President William Ruto struck a major blow to civil servants
and public officials, signing into law a bill which bars them from conducting
business with the government.
At a ceremony at State House, Nairobi, flanked by
anti-corruption officials and lawmakers, Ruto declared an end to the era of
civil servants awarding themselves tenders while serving in government.
“We have stepped up the fight against corruption by passing
this law that now gives power to the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to
take charge of all matters of corruption,” he said.
EACC would thus have exclusive authority on matters of
corruption, and has its enforcement capabilities strengthened in the new legislation.
The commission would also now institute forfeiture
proceedings against public officers, without having to rely on the Assets
Recovery Agency.
The new law also strengthens regulations of gifts, with
civil servants now required to not only declare gifts they receive personally
but also those accepted by family members or relatives, and other third
parties.
Government agencies would, going forward, be required to
maintain gift registers covering all recipients, not just public officers.
Public officers have also been barred from holding an
interest in entities doing business with any government agency, not just those
under their purview.
In the new law, MPs and MCAs are also barred from
participating in debates where they have a conflict of interest.
The lawmakers would be subject to the same recusal
requirements as other public officials, while civil servants would have to
immediately declare any material change to their assets.
He said there was no room for civil and public servants to
abuse the offices they hold, as well as the resources under their custody.
“This is a very consequential moment in Kenya. We are
stepping up the use of resources and making it difficult for people to take
advantage of the offices they occupy.”
President Ruto went on, “It is significant that Kenyans can
participate in making sure they hold public officers to account in their
exercise of the authority and power they have. This moment is significant.”
The law aims to ensure that no public servant competes with hustlers
for government business, and for those employed to serve the people to be
content with their salary.
The President said he was elated that the law was in place,
saying the delays in passage of the law were caused by the very conflict of
interest the law was addressing.
“We will now deal decisively with conflict of interest in
every part of government,” President Ruto said.
The new law provides for a total ban on civil servants from
meddling in government business.
As such, civil servants, state officers and their immediate
families are prohibited from bidding for or supplying goods/services to the
government.
Family is now defined in law to include spouses, dependent
children, parents, and parents of a spouse, while relative covers anyone related
to an officer by birth, marriage, or adoption.
It also provides for mandatory asset declaration by public
officials, as well as their businesses and any conflicts will lead to automatic
disqualification.
It also sets stiffer penalties with violators facing jail
terms of up to 10 years, hefty fines and mandatory forfeiture of illegally
acquired wealth.
Deputy President Kithure Kindiki said the coming into force
of the Conflict of Interest Act, ‘strikes a phenomenal blow for the fight
against corruption’.
“The new law not only closes the loopholes corrupt officials
have been exploiting to steal money from public coffers, it also makes it much
more difficult for them to use proxies to advance corruption,” the DP said.
He added, “The EACC now has the levers to advance the fight
against graft, abuse of power and the manipulation of public trust for private
gain.”
The law empowers the commission to investigate and prosecute
those using relatives, friends, or shell companies to bypass the rules.
For years, corrupt civil servants have exploited loopholes
to award themselves lucrative tenders, diverting funds meant for public
projects into private pockets.
The new law aims to slam doors on these schemes, ensuring
that public procurement benefits genuine businesses, not bureaucrats.
Conflict of interest has been cited in major tenders,
especially in the infrastructure sector and in public-private partnership
projects.
EACC has for years decried the lack of a strong legal framework
to enforce conflict of interest laws, citing a clash of mandates with other
agencies.
Both EACC chairperson David Oginde and CEO Abdi Mohamud were
present during the assent of the law, which commences immediately.
MPs had attempted to water down the proposed law, forcing
the President to send back the bill to the House for further amendments.
They sought to include provisions that would have exempted
accused persons from stepping down and also given leeway for state officers to
bag state tenders.