Members of Parliament have failed in their bid to stop recovery of at least Sh2.7B they earned as illegal allowances. - @NationAfrica
The lawmakers, jointly with Parliamentary Service Commission (PSC), had moved to the Court of Appeal seeking suspension of a High Court order that directed Clerks of @NAssemblyKE and @Senate_KE to deduct the illegal allowance payments in full from each of the lawmakers' salaries.
From 2018 to December 10, 2020, when the High Court issued the order, each of the 418 legislators used to earn a monthly allowance of Sh250,000 for accommodation and house allowance, without approval of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission @srckenya.
The decision by the PSC to pay MPs the allowance was made on April 24 2019, and the payments were backdated to October 2018. During the period of 26 months, each MP had cumulatively received Sh6.5M, and each is now required to return the same to the Exchequer.
They wanted the Court of Appeal to suspend recovery of the money and allow them to continue receiving the allowances, pending determination of their appeal.
But a three-judge bench of the appellate court declined the request, saying that although the case is arguable, its purpose will not be defeated if the lawmakers refund to the Exchequer the illegal allowances already paid.
If the appeal succeeds, all that will happen is that the @srckenya will pay the arrears that will be owed to @AGOfficeKenya. We fail to see how the appeal will be rendered nugatory if stay orders are not granted - ruled justices Wanjiru Karanja, Gatembu Kairu Jamila Mohammed.
The legislators are against the High Court's finding that the PSC encroached into the mandate of the SRC by granting them the disputed allowances.
The High Court bench comprising Justices Pauline Nyamweya, Weldon Korir and John Mativo ruled that the Constitution and statutes do not give the Parliamentary Service Commission any specific function to set salaries and allowances of MPs and parliamentary staff.
The judges said the only financial functions allocated to the PSC by the Constitution are budgetary, hence SRC had acted within its mandate by directing the Clerks of Parliament not to pay the said allowances.
The accounting officers for the PSC are also culpable for failing to undertake their obligations under the Public Finance Management Act in this regard. For this reason, we therefore find that the said accounting officers are under obligation to recover the money paid to MPs
But in their appeal, the legislators argue that the High Court judges misinterpreted the Constitution in as far as the roles of the SRC viz a viz those of the PSC are concerned.
In an affidavit sworn by Jeremiah Nyegenye, who doubles up as the Clerk of @Senate_KE & Secretary to the PSC, they state that the role of SRC concerns the remuneration and benefits payable to all State Officers, whereas the PSC deals with facilitation of members of Parliament.
While faulting the High Court judges for issuing the declarations that they did and for ordering a refund of the money that had already been paid out....
....the Clerk reiterated that the PSC has mandate to facilitate the lawmakers to enable them carry out their constitutional and parliamentary duties of serving the electorate.
In opposition to the application, @srckenya Chief Executive Officer Anne Gitau maintained that the payment of the allowances was illegal and the same should not be allowed to continue.
It is in the public interest that the amounts paid out from public funds be returned or be recovered from the Members of Parliament - Anne Gitau CEO @srckenya
She explained that the only housing benefit approved by @srckenya isto a select group of State Officers who include the President, Deputy President, the Chief Justice, Deputy Chief Justice, County Governors, County Deputy Governors and Speakers of the County Assemblies.
In urging for upholding of the High Court decision, Ms Gitau maintained that the judgment interpreted the law correctly and that the pending appeal is not arguable.
.@AGOfficeKenya Kihara Kariuki also opposed the MPs' application, saying there is no gurantee that taxpayers would get back the money since there is no certainty all the MPs will be re-elected.
.@OkiyaOmtatah stated that MPs are entitled to a mortgage of Sh20M per term to cater for their housing needs, therefore, any further house allowance would be unreasonable. He said the allowances had been backdated to April 2018.
In addition, he states that the allowances awarded to MPs will create inequity in remuneration and benefits for other State Officers, thus lead to demands for house allowance by other State Officers.
SRC stated that on January 31, 2019 the PSC wrote to it asking it to approve house allowances to be paid to each MP at the rate of Sh250,000 per month, to enable them to rent houses within Nairobi in locations befitting Members of Parliament.
Further, that the reasons given by the PSC in support of their request were that Governors and Deputy Governors enjoy a housing benefit, hence MPs too must be paid a housing allowance and that failure to pay them a housing benefit discriminates against them.
They also argued that section 31 of the Employment Act requires an employer to provide an employee with reasonable housing accommodation near the place of employment.
Thirdly, they submitted that in other countries, MPs are paid an allowance to enable them hire a hotel room or lease a house where Parliament is located. Lastly, they told the court that a house allowance of Sh250,000pm had been budgeted for each MP in the 2018/2019FY.
The Lubumbashi leg of the #KenyaDRCTradeMission has officially started, following the official launch by the Vice Governor of Haut Katanga Province Jean Claude Kamfora. - @HapaKenya
The Lubumbashi leg of the #KenyaDRCTradeMission will be held over a 4 day period. Delegates will have an opportunity to interact with businesses through expert panel decisions, trade exhibitions, site visits and in person business meetings.
The Trade mission which is in its 8th day has so far attracted over 2,000 local and international delegates. It aims to showcase the trade, tourism and investment opportunities in the DRC and the Great Lakes region.
Before constable Benson Imbatu went on the rampage, killing his wife and five other people before taking his life yesterday, his colleagues had feared it was a matter of when, not if, he would go berserk. - @NationAfrica
The policeman, who worked in Kabete, Kiambu County, had been implicated in a murder at Mountain View Estate in Nairobi about eight months ago. However, @IPOA_KE was yet to submit his file to @ODPP_KE for action, sources told @NationAfrica.
Had he been interdicted, his colleagues said, the civilians he was meant to protect would still be alive.
When newly elected President of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) Felix Tshisekedi arrived in Nairobi in 2019, few people understood the importance of his first official state visit. - @StandardKenya
It came two weeks after Tshisekedi’s inauguration in the country’s first peaceful transition of power in more than five decades.
The election itself had been delayed repeatedly since 2016, and Kenya had played a significant role behind the scenes to maintain stability in the volatile nation in negotiations that eventually saw immediate former President Joseph Kabila step down after 18 years in power.
US power company Ormat continued to earn huge payouts from @KenyaPower despite lower output at its Olkaria wells, exposing the downsides of protective electricity purchase contracts. - @NationAfrica
.@KenyaPower is the biggest revenue basket for the US firm outside America contributing 16.3% of total revenues in the nine months to September despite the reduced uptake of its power.
This was a marginal drop from 16.5% of total revenue in September last year despite the limits in output called curtailments.
Born on December 12, 1963, Mary Wambui Mungai, the elusive woman in the Sh2.2 billion tax evasion case may not have known that one day she would have to dodge authorities to avoid taking the stand in court. - @NationAfrica
Those who know Ms Wambui say her present fortunes are a sharp contrast to her very humble upbringing in the remote village of Gachika, Gatundu South, where her parents still live today.
A March 26, 1999 Kenya Gazette notice lists her among candidates that passed that year’s Government Proficiency Examination for clerical officers, which she sat on Dec 1 and 2 the previous year.
.@KRACare has sealed airports and border points in search of a billionaire @JubileePartyK campaign financier wanted over Sh2.2B unpaid taxes from big-ticket State tenders in agencies like @Kemsa_Kenya and @kdfinfo. - @NationAfrica
.@KRACare issued the alert to seal the border points, including Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA), to prevent Mary Wambui Mungai from leaving the country after she skipped court to answer to charges of failing to pay taxes between 2014 and last year.
In June, the businesswoman failed to appear before the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) as directed, claiming she was in Zambia for undisclosed business deals.