Anti-graft lobby questions state’s commitment to fight corruption

Milton Nyakundi
February 1, 2023 ·2 min read ·52 views
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Transparency International Kenya's Executive Director Sheila Masinde during a press conference in Nairobi on October 8, 2020./Courtesy

An anti-corruption watchdog has questioned the Kenya Kwanza government’s commitment to eliminating graft as a new global report shows Kenya recorded scant progress in tackling the vice.

Transparency International Kenya has criticised the appointment of individuals facing criminal cases to senior government positions and the withdrawal of numerous corruption cases touching on allies of President William Ruto.

“The Kenya Kwanza Coalition in its manifesto, promised to end the weaponisation and politicisation of anti-corruption efforts by allowing the relevant institutions to freely exercise the independence given to them by the constitution … However, the government has not yet lived up to its billing in the fight against corruption,” TI Kenya said in a statement yesterday while releasing the Corruption Perceptions Index 2022 report, which shows Kenya had a score of 32 out of 100, a slight improvement from 30 points in 2021.

The actions, TI Kenya says, show a disregard of the leadership and integrity standards set out in Chapter Six of the Constitution, and undermine public confidence in the justice system.

The report further points to publicly known corruption and other criminal cases of high-profile individuals that have been inexplicably dropped by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) in less than five months of Kenya Kwanza being in power.

“The withdrawal of corruption and other cases has caused a precipitous fall of public confidence in the justice system in the country and anti-corruption efforts. Dropping of corruption cases casts doubt on the ODPP’s independence, transparency, fairness, competence, professionalism and its mandate in the justice system in Kenya,” said TI Kenya’s executive director Sheila Masinde.

TI Kenya has recommended to Kenya Kwanza four ways through which to combat corruption: promoting ethical values, strengthening political commitment, encouraging civic involvement, and supporting media reporting.

These measures, they said, would establish a culture of integrity, support anti-corruption institutions, empower citizens and hold corrupt individuals accountable. By implementing these actions, TI Kenya says the government will create a society that values transparency and honesty.

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About the Author

Milton Nyakundi

Milton Nyakundi Oriku is a veteran multimedia journalist with over 20 years’ experience across broadcast, digital, and print media. He is the founder and Managing Editor of Kurunzi News and serves as its Senior International Correspondent based in the United States. He previously worked at the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC), rising to Assistant News Editor, and later served as Copy Editor at Mediamax Network. His career includes freelance commentary for major outlets such as KTN, and consultancy roles with Football Kenya Federation, StarTimes Kenya, and UAP‑Old Mutual. He is known for incisive political and sports reporting and evidence‑driven journalism.

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