Former Devolution Cabinet Secretary Anne Waiguru on Thursday
blamed a “mysterious puppeteer” for her problems over the National Youth
Service scandal.
She told
Public Accounts Committee members to find out for themselves who she was
referring to, but pointedly named an aide to Deputy President William
Ruto – Mr Farouk Kibet – as one of the people who have been allegedly communicating with her persecutors.
She
said the “puppeteer” was working with a network to fix her over the
theft of public funds at the NYS, which was a major component in her
docket during her time in the Cabinet.
Ms
Waiguru told the PAC in Nairobi that the “puppeteer” was behind
attempts by Mr Ben Gethi, Ms Josephine Kabura and her former Principal
Secretary, Mr Peter Mangiti, all whom have been charged in court in
connection with the scandal, to link her to it.
In
their appearances before the team on Tuesday and Wednesday, Ms Kabura
and Mr Mangiti, respectively, placed the scandal at the feet of Ms
Waiguru. Ms Kabura said she was her long-time friend and that she had
introduced her to doing business with the government. Mr Mangiti said
she created a parallel administration in the ministry and manipulated it
to facilitate the theft.
NEVER MET
Ms
Waiguru described the effort to link her to the scandal as “an
inconvenient truth”, saying she had never met or interacted with Ms
Kabura.
She said it was not
possible that Ms Kabura was covering up for her “as Kabura has said
everything evil that one can humanly say about me”.
“Clearly
Kabura is a puppet. She picked me for the simple reason that she must
have been told by the puppeteer to pick on me with a view to protect the
puppeteer,” she said.
“The
network is intricate, the manner in which every witness, who has come
before this committee has been at pains to try and link me to their
actions is telling. They have not given any concrete evidence in the
form of a signed letter, phone records or a text message. They are
clearly working under very powerful instructors or puppeteers and I hope
that this committee finds out who these are,” she said.
“The
problem with this thing of NYS is that there have been so many stories,
so many lies, so many rumours, too much drama, that it is difficult to
see the truth,” she added.
She also denied allegations that she had companies doing business with the NYS.
WAS NECESSARY
While
she admitted asking the Treasury and subsequently Parliament, for the
Supplementary Budget of Sh3.5 billion that was later the target of theft
at NYS, she said this was necessary because of the expansion of the NYS
to 20,000 servicemen and the cohorts to 80,000.
“I
did not personally request. I made the request and proceeded to defend
it in Parliament as part of my mandate as Cabinet Secretary,” she said.
She,
however, had a hard time explaining how the request was originated by a
letter from Mr Mangiti, but which referred to her own instructions.
This contradicted her earlier assertion that she gave all instructions
in writing and never verbally.
She eventually found a single sheet of paper in her documents, but it was declared inadmissible as evidence.
She
also blamed the network for the loss of Sh791 million using the simple
trick of adding zeroes to documents and increasing the amount tenfold,
from Sh79.1 million to Sh791 million.
Ms
Waiguru, who has declared interest in the Kirinyaga governorship, said
this could not happen “unless you are all colluding” since the various
officers who look at the payments on paper and in the system would
recognise the oddity.
NOT IFMIS
“The problem is not the Ifmis system. The problem is the people. The system is as good as the people who use it,” she said.
To
prove the existence of a network, she presented a document that she
said was from the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, showing how
individuals in the ministry and the NYS communicated with eventual
suspects and persons of interest in the scandal.
Among
these were calls between Mr Gethi and Mr Kibet, thought to be the man
who works as an assistant to Deputy President Ruto. Mr Kibet was shown
to have spoken on the phone with Mr Gethi 262 times. He was also
reported to have received Sh1 million from Mr Gethi.
There
were also records of calls between Mr Gethi and Mr Mangiti, the PS, Mr
Harakhe and Mr Gethi and Mr Gethi and Samuel Wachenje, the former
Finance Director at the NYS.
Asked
about its source, she said: “You can find documents if you want them.
Nowadays there is hardly any document you can’t find. I got it from a
friend. It is not a formal document. It is not official.”
