Summary
- Nairobi, Kiambu and Samburu governors face the fight of their lives as the year draws to a close after they were charged with graft.
- In Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko’s woes, experts have pointed out, cold see service delivery grind to a halt next year since he has no deputy.
- Mr Sonko, who faces 19 counts of corruption-related charges including corruptly receiving more than Sh25 million through proxies, was early this month ordered to stay out of his City Hall office until the case is determined.
Nairobi, Kiambu and Samburu governors face the fight of their
lives as the year draws to a close after they were charged with graft.
In
Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko’s woes, experts have pointed out, cold see
service delivery grind to a halt next year since he has no deputy.
Mr
Sonko, who faces 19 counts of corruption-related charges including
corruptly receiving more than Sh25 million through proxies, was early
this month ordered to stay out of his City Hall office until the case is
determined.
Kiambu’s Ferdinand Waititu and Moses
Lenolkulal also lost a case at the Court of Appeal last week where they
had sought to be allowed to access their offices during the trial on
graft charges.
Constitutional lawyer, Kibe Mungai said
that the ruling puts Nairobi in a difficult position owing to lack of a
deputy to take over the affairs.
“We have difficulties with the situation in Nairobi. The issues
are partly political but the law does not envisage a situation where an
executive office does not have a substantive holder,” Mr Kibe said.
Mr Sonko has been without a deputy since the resignation of Polycarp Igathe in February last year.
Unlike
Mr Sonko, Mr Waititu and Mr Lenolkulal have acting deputies who have
since assumed leadership ensuring that operations run smoothly.
Mr
Lenolkulal is facing charges of conflict of interest where his fuel
firm Oryx Service Station supplied petrol and diesel to the county
leading to the loss of Sh84.6 million.
Mr Waititu has
been charged with irregular awarding of Sh588 million tender for the
upgrading of various gravel roads to bitumen standard.
Constitutional
lawyer Peter Wanyama, however, poked holes into the implications of
last week’s ruling saying that the trio has not been explicitly barred
from signing documents that need the governor’s signatures.
Mr
Waititu and his Samburu counterpart had appealed Justice Ngugi’s
ruling. The Court of Appeal upheld her ruling and now Members of County
Assemblies (MCAs) have set in motion plans to kick the embattled county
chiefs from office.
Kiambu MCAs last week unanimously
voted to impeach governor Waititu. In Nairobi ward representatives have
been mulling impeachment of Mr Sonko saying that his continued stay in
office is untenable as it will impact negatively on service delivery.
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