Kibaki Was Selfish - And Corrupt?

https://www.nation.co.ke/news/Kibaki-pushed-for-relatives--scholarships--Muthaura/1056-4786356-sgih3v/index.html

It emerged on Monday that former president Mwai Kibaki used his position to push for the award of scholarships to his relatives.
Mr Kibaki’s name was mentioned during the proceedings of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of the National Assembly.

DIRECTIONS

Former head of public service and secretary to the cabinet, ambassador Francis Muthaura, told the PAC that Mr Kibaki directed him to ensure that two children of his nephew, Mr Philip Githinji, got government sponsorship to study in Australia.
The sponsorship of Ian Githinji and Sandra Githinji has seen the government pay about Sh25 million for their education at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT).

Mr Githinji enrolled for a master’s degree in analytics while Ms Githinji went for a bachelor’s degree in interior design.
Although their programmes were to last four years from 2011 when they enrolled, six years down the line they are yet to finish their studies.

The committee members questioned why the two could not pursue the courses locally.

PRESSURE

According to Mr Muthaura, Mr Kibaki directed him to liaise with former Higher Education Permanent Secretary Chrispus Kiamba to have the students assisted after their father lost his job at Oil Libya Company Limited.
“After he lost his job, he could not sustain the education of his children," Mr Muthaura told the watchdog committee chaired by Ugunja Member of Parliament (MP) Opiyo Wandayi.

"He made an appeal to the president to be assisted through the government scholarship programme. The president considered the request and directed me to present the case to the Ministry of Education,”
Asked by Mr Wandayi to state the relationship between the retired president and Mr Githinji, and why the case was so special, Mr Muthaura said Mr Githinji is a nephew to the president.

“They are personalities who are known to me and you know the pressure that accompanies people in leadership whenever help is sought by the people. The president has discretion in the awarding of things like scholarships. He can intervene to assist anyone- the sick as well [and others] in distress,” he said but did not provide any legal proof to support his answer.

Mr Muthaura wrote to professor Kiamba on August 12, 2011 telling him that the two should be considered because of the “heavy burden Mr Githinji was carrying as a result of taking care of the seven children of his two deceased brothers, in addition to his own family”.
Another letter was to be written to include Ms Githinji in the president’s order, through his then private secretary professor Nick Wanjohi.

VERBAL INSTRUCTIONS

Rarieda MP Otiende Amollo wondered why the president occasioned the use of public resources when the assistance should have come from his pocket.
Dr Amolo also faulted the retired president for violating the Constitution in the communication of his decisions after Mr Muthaura admitted that some, in respect to Ms Githinji’s case, were verbal.

“Instructions of the president must always be in writing but what has been presented to the committee does not even have a seal as per the Constitution,” Dr Amollo noted.
The Constitution requires that a decision of the president, in the performance of any function of his or her office, be in writing and bear the seal and signature of the president.

PLEA
Mr Muthaura pleaded with the committee saying the government was still transitioning to the new constitutional order.
“Sympathise with us because we were under transition and had not yet developed the instruments,” he said.
Prof Kiamba also defended the scholarships saying the president acted within his powers.
“We were helping a Kenyan and the ministry was sponsoring students within the East African region and outside,” he said.
University Education and Research Chief Administrative Secretary (CAS) and Principal Secretary Collette Suda faulted the manner in which the scholarships were awarded when they appeared before the committee last week.
“We have a committee that oversees the award of scholarships. This case may have been handled differently,” Ms Suda told the MPs.

Why couldn’t he pay from his own pockets with all his wealth? Why couldn’t he sponsor them to study locally? And to hear Kenyans praising him

maybe he was broke…but only he can tell us…i wish he was a member here tungemuuliza.

Corrupt you say? And selfish? Kwasababu ya watoto kusoma shule? While others are siphoning billions. You are so busy ukitaftia mtu alifanya maendeleo na unawacha wengine wanaiba hata sahii? This is pettiness… I’m sure we have more pressing matters. Are the mps this desperate for an allowance? And the writer a topic?

Maendeleo Gani yenye Uhuru hajafanya? Wakati pesa ya vijana ilikuwa ikipotea, where was obako? Don’t forget that Kibaki killed the hopes of Kenya in 2003 after we were the most optimistic people. With all the anglo leasing thieves around, where was he?

msapere birionea hata kutoa bob ya ku support nephew yake ni kama ngamia kupita ndani macho ya kikombe

Nani amekuuliza?

Corrupt because those are courses you can study locally and non of those courses add value to the country.

Huyu mutu ata bro yake hakuwa na stima. … selfish niccur

Uchoyo ingine jo, didn’t they feature a brother living in poverty sometimes back

Imagine yourself in the guy’s shoes. Lucy yapping in your face, even in your dreams ata kidney zote mbili ningepeana

Kenya we haven’t found the one. Thieves have been our presidents since independence. Maybe 2022 we will luck out and get our Thomas Sankara.

Legally speaking, Kibaki is not at fault. Why did Muthaura not ask for a written order? 25 million is a lot of money to be spent on education. They could have been educated for less in many other countries, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Germany, Sweden, Cuba to name a few including the USA. That is assuming that the same could not have been accomplished in Kenya.

“Instructions of the president must always be in writing but what has been presented to the committee does not even have a seal as per the Constitution,” Dr Amollo noted.
The Constitution requires that a decision of the president, in the performance of any function of his or her office, be in writing and bear the seal and signature of the president.

From inner circles, Kibaki cannot buy anyone anything. Any time he even went out with friends for a drink of whitecap, they would foot his bill. Even his own brother lived in Ziwani. Kibaki was as thrifty as they come. In spite owning huge tracts of land in the Coast.

Those are public funds being utilized there, but I find this a little bit petty

When hatred becomes an inborn character in a person,the will find fault even in a supreme being.

20 million ni pesa kidogo sana to mud sling the best president Kenya has ever had.

Sankara was an army man who took power via a coup.

Kibaki was a mediocre, corrupt president.
Having said that, everyone before and after him has been terrible.

Ni kama kucompare mkojo na mafi.

Half of Naru Moru town iko kwa shamba yake. Corrupt stingy bugger.