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It is so disheartening when the CEO of the nation bemoans
the failure of his government to tame a vice. President Kenyatta sounds like a
broken record when he tells Kenyans that corruption has been a malady which
successive regimes have failed to deal with.
It is not enough that he has fired a few individuals and it
does not help matters when the president hogs airtime to castigate the
Opposition when he too admits albeit subtly that his government is finding it
hard to vanquish the dragon of corruption.
Fire or prosecute
It is true that it has taken the Opposition’s effort led by
the Former Prime Minister Raila Odinga to either fire or prosecute a few cases
much to the chagrin of the national government’s operatives.
It does not help when the names of the high and mighty
within the government feature in the scandals because that makes the claim by
the president that they are doing good sound so hollow.
The institutions charged with dealing with corruption have
been accused of tolerating and even abetting the same.
The institutions have actually resorted to buck-passing
while the Kenyan economy continues to get a beating as the ordinary man
struggles to make ends meet.
Just like in the developed world, the president has to take
responsibility for the failures of his regime; it does not work for him to
blame the Opposition for pointing out the grey areas where Wanjiku is not
getting a satisfactory explanation concerning spending of public funds.
The Eurobond, for instance, has been a questionable
expenditure and that has to be fodder for the Opposition as The Treasury seems
unable to explain or rather keeps stumbling incoherently, leaving a big chunk
of the citizenry with many questions regarding the resolve by Jubilee in the
fight against corruption.
I do not hold brief for any political players but the work
of the civil society and of course the Opposition is to always provide
direction in cases where the government of the day is deemed to be failing.
Bad governance entails a myriad of issues: insecurity, bad
foreign policies, corruption and violation of human rights to name just a few.
We pray that the Opposition and the civil society continue
to point out these issues with the objective of correcting them and improving
the lives of Kenyans - that should never be taken away from them.
Mr. President, it is time to take the bull by its horns.
{Titus Pala, Kisumu}
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Corruption is the biggest threat to nationhood, development,
security and national cohesion. Graft poses a threat beyond measure to our existence.
We even lose our humanity due to graft. Yet with all these
scaring descriptions and devastating effects of corruption, it is the not only
the largest but also the fastest growing vice in Kenya.
Countries which have waged a vicious war against the vice
are miles ahead of us in development.
The difference between them and us is the stern action they
take against graft. In Kenya, the investigating agencies do everything to sanitize
the merchants of mega graft.
While developed countries abhor graft, here we celebrate it.
It is normal to see a person under active investigation being appointed to an
influential position in the public service. How can you defeat corruption when
the high priests of graft are presiding over public affairs?
Could our tragedy be the narrow understanding of the meaning
of corruption?
Any form of abuse of office for personal gain constitutes
corruption. On this note, perpetuating ethnic bias is a form of corruption.
The national Integration and Cohesion Commission should work
together with Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) to eliminate graft.
To defeat the vice, we must attack where it is prevalent.
The public service is the hot bed of graft.
State corporations are major conduits of fleecing public
funds.
EACC must focus its efforts of public firms. It is notable
that huge resources allocated to these institutions is being plundered with
impunity.
President Kenyatta should make the fight against graft the
main performance contract target for all boards and councils of public
institutions.
Each of the organs should guarantee prudent utilization of
public resources.
Any misappropriation of public funds must result in
immediate suspension and prosecution of the culprits or the boards be held
responsible. Otherwise, graft will continue eating our nation.
{Benard Amaya, Via Email}