Politics and policy
City Hall, Nairobi. PHOTO | FILE
By JOHN NGIRACHU
In Summary
- The auditors found that the two other companies that qualified to the financial evaluation- Virtual Mobile and Craftsilcon- had bid to charge 2.5 per cent of the transactions as the fee, the same rate the Kenya Revenue Authority would have charged had it been given the job.
- From this, the Auditor-General concluded that over the five years the contract will be in place, Nairobi County will lose Sh767.4 million compared to what would have happened had the other lower bidders been given the job.
- The contract to supply, implement and maintain the electronic system by Webtribe Ltd was awarded at Sh23.2 million, with the firm then keeping 4.5 per cent of all revenue collected through JamboPay.
Nairobi MPs are this morning scheduled to formally
petition the EACC to investigate financial irregularities in the county
government in a report by the Auditor-General.
Angered by the damning report by Auditor-General Edward Ouko
tabled in the County Assembly of Nairobi in July, the MPs will be
asking the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to focus on the
electronic revenue collection system.
“The issue is whether the governor has the mandate
to sign an agreement and how it was procured, which even the
Auditor-General has questioned,” said Makadara MP Benson Mutura.
He said the agreement between the government and
Webtribe Ltd, who run the revenue collection on the system known as
Jambopay, was questionable because of a confidentiality clause.
The clause states that: “The parties undertake to
keep strictly confidential all information and data exchanged between
them (including those exchanged in the pre-contractual stage) as well as
the terms of this contract for the contracting period.”
Mr Mutura argued that this undermines the transparency expected in the management of public affairs.
“Any agreement that the county has entered into
should be made known to the public. There should be no secrets in the
way the county is run,” he added.
Dr Kidero has accused Mr Mutura and his colleagues
of politicizing revenue collection at City Hall and said that the
e-payment contract was awarded competitively.
Enhanced revenue collection
"Since its inception, the electronic payment has
led to enhanced revenue collection through increased accountability and
transparency in tracking of county revenue flows, resulting in reduction
of corruption and loss of funds experienced through handling of cash,”
said the governor.
“The overall county revenue collection went up by
approximately Sh1.44 billion in the financial year 2014/2015, contrary
to the allegations by some MPs that the e-payment deal has led to
reduced revenue collection and that it was meant to steal from the city
residents."
Mr Mutura said Dr Kidero’s claims were not true and should be supported by evidence.
“Last year, they increased parking fees, land rates
and licence fees by more than 100 per cent and so the year’s revenue
should have doubled. We are demanding that the governor shows how much
revenue was collected,” he added.
The contract to supply, implement and maintain the
electronic system by Webtribe Ltd was awarded at Sh23.2 million, with
the firm then keeping 4.5 per cent of all revenue collected through
JamboPay.
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