Remember One Corrupt Sally Kosgei?

[SIZE=7]How Sally Kosgei’s bid to give husband plum US job cost the State[/SIZE]

On October 14, 1999, Kenya’s ambassador to the United States, Mr Samson Chemai, received a letter from Nairobi advising him to return immediately.

There were no reasons given to terminate his contract midway in a letter written by Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Sally Kosgei.
All the letter stated was that he was required to be in Nairobi by November 15, 1999.

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Dr Sally Kosgey

RECALL
Upon arrival, Mr Chemai reported to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs headquarters where Dr Kosgei not only refused to give him any audience but also stopped all his emoluments and entitlements.
Mr Chemai contended that shortly after his abrupt recall and arrival in Nairobi, Dr Yusuf Nzibo, Dr Kosgei’s husband, was appointed Kenya’s new ambassador to the United States.
“Such appointment directly benefitted Dr Kosgei on account of the benefits that accrue to her personally as a spouse together with her children on account of the then renewed terms of service for Ambassadors and High Commissioners appointed by the President of the Republic of Kenya to serve abroad,” he told the High Court’s Labour Relations division.
The benefits include the education of the envoy’s children by the taxpayer.
Dr Nzibo went on to serve as ambassador in the Netherlands and Saudi Arabia.
COMMISSIONER
He was also a commissioner in the Interim Independent Electoral Commission and later the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission from 2008 to 2017.
Dr Kosgei became head of Public Service in the dying years of President Moi’s administration and was to become an MP and Cabinet minister under President Mwai Kibaki from 2008 to 2013.
Mr Chemai, who lost his job following Dr Kosgei’s letter, this week got a reprieve after the High Court Labour Relations division awarded him Sh60 million for loss of employment.

In his judgment, Justice Nduma Nderi noted the “the contract was terminated for no fault of the claimant by operation of the law.”
The case was first lodged in court in July, 2001.
The State filed a statement of defence in August the same year and it was not until December last year that the case went to full hearing.
Mr Chemai was the Managing Director of Kenya Posts and Telecommunications (KPTC) in 1995. In September 1995, he was appointed Ambassador of Kenya to Japan by President Moi for a period of 36 months.
CONTRACT
In 1997, before the expiry of the first 36 months, he was appointed to serve as the Ambassador of Kenya to the United States of America, Colombia and Mexico
After the expiry of the initial 36 months, the President extended his contract for a further 36 months as a result of which the contract period was to expire on August, 2, 2001.
“However, before the expiry of his contract by a letter dated October 14, 1999, Dr Kosgei, without just and legal cause, maliciously, illegally and unconstitutionally recalled him from his station in Washington DC where he was serving,” noted the judge.
In March 2000, then Head of Public Service Richard Leakey wrote a letter retrospectively terminating and removing Mr Chemai from his presidential appointment as Ambassador with effect from November 15, 1999.
“It is his contention that the said Permanent Secretary had no legal authority to terminate his contract as his was a presidential appointment,” noted the judge.
The government, in its defence, stated that according to the terms of the contract, it could at any time determine the engagement of the person engaged by giving him three months’ notice in writing, or paying him one month’s salary in lieu of notice.

TERMINATE
The judge noted that the then Constitution was clear that only the President could terminate an ambassador’s status.
He noted that in the appointment letter, it was expressly stated that Mr Chemai had been appointed by the President, but in the November 14 letter, he was informed that “the government had decided” to recall him.
“Mr Leakey and Dr Kosgei therefore purported to exercise powers they did not have, which power they were expressly restricted from exercising even in their capacity as members of the Public Service Commission,” noted Justice Nderi.
The judge noted that the move was an “ill-motivated conspiracy” to benefit Dr Nzibo.
“It was not far-fetched for a reasonable person to impute malice, ill-will and illegality in the manner Mr Chemai was abruptly recalled and received a harsh welcome back at home. The fact that Mr Chemai was immediately replaced by the husband of the Permanent Secretary confirmed his worst fears,” noted the judge.
The court awarded Mr Chemai the equivalent of the basic allowance, both foreign and local for the period of twenty-two (22) months remaining to complete the contract and loss of school fees for his children.

All payable with interest at court rates from the date of filing the suit until payment in full.

She was also Moi’s side chick. Exposee laid how she used to be banged on the carpet at Mois office in State House.

Sally Kosgei and Zipporah Kittony wept when Moi handed over power to Kibaki in early 2003. They couldn’t believe their gravy train had stopped.

The Uglies thot Moi was god… :D:D:D

[SIZE=7]Zipporah Kittony: Growing up with Moi, his chapati cooking skills and generosity[/SIZE]

Wednesday, June 08, 2022

I was named Zipporah, a Hebrew word meaning beauty, trumpet or bird. In the Bible, Zipporah was the wife of Moses, a famed Jew who led the exodus out of Egypt to the Promised Land. It is perhaps no coincidence that later in life, I became a leading champion and trumpeter of farmers’ and women’s rights. I “sing” for the betterment of girls, women and farmers in Kenya.

My maiden name, Jepchirchir, means hurried. It is said my mother did not experience difficulties or labour pains at the time of my birth. Unlike others, the traditional birth attendant said my birth was uneventful and delivery fast.

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Former nominated senator Zipporah Kittony during an interview at her home in Fourways Junction Estate, Kiambu Road.

I was raised in a family set-up where every child is assigned a duty. Boys got work requiring physical strength while girls handled domestic chores.
Our home was a large compound ringed with a live fence of euphorbia with an entrance blocked with tree planks for a gate. Outside the compound was a monotonous shrubbery of semi-arid plants and trees like little fountains in a desert.
Inside the compound were a three-roomed house on the right and two granaries on the left as well as a wooden outdoor utensil rack.
The house had a large living room to accommodate every member of the family.
Apart from my parents’ master bedroom, the boys and girls claimed the other bedroom. In my parents’ bedroom was a cupboard where they kept household items such as sugar, tea leaves, cooking oil and gourds of mursik (fermented milk) in a basket at one corner.
A round mud-walled thatched hut with a stone-filled fire place and a home drier for grains was the kitchen.
Inside was a raised storage, above the ground and just beneath the ceiling, where crops and grains were dried when fire is made.
[SIZE=6]Slept in the kitchen[/SIZE]
Whenever we had extra guests, they slept in the kitchen, something that required a careful reorganisation of the room not to sustain burns, for example.
The bed (kitok) was made of planks of wood and animal hides and skins.

A large tree took the pride of place at the centre of the compound, offering the much needed cover from the blazing sun.
It was also a source of fruits and that is where I saw Daniel Moi, for the first time, picking fruits and throwing some to us to eat.
The tree is called Soget (East African Greenheart; Warburgia Ugandensis) in Tugen.
Time and again, we would sit under the shade to play, converse, pick grains or to remove crop debris from the produce after harvest.
Moi would later become President of the Republic of Kenya from 1978 to 2002.
[SIZE=6]Night stop over[/SIZE]
He would often stop over for a night or two at our home in Kasoyo on his way to Government African School Tambach (now Tambach High School) from his rural home in Sacho location, where he lived with his elder brother, Tuitoek, covering a distance of approximately 65 kilometres on foot.
Earlier, young Moi had met my mother at the African Inland Mission (AIM) at Kabartonjo in 1934.
After finding a suitor, my future dad, my mother insisted on coming with Moi to her new homestead, because he was orphaned and under her care at the missionaries’ rescue centre, and was a humble boy.
The layout or arrangement of items at a homestead was first introduced by early AIM missionaries who encouraged natives to fence homes and lead an organised life.
That is why in some parts of Kenya, AIM was referred to as AIM sing’enge (a corrupted Kiswahili word for seng’enge, meaning barbed wire).
My parents did not own a television set as it was a luxury in many rural homes.

The only time we got closer to a semblance of TV was the outdoor mobile cinema occasionally beamed to villagers at the mission station, a tool they used to advance missionary work.
[SIZE=6]Popular sport[/SIZE]
Among young boys and men in my village, soccer was a popular sport. It still is in Baringo.
This was manifested in President Daniel Moi’s love for the beautiful game especially when Kenya was playing a foreign team. During his tenure as Head of State, he introduced Moi Golden Cup, a national football tournament.
My brothers learned the game by watching older village mates play.
It brought age mates together, whenever they were not engaged in household or school activity.
Young boys, especially those who lived in hilly areas took up athletics. Girls, on the other hand, were expected to assist their mothers in the house and play after finishing household chores.
[SIZE=6]*****[/SIZE]
I met and married Paul Kittony in the most uncharacteristic of ways. I had just finished secondary education at Kapsabet Girls High School and was teaching at Kapropita Primary School. Paul was the headteacher at the neighbouring Kabartonjo Primary School in Baringo County.
A most memorable moment of my wedding day was when my father walked me down the aisle. For the first time, many guests in the church saw my beautiful wedding dress, a point of pride for many parents and a sight to behold for children, especially young girls who aspired to have a white wedding someday in their lives.
About halfway to the altar of the church, all the jitters, stage fright and anxiety had faded partly with the wild ululations and I simply thought, wow! This is the day, let’s do it! When we reached the church altar, my father presented me and all other ceremonial steps followed. It was a formal but big and unforgettable ceremony by the standards of the village. Eunice Bomett, sister to Lenah Moi, the wife of Kenya’s second President, Daniel arap Moi, was my best maid and the best man was Wesley Chesire.

Mrs Herman, the wife of Dr James Herman Propst, an AIM missionary in Baringo, attended my wedding. During this wedding, my brother, Reuben Chesire, who was a District Officer for Kinango Division in Kwale District with the colonial government, made plans for our honeymoon at the Coast, a place I had looked forward to visiting. We left the village by bus for Nakuru and onwards to Nairobi for our honeymoon. We spent our nuptial night at Beacon Hotel next to Jeevanjee Gardens in Nairobi, a five-acre open green space in Nairobi’s Central Business District sandwiched between Muindi Mbingu Street, Monrovia Street, Moi Avenue and Moktar Daddah Street.
[SIZE=6]No suitcases[/SIZE]
I had packed our clothes and other personal belongings in a wooden box, which I reluctantly balanced on my head. At the time, suitcases, as we know them today, hardly existed.
It was made of a rigid wood frame, brass lock and latches, inside leather straps and pockets with a cloth lining and solid leather caps or brass at the corners.
It was bulky and heavy.
The next morning, my husband asked me to accompany him to the National Museums of Kenya to unwind after a gruelling few days before our big day.
I could not cover the distance on foot.
The heavy wooden box on my head ruined his rapid pace.
It was frustrating and made me give up on the trip. I was tired and uncomfortable and eventually asked him to take me back home.
That is how our honeymoon trip to the museum and the Coast aborted. We returned to Baringo.
[SIZE=6]Fostered relationships[/SIZE]
As newlyweds, we established and fostered relationships with other families in the region. Daniel arap Moi, the Vice President of the Republic of Kenya, and Lena Tungo Moi were close family friends. My husband and I visited them often for lunch and dinner.

Moi was a good cook and would often prepare sumptuous chapatis for us.
I had actually lived in his family home before during my schooling at Kapropita and after my days at Kapsabet Girls and so he remained a close family friend and a father figure.
Away from public glare, Moi was a sociable man, who would share stories, crack jokes, laugh heartily and was exceptionally generous.
As a President, that side of him occasionally came out during entertainment segments at public events. He loved music, especially gospel, folk and patriotic songs, which would move him to join the performance, tap his feet and dance in tune with the song.
[SIZE=6]*****[/SIZE]
(Mzee Jomo) Kenyatta died in 1978 and was succeeded by Daniel Moi, a family friend.
As provided for in the Constitution, Mzee Kenyatta’s principal assistant, Daniel arap Moi, immediately assumed the office of the President.
He was sworn in as Acting President by Chief Justice Sir James Wicks and was to hold the office for 90 days during which time elections would be held. Head of public service Geoffrey Kariithi and Attorney General Charles Njonjo facilitated the smooth transition. As family and close friends of President Moi, we were extremely happy for him. Never had we imagined that a Tugen from remote Baringo, which was a closed district during the colonial regime, would ascend to the presidency of the Republic of