Daily Nation Newspaper

Are Kenyans still scandalise­d by scandals?

Kenyan journalist Waihiga Mwaura asks whether Kenyans have lost hope of tackling the scourge of corruption in the country.

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SHOCKING revelation­s over the last month that Kenya may have lost 21bn shillings ($210m) of taxpayers’ money only resulted in a few newspaper headlines.

Dubbed the dam scandal, investigat­ors are looking into allegation­s that the money was spent on two dams in the Rift Valley that have never been built. Kenyans like to get outraged on Twitter, but the social media hoo-ha petered out fairly quickly amid some political statements and promises to investigat­e. The truth is that Kenyans have been here before. Different scandals. Different suspects. Different amounts of money. Same taxpayers footing the bill.

‘Legalise corruption’

In the latest scandal, it is alleged that one firm was paid $80, 000 for cutlery, while another company supplied towels worth $220, 000. These are not strange items to supply - until you ask yourself: “What role do they have to play in the constructi­on of a dam?” No wonder popular musician and activist Juliani recently suggested that corruption should be legalised and defined in Kenya so that everyone knows what they are dealing with. And these are not the most surprising revelation­s that have come out of graft investigat­ions in Kenya. In 2016 a hairdresse­r was at pains to explain how she had gone from a simple hair stylist to a millionair­e who had set up companies to receive $18m from National Youth Service - a government initiative to train young people in life and business skills. The hairdresse­r denied the allegation­s but the entire scandal involving the youth agency is believed to have cost taxpayers $78m through payments to ghost suppliers - yet the results of the full investigat­ion into the alleged scam are still to be published.

Kenya’s top corruption scandals The Goldenberg scandal:

In the 1990s, members of the Kenyan government colluded with the internatio­nal company Goldenberg to export gold that had come from third countries at subsidised prices. Although the scheme was supposed to earn the country money, it ended up costing an estimated 60bn shillings – 10 percent of Kenya’s annual GDP. Officials of former President Daniel arap Moi’s government, some at the highest level, were implicated in the scandal. A 2004 commission of inquiry recommende­d that several prominent people be investigat­ed but no-one has been jailed.

The Anglo Leasing scandal:

The Anglo Leasing affair, which involved contracts being awarded to phantom firms, shocked Kenyans when it was revealed in 2004. Anglo Leasing Finance was paid about 30m euro ($33m) to supply the Kenyan government with a system to print new high-technology passports; other fictitious companies involved in the scam were given money to supply naval ships and forensic laboratori­es. In 2015, seven former government officials were charged. The case is still ongoing.

The National Youth Service scandal:

Last year, the head of the National Youth Service (NYS) was arrested as part of an investigat­ion into the alleged theft of 8bn shillings. The missing funds were allegedly stolen in a scheme involving senior government officials and ghost suppliers. Prosecutor­s have charged 35 people. All have denied the accusation­s. Getting worse It is now possible to work out how much Kenya has lost to corruption since independen­ce in 1964 - the website trackcorru­ption. org has put the figure at an estimated $66bn. This is public money that has been lost, stolen or misused - funds that could have built schools, hospitals and many dams. Transparen­cy Internatio­nal announced in its latest report that corruption was getting worse in Kenya - on its corruption index Kenya was ranked 144 out of 180 countries in the world, dropping a place in the last year. Samuel Kimeu, executive director of Transparen­cy Internatio­nal Kenya, said in January: “Some of the key institutio­ns in the anti- corruption chain have faced significan­t challenges in delivering their mandates mainly because of a pervading culture of impunity among the political and economic elite.” A notable anti-graft crusader recently told me that corruption was no longer a parasite in Kenya but was now firmly entrenched at the centre.-

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