Former Central Depository and Settlement Corporation (CDSC) chief executive Rose Mambo. FILE PHOTO | NMG
The former Central Depository and Settlement Corporation (CDSC)
chief executive Rose Mambo is among the 12 candidates shortlisted for
the data commissioner’s post.
The shortlist for the new office is the second one after the Public
Service Commission (PSC) was forced to cancel an earlier recruitment in
July after signing an out-of-court deal with a city lawyer who had
challenged the hiring process.
The commissioner
will look at data privacy and protection matters and will take office
nearly a year after President Uhuru Kenyatta assented to the Data
Protection Act on November 8, 2019.
Ms
Mambo, who left the State-run shares agency last October after 12 years
as CEO, will appear before the PSC interview panel on September 22 for
her hour-long interview.
Apart Ms Mambo, other
candidates eyeing the new seat expected to set new standards on how
personal and company information is handled, stored and shared are IEBC
director of voter registration and ICT Authority deputy director Thomas
Odhiambo.
Others are University of Nairobi Computer
Science lecturer Brian Gichana, lawyer Anthony Akelo, Universal Services
Advisory Council member Dr Kennedy Okong'o, and a former National
Police Commission member Murshid Mohamed.
Dr
Tobias Mbithi, whose PhD in Information Technology was on Neural
Networks in predicting quality metrics for component-based software
systems is also slated for an interview as well as the National
Taskforce on Data Protection member John Walubengo, among other
candidates.
“The candidates should be at the venue at least 15 minutes before the starting time,” said PSC in a public notice on Tuesday.
Cancelled
Most
of the candidates had also been in the earlier shortlist. But, the
Communications Authority of Kenya (CA) interim director general Mercy
Wanjau, who had been shortlisted in the cancelled recruitment, is
missing.
The PSC had initially shortlisted 10 candidates.
But
in a consent filed before Employment and Labour Relations court in late
July, PSC and lawyer Adrian Kamotho agreed that the commission starts
the recruitment process afresh ‘in accordance with the law’.
Mr
Kamotho had obtained orders stopping the process, arguing that PSC's
failure to disclose the origin and time of notification giving rise to
the declaration of the vacancy is contrary to the national values and
principles of good governance and transparency, which require the state
to publish and publicise any important information affecting the State.
The
Office of the Data Commissioner is tasked with maintaining the register
of data controllers and data processors, exercising oversight over data
processing operations and has investigatory powers with respect to any
alleged breach of the provisions of the Data Protection Act.
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