Summary
- Former National Assembly Speaker Francis ole Kaparo has demanded, among his other generous pension benefits, an armoured four-wheel drive 3000 cc engine vehicle bought and fuelled by taxpayers.
- Former Senate Speaker Ekwee Ethuro and retired Chief Justice Willy Mutunga are also demanding additional millions in retirement benefits, arguing that the Treasury used wrong figures to calculate their exit packages and monthly pension payments.
- The Deputy President and Designated State Officers Act provides hefty monthly pension payouts equivalent to 80 percent of the last salary of retired CJs and Speakers.
- Retired chief justices were included in the law in April 2017 after changes to the Act, nearly a year after Dr Mutunga had retired.
Two former Speakers of Parliament and a retired Chief Justice
are locked in a standoff with Treasury officials over their demands for
lavish retirement perks that include a bullet-proof fuel guzzler,
backdated retirement benefits and shift to a higher pension pay scale.
Former
National Assembly Speaker Francis ole Kaparo has demanded, among his
other generous pension benefits, an armoured four-wheel drive 3000 cc
engine vehicle bought and fuelled by taxpayers. Former Senate Speaker
Ekwee Ethuro and retired Chief Justice Willy Mutunga are also demanding
additional millions in retirement benefits, arguing that the Treasury
used wrong figures to calculate their exit packages and monthly pension
payments.
After leaving office, Dr Mutunga publicly
declared that he was worth Sh80 million. He added that he earned a net
salary of Sh50 million in the five years that he served as CJ.
The two, according to correspondence with the Treasury seen by the Business Daily,
want the Pensions Department to base their pension payouts on their
last gross salaries estimated at about Sh2 million and not the lower
figures quoted by the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC), which
places the Speakers’ basic salary at Sh693,000 and that of the former
Chief Justice at Sh796,732.
If implemented, the higher
pay scale will offer Mr Ethuro and Dr Mutunga Sh1.6 million in monthly
pension, lump sum payoffs of Sh24 million each and monthly fuel
allowances of Sh300,000 each.
However, the Treasury
says pension payouts are guided by the SRC pay scales that offer the
former CJ an estimated monthly pension of Sh637,386, a lump sum payout
of Sh15.9 million and monthly fuel allowance of Sh199,183. Similarly Mr
Ethuro is entitled to a monthly pension of Sh554,400, a lump sum
send-off of Sh13.8 million and monthly fuel allowance of Sh173,250.
The
Deputy President and Designated State Officers Act provides hefty
monthly pension payouts equivalent to 80 percent of the last salary of
retired CJs and Speakers. This is in addition to a golden handshake
equivalent to one-year salary and fuel allowance equivalent to 15
percent of their last pay.
If the Treasury yields to
their demands, Mr Ethuro and Dr Mutunga’s monthly take home will surpass
President Uhuru Kenyatta’s official salary of Sh1.4 million. It also
puts the benefits of the two higher than the salary and benefits of top
chief executives of State corporations listed at the Nairobi Securities
Exchange such as Kenya Power and KenGen.
“Mr Ethuro and Dr Mutunga want more money based on their last
pay cheque, but we are guided by the basic and not gross SRC pay
structure,” said a top Treasury official who sought anonymity, citing
sensitivity of the matter. “Kaparo demanded an armoured car, arguing
that he comes from an area prone to banditry. Again, the State transport
policy does not back this demand. But he is pushing.”
Mr
Kaparo’s push is emboldened by the law, which does not expressly ban
armoured car benefits but only specifies the provision of a four-wheel,
3000 cc engine capacity vehicle replaceable every four years. He is also
entitled to a saloon car of 1,800 cc. A 2,986 cc Toyota Prado LJ is
currently retailing at Sh7.1 million, but additional millions are needed
to turn it into an armoured car.
Car dealers say that
it could cost an additional Sh9 million for top armour protection where
the Prado is encased with ballistic steel that can withstand a barrage
of bullets from an AK-47 rifle and pistol. Under the Retirement Benefits
(Deputy President and Designated State Officers) Act, retired officials
including Speakers of Parliament, chief justices and their deputies as
well deputy presidents get over-the-top retirement benefits. Retired
chief justices were included in the law in April 2017 after changes to
the Act, nearly a year after Dr Mutunga had retired.
Dr Mutunga wants to be paid for the 10 months between his retirement and when the law was enacted.
“The
former CJ wants the pension benefits to be backdated to his retirement
date yet he was not part of law,” the Treasury source told Business
Daily.Taxpayers cater for office rent, furniture and office equipment,
security, medical insurance and diplomatic passports for retired State
officials and their spouses as well as maintenance of the vehicles at
dealerships.
The State also pays for their personal assistants,
secretaries, accountants, housekeepers, support staff, two gardeners,
armed security and cleaners. Those already enjoying these benefits are
former Vice-President Moody Awori, three Speakers including Mr Kenneth
Marende, retired deputy CJ Kalpana Rawal and two other ex-chief justices
who are still alive -- Mr Bernard Chunga (1999-2003) and his successor,
Mr Evan Gicheru (2003-2011).
The lavish benefits
reflect the growing burden of keeping top public servants comfortable in
retirement. For instance, taxpayers spent Sh149.2 million for staff and
the office of Mr Awori in the financial year ended June last year.
Treasury budget estimates show that taxpayers used Sh79.3 million for Mr
Awori and his staff office rent, insurance costs (Sh25 million), staff
wages (Sh20.4 million), purchase of cars (Sh11.2 million) and Sh4
million for furniture.
Retirement benefits of former
presidents have also come under sharp criticism, especially in the last
couple of years when allocations were increased by large margins even as
the State insisted it had put in place austerity measures.
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