An unholy alliance between governors and MCAs in certain counties
is compromising oversight and fostering corruption.
Controller of Budget Margaret
Nyakang’o says some governors are
evading accountability issues due to
their association with MCAs.
“Some MCAs align themselves with
governors, thereby undermining the
fight against corruption,” she said.
Nyakang’o’s assertions are a serious indictment of the ward representatives, who are mandated by law
to provide primary oversight of the
county executives to curb graft, waste
and excesses.
The country’s budget chief spoke
during the ongoing fifth legislative summit led by the County Assemblies
Forum in Nairobi.
Nyakang’o said ward representatives are tasked with examining
expenditure reports, investigating
financial mismanagement and holding county executives accountable.
Besides their alignment with governors, the ward reps face capacity challenges, especially financial expertise,
to scrutinise the accounting books.
“Limited financial expertise among
MCAs hinders budget analysis,” she
said.
It also emerged that inadequate
funding is restricting oversight committees at the county assembly level.
In some counties, the executives are
flatly ignoring summons by MCAs to
explain their spending, with others
turning a blind eye on the recommendations of the county assemblies.
Weak oversight, Nyakang’o said,
is providing a fertile ground for corruption to thrive.
Corruption is mainly manifested
through outright misappropriation,
huge expenditures on ghost projects
and inflated contracts, she said.
Three former governors – Daniel
Waithaka (Nyandarua), Moses Lenolkulal (Samburu) and Ferdinand
Waititu (Kiambu) – have been convicted of corruption.
Last week, the court convicted
Waithaka of procurement irregularities.
The former governor was convicted alongside former County Executive Committee Member for Water,
Energy, Environment and Natural
Resources, Grace Gitonga.
The court found them guilty of two
other charges of engaging in a project
without prior planning and willful
failure to comply with procurement
laws.
In February, the court found Waititu and his wife, Susan Ndung’u, guilty of various charges in the Sh588 million road tender graft case.
He was
sentenced to 12 years in prison or a
fine of Sh53.5 million.
In August last year, the Anti-Corruption Court in Milimani found
Lenolkulal and 10 others guilty of
the 2013 -2019 scandal, in which he
supplied fuel to his county.
The CoB now wants the capacity of
the MCAs enhanced through training,
especially on financial oversight.
“County assemblies are critical
in ensuring fiscal accountability in
devolved governance,” the budget
controller said.
She also challenged the ward reps
to implement lessons learned from
their many benchmarking trips.
Nyakang’o also wants the legal
frameworks strengthened and clear
penalties introduced against executives who fail to comply with oversight requirements.