President Uhuru Kenyatta has promised
Kenyans that funds spent in dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic will be
audited publicly once the disease is over.
In
his Labour Day speech from State House Nairobi, Mr Kenyatta said every
“shilling, every cent” will be accounted for, saying those who are
raising questions on expenditure are engaging in cheap politics.
“Let
us not use this fight against coronavirus to be like our time to play
petty politics,” he said in Kiswahili. “All the money that has been
spent in this pandemic, when its time comes, will be audited in broad
daylight.”
He
went on: “We will make it public. Nothing will be hidden. But now is
not the time to quarrel. It is the time to save lives, dear leaders. If
you have mercy on your people, this is the time for you to be supportive
of the efforts that we are all undertaking to ensure that we defeat
this virus.”
Mr Kenyatta’s address was largely on the Covid-19 pandemic and the effects it has caused on the country’s workforce.
Urging
Kenyans to take seriously the measures issued by the government towards
combating the virus, the president warned that up to 500,000 jobs could
be lost in the next six months if the pandemic goes on.
He also mentioned his
recent interventions towards cushioning lower-cadre staff, chiefly the
move to exempt those earning gross pay of Sh24,000 and below from
remitting pay-as-you-earn tax.
Speaking
before Mr Kenyatta, the secretary-general of the Central Organisation
of Trade Unions (Cotu), Mr Francis Atwoli, asked Mr Kenyatta to consider
having more employees enjoy the tax relief, arguing that it can cover
all those earning Sh100,000 and below.
In
response, Mr Kenyatta promised to look into the matter but was quick to
add that taxes are important for the progress of the country.
The
president also promised to announce more plans towards bringing the
economy back on its feet after the coronavirus fight is over.
He
called on Kenyans to be ready to invest more in products by fellow
Kenyans as one of the moves that will resuscitate the economy that has
been battered by the effects of the virus.
Mr
Kenyatta also cited foresight in the government’s move to transport
flowers to patients and healthcare workers in the United Kingdom. It is a
move that has drawn criticism from various quarters but the President
believes it is a good marketing strategy.
“We
must look ahead,” he said. “For those flowers we have sent, we have
kept thousands and thousands and thousands of Kenyans employed… When we
send the flowers and they see they are from Kenya, when the market is
reopened, whenever someone will be shopping for flowers, the first thing
he or she will think is, ‘That one thought of me when I was in
problems. That is where I will buy my flowers.’”
Mr
Kenyatta said he was amused by Kenyans making fun of the move:
“Think before you start talking nonsense on this social media of yours.
We must protect our economy.”
Mr
Atwoli’s address touched on a number of issues, among them the tiff
between Cotu and the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC). The
Cotu boss expressed hope that the commission will be disbanded when if
the proposals in the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) sail through.
The
Cotu boss also took a swipe at the Judiciary due to the fact that a
number of corruption suspects have been released on bail, thus derailing
the fight against corruption.
He
also praised President Kenyatta’s government over the recent move to
repossess land initially intended for a sewerage in Nairobi’s Ruai that
had been grabbed by a politician.
This
year’s Labour Day event was a start opposite from previous years’
events as it was devoid of marches by cadres of employment, performances
and large crowds. Only Mr Kenyatta, Mr Atwoli, Labour Cabinet Secretary
Simon Chelugui and few other people were present, sitting far from each
other and wearing face masks.
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