By EDWIN MUTAI, emutai@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
The Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) will soon be compelled
to disclose the total cost its troops have incurred in the five-year
battle against Somalia-based Al-Shabaab terrorists if Parliament
passes proposed changes to the law governing the country’s military.
The new law is expected to open the lid on the KDF’s
spending while on local or foreign missions – a totally opaque public
expenditure line under the current legal regime.
The National Assembly’s Departmental Committee on
Defence and Foreign Relations has proposed a further amendment to the
Kenya Defence Forces (Amendment) Bill, 2015 to compel the Cabinet
secretary in charge of Defence to disclose where the troops are
deployed, and the expenditure incurred or is expected to be incurred.
“The proposed amendment seeks to include
expenditure incurred or expected to be incurred during deployment of
Defence Forces as one of items that the Cabinet secretary should
disclose to the National Assembly,” the committee said in its report on
the amendment Bill.
The Bill, which is sponsored by the government, was
published on July 22, 2015. MPs commenced debate on the Bill last
Thursday after Majority Leader Aden Duale moved it through the second
reading.
Section 13 of the Bill seeks to amend clause 31 of
the KDF Act, 2012 that allows the KDF to co-operate with other
authorities like the Kenya Police.
The parent Act stipulates that the Defence Forces
shall assist and co-operate with other authorities in situations of
emergency or disaster, and report to the National Assembly whenever the
military is deployed in such circumstances.
It says that the KDF personnel may be deployed to
restore peace in any part of Kenya affected by unrest or instability but
only with the approval of the National Assembly and shall, in the
interest of national security, co-operate and work with other security
organs in the discharge of its constitutional mandate.
Through the proposed amendment, the committee has
expanded the scope of the KDF Act to require that where the Defence
Forces are deployed for any purpose, the Cabinet Secretary shall inform
the National Assembly promptly the reasons for such deployment, place
where they are being deployed and the period for which they are expected
to be deployed.
“If the National Assembly is not in session during
the first seven days after the deployment of the Defence Forces, the
Cabinet Secretary shall provide the information required to the Speaker
of the National Assembly,” the Bill states.
Committee chairman Ndung’u Gethenji argues in the
committee report that clause 13 of the amendment Bill, as originally
drafted, had removed the need for the Cabinet Secretary to inform the
National Assembly where the Defence Forces are deployed, and expenditure
incurred or expected to be incurred.
“This is in violation of Article 201 of the
Constitution, which outlines openness and accountability as one of the
guiding principles in financial matters,” Mr Gethenji said in the report
signed by 15 MPs who sit on the 28-member committee.
The KDF moved into the war-torn horn of African
nation in 2011 in pursuit of the Islamist militants who had staged
numerous terrorist attacks and kidnappings of Kenyan and foreign
citizens.
Kenya suffered a spate of terrorist attacks to
which western governments responded with travel advisories warning their
citizens from visiting the East African nation.
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