Ms
Waiguru arrived at Parliament Buildings for her much-anticipated
appearance at about 10am accompanied by her secretary, Ms Pauline Kamau,
and a bodyguard, a delegation far much smaller than the ones she had
brought along during previous appearances before the committee.
ALSO BROUGHT
Clad
in a blue and white dress with shades of black and a pair of formal
black leather shoes, she also brought a large black leather briefcase of
documents borne by her secretary.
She
began her testimony by asking for assurances that the committee was not
pursuing her and was only interested in the truth and didn’t have any
ulterior motives.
Ms Waiguru said that from watching live broadcasts of the committee’s proceedings, she had noticed that some members of the asked witnesses leading questions.
She cited questions put to Mr Gethi and Ms Kabura when they met the committee.
“I seek your assurance before we proceed that this committee is guided by none other than its mandate to seek the truth under the law,” she said.
Ms Waiguru said that from watching live broadcasts of the committee’s proceedings, she had noticed that some members of the asked witnesses leading questions.
She cited questions put to Mr Gethi and Ms Kabura when they met the committee.
“I seek your assurance before we proceed that this committee is guided by none other than its mandate to seek the truth under the law,” she said.
Members
of the team saw this as an attempt to intimidate them, but PAC chairman
Nicholas Gumbo gave her the necessary assurances.
She
was in a bullish mood, brushing aside a request to explain how the
Integrated Financial Management Information System (Ifmis) works and
telling MPs to ask the Treasury Cabinet Secretary about it, flatly
refusing an offer to have a cup of tea, smiling and when it came to
answering the questions, choosing to rearrange the responses to ease the
flow of her delivery.
INTERESTED PARTIES
At
the meeting were also MPs, referred to as “friends of the committee",
some of them interested parties and others her supporters and friends.
Among
these were: Mr Stephen Kariuki (Mathare, ODM), Mr Alfred Keter (Nandi
Hills, Jubilee), Mr Lati Lelelit (Samburu West, Jubilee), Mr Abdikadir
Ore (Wajir West, ODM), Mr Peter Kaluma (Homa Bay Town, ODM), Mr Jared
Kopiyo (Awendo, Ford-Kenya), Ms Rachel Shebesh (Nairobi Woman Rep,
Jubilee), Mr Stephen Mule (Matungulu, Wiper), Ms Maison Leshoomo
(Samburu Woman Rep, Jubilee), Mr Fred Outa (Nyando, ODM) and Ms Peris
Tobiko (Kajiado East, Jubilee).
Unlike
previous appearances, when the Jubilee MPs openly interrupted
proceedings, they were mostly quiet, with Tongaren MP Eseli Simiyu at
one point saying the MPs behind him were getting agitated when Ms
Waiguru was questioned.
Ms
Waiguru sought to lay the blame on the loss of Sh791 million via
payments for materials to build a 3.5-kilometre road through Kibera at
the feet of a former NYS Director General, Dr Nelson Githinji.
She
said all the payments for the Sh791 million were made with the approval
of Dr Githinji, who continued to access Ifmis up to May 20 last year
yet his Authority to Incur Expenditure had been withdrawn in February.
RECORDS TABLE
Ms
Waiguru had made a table of these records and backed it with the query
raised by the Office of the Auditor-General regarding Dr Githinji’s
continued access to Ifmis.
That
theory, however, ran into trouble after Dr Simiyu pointed out that Dr
Githinji had stated that his access after revocation of the authority
was “see-only” and that he could not approve transactions.
The
tabulation she had made was subsequently declared inadmissible as it
did not show who had approved the payments to the firms.
“We
can understand what the intimidation was all about...the documentation
was deliberately to mislead us...she is ...covering up for Harakhe,”
said Mr Timothy Bosire (Kitutu Masaba, ODM).
Ms
Waiguru told the committee that she noticed that costs for the
3.5-kilometre road in Kibera were unusually high and asked Mr Mangiti to
have NYS explain it.
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