THE Ministry of Education is facing a fresh multimillion-shilling scandal after revelations
that cartels at Jogoo House disbursed millions from the Sh1.3 billion infrastructure
fund to ghost schools.
The
infrastructure fund is designed to enhance school facilities, including buildings, classrooms, libraries, and laboratories, and to equip them with the necessary resources, such as technology and learning materials.
MPs on Thursday confronted Education CS Julius Ogamba with revelations of how
a network of shadowy bureaucrats and rogue ministry officials allegedly colluded to
create fictitious schools.
The fake schools were reportedly created, complete with fake enrolment data and fabricated
locations, diverting funds under the ambitious
school programme.
Luanda MP Dick Maungu tabled in the committee a list of four schools – two of which
were completely non-existent and which were allocated Sh50 million each to improve infrastructure.
The other two - Olbutyo Boys and Olbutyo Girls secondary schools, though existing, are a stone's throw from each other, raising questions on fairness.
The non-existent schools were Bomet High School and Kamuret Secondary
School, each receiving Sh50 million.
Maungu further alleged that the powerful cartels at the Education ministry
altered the list of schools approved by Parliament and inserted non-existing
institutions.
“There is a dark area in the infrastructure funding. Names of schools that
did not come from this House found their way into the list and were given
millions of shillings,” Maungu said.
“Ghost schools received money despite not approved by this House; there is a
strong cartel in your ministry.
“You oversight a ministry full of cartels because, how do you explain that
several schools which were in the list did not receive any money and ghost schools
were given millions?”
Maungu is questioned how two schools which almost share a fence ended
up each getting millions at the expense of deserving schools from other regions
which completely missed out.
The
lawmaker also asked the CS tabled before the house the list of all schools that benefitted from the Sh1.3 billion fund, insisting most of the
beneficiaries are non-existent.
“The
reason why the Cabinet Secretary cannot table the list is because of the anomalies.”
Kitutu
Masaba MP Clive Gisairo demanded a comprehensive probe into the matter, saying
the revelations were shocking.
“You are
running a ministry that should be branded a cartel. If the infrastructure fund
can be siphoned this way it therefore means that capitation is worse,” Gisairo
stated.
CS Ogamba promised a thorough probe and to furnish the House with the full
list of beneficiaries.
“I have
given clear instructions that we need the list and probably we will visit schools
to ascertain whether they exist or not,” Ogamba told the Star.