General.
Three MCAs are accused of pocketing double
allowances after they were listed as having attended two functions that
were running concurrently in two different countries.
County Clerk Daniel Konyango and Speaker Johnson
Osoi admitted that each of the MCAs received Sh30,000 as allowances for a
local event and another Sh170,340 for a forum that was held in Addis
Ababa as from June 15-20, 2014.
The woes facing Kajiado come in the wake of a
scandal in Bungoma County where officials bought wheelbarrows worth a
whopping Sh109,320 each – which is 32 times the average price of a
regular unit as set by the Public Procurement Oversight Authority (PPOA)
that benchmarks pricing for government procurement.
Dr Nkedianye’s battles will, however, not just end
after tackling the graft claims. The governor faces the headache of a
brewing conflict among sections of residents in the county’s main town
of Kitengela.
Intermittent violent clashes have rocked the
metropolis, raising panic among residents and the business community.
Although the county officials have maintained that the clashes were as a
result of disagreement between traders over market stalls and space,
some residents warned that the clashes could be signs of long-running
feuds over land.
Congestion in Nairobi has seen thousands of people
move out to areas such as Kitengela, Athi River and Thika in search of
land and housing. Land sale transactions remain banned in the county
despite pressure by private developers and realtors to have the embargo
lifted to enable buyers obtain title deeds for their properties.
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