Millionaire Afandes should teach business in campus

The team from the National Police Service Commission (NPSC) vetting traffic police officers shouldn’t have taken offense when a corporal strolled into the room and casually said, “Habari zenu!” The good officer, after all, is worth a cool Sh59 million. With that kind of war chest, it doesn’t make much sense salute and kowtow to people from Nairobi.

Yes, the Police Service is teeming with so many millionaire junior cops that it is even a miracle they still bother chasing smelly thieves and small time crooks for meager official pay. So adept are the boys in blue at business that one wise acre quipped that Kiganjo Police College must rank as the finest business school in the world.

In which other college can someone attend courses for a mere six months and mint millions in under a year?

Yet, to earn a Bachelors, Masters and PhD degree in one stretch takes 10 years of slogging out in lecture halls, and even for a professor, taking home a million requires international contracts with the United Nations backed by 20 years’ experience and publishing research in referred journals.

But for a police officer in Kenya, if the ongoing vetting is anything to go by, even proficiency in English is no requirement for an enterprising constable to mint millions selling ‘mogoka’ (khat leaves), maize, beans, chicken, eggs, milk, charcoal, sand, bed sheets, mabati, and mitumba besides residual income from rental houses.

Incredulous as it sounds, police officers also reap hundreds of thousands from merry-go-rounds (chamas), a feat that has eluded millions of women who perfected them for decades on end and t NPC commissioners including Murshid Mohammed, Ronald Musengi and Mary Awuor suspect the chamas are a cover-up for the millions sent by junior officers to their seniors.

A constable is the lowest rank within the National Police Service (NPS) where basic salary of a newly employed kurutu is around Sh17,190. A revised salary structure in which a constable was entitled to a starting monthly wage of Sh32,880 has never been implemented.

How such poorly paid and overworked constables surmount their financial challenges to ‘prudently’ manage a micro business that rakes in millions, yet MBA graduates can’t run small ‘wines and spirit’ pubs or rudimentary ‘telephone farming’ is the question management gurus are scratching their greying heads over.

Retired police officer Fredrick Mulandi says it is possible for a karao to be worth millions through the easiest known route to wealth- inheritance. Others he says, make a lot of dough through sheer hard work. The former head of Logistics in the Administration Police (AP) said he started making a steady flows selling sand.

“I started with a single truck, collecting sand from Kajiado and supplying the same in Mlolongo and surrounding environs. There is money in business, I don’t doubt what the officers are saying because I can speak from personal experience,” said Mulandi.

The former senior deputy commandant was among seven senior officers who retired in 2013, electing not to be vetted. He says his sand transport business grew such that he now owns a fleet of 45 trucks.

“You can still work in Malaba and run your matatu business in Nairobi via mobile phone. You issue directions on phone and receive cash returns on the same phone,” stated Mulandi.


source: The Nairobian (Standard Media Group)

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@introvert njoo hapa sembuleni

LULZ…I always looked down upon cops but nowadays I have respect for them, they have lot’s of dirty money.

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@xuma hebu njoo sembuleni pia.
:D:D:D

6 Likes

My take, devolve the police, utumishi kwa wote, and maintain Administration Police at National level.

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You have never encountered a more miserable person than a sacked cop. They know no other way of making money other than bribes and shake downs.

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When I become prezzo wote wataneda home

Imerekebishwa!