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Aladwa lauds, pledges support as Nang’ole takes charge as new NCWSC MD

Until his appointment, Nang’ole served as NCWSC’s director of ICT

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by JULIUS OTIENO

Nairobi29 September 2025 - 09:10
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In Summary


  • A section of Nairobi leaders has welcomed the appointment of Martin Nang’ole as the acting managing director of the Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company (NCWSC).
  • Nang’ole takes over from Nahashon Muguna, who resigned amid controversy. The Board held that Muguna has attained the mandatory retirement age of 60 for public servants.
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ODM leader Raila Odinga with Makadara MP George Aladwa./FILE
Some Nairobi leaders have welcomed the appointment of Martin Nang’ole as the acting managing director of the Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company.

Nang’ole takes over from Nahashon Muguna, who resigned amid controversy. The board, however, held that Muguna has attained the mandatory retirement age of 60 for public servants.

“The interim appointment arises due to the position being declared vacant and shall remain in effect subject to the substantive recruitment of the opposition,” NCWSC board chairman Arnold Karanja said on Friday.

Muguna has served in the position since August 2017, when he was appointed as acting MD before being confirmed in the role in May 2020.

Led by Makadara MP and ODM Nairobi branch chairman George Aladwa, the leaders praised Nang’ole as a technocrat capable of turning around the fortunes of the utility.

“This is a welcomed step that signals competence, continuity and recognition of professional merit at a time when Nairobi needs steady hands to guarantee uninterrupted water and sewerage services,” Aladwa said.

Until his appointment, Nang’ole served as NCWSC’s director of ICT. The board said his elevation was a transitional measure to safeguard service delivery.

“We are proud to support Martin Nang’ole. He is a young, vibrant and highly qualified technocrat,” Aladwa said, adding that the appointment was also an honour to the Luhya community where Nang’ole comes from.

“For many in our community, this appointment is more than a personnel change — it is symbolic,” the Makadara MP said.

 “Over recent months, concerns have been raised about how the Luhya and other communities sometimes feel marginalised in appointments and leadership opportunities. Merit-based recognitions like this one are particularly meaningful.”

Aladwa said while the appointment was not political, it showed competent professionals from the community were being acknowledged and entrusted with responsibility.

During his tenure as ICT director, Nang’ole spearheaded digitisation and efficiency reforms that, Aladwa said, benefited businesses, households and small enterprises that rely on reliable service provision.

“With his technical know-how and commitment to public service, Nang’ole is well placed to deliver practical improvements — from shorter fault response times, clearer billing and connection processes, to stronger systems that reduce mismanagement. These are the tangible changes Nairobi needs,” he said.

The MP urged Governor Johnson Sakaja and the NCWSC board to continue backing technocratic and transparent leadership and provide Nang’ole with the resources needed to implement reforms.

“To Mr. Nang’ole: we offer our support and will watch your early actions with keen interest — particularly on quick wins that improve supply reliability and customer service in our wards,” Aladwa added.

He said the appointment restores faith that career public servants can rise on merit and that technocratic competence is being rewarded.

“We are optimistic that Mr. Nang’ole’s youth, energy, and technical leadership will translate into better service, greater transparency, and renewed trust in NCWSC,” Aladwa said.

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