Kenyatta fires graft-tainted ministers

Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta addresses delegates during The India-Africa Summit in New Delhi on October 29, 2015. Picture: Money Sharma

Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta addresses delegates during The India-Africa Summit in New Delhi on October 29, 2015. Picture: Money Sharma

Published Nov 25, 2015

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President Uhuru Kenyatta fired five government ministers embroiled in corruption scandals in a cabinet reshuffle late on Tuesday amid growing criticism of runaway graft in Kenya.

The five were suspended - on full pay - since March. Another cabinet minister resigned on Sunday citing health reasons after a parliamentary inquiry alleged massive misspending in her ministry, including the purchase of a $17 600 television and a box of 20 ballpoint pens costing $85 (80 euros) each.

Scandals this year alone have included an official audit that could only account for one percent of government spending and a quarter of the entire $16 billion (15 billion euro) budget.

There have also been a series of land grabbing and procurement scams, allegations that Kenya's army shares the spoils of a $400 million (376 million euro) sugar smuggling racket with an Al-Qaeda linked group it is supposed to be fighting in Somalia, and the inability to explain how a $2.75 billion (2.6 billion euro) Eurobond raised on international markets last year was spent.

Announcing the reshuffle, Kenyatta said it would “ensure the accountability of public officials”.

The ministers of agriculture, energy, labour, lands and transport were sacked late Tuesday following the devolution minister's weekend resignation.

“Having savoured our successes and having taken stock of our challenges, the time has now come to give my government's development agenda fresh impetus,” Kenyatta said, more than halfway through his first five-year term in office.

This month, a dozen foreign diplomats representing Kenya's biggest donors criticised its failure to tackle the corruption “crisis” and threatened to impose travel bans on wrongdoers.

On Monday Kenyatta declared a range of measures aimed at fighting graft. He said corruption was a threat to national security and called on religious leaders to declare it “a sin against God and humanity”.

Among the ministers sacked is Charity Ngilu, a close Kenyatta ally, who is accused of corruption in her former ministry of lands.

A report by Kenya's Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission said the ministry was “bedevilled with rampant corruption” and run by a “cartel” linked to Ngilu.

AFP

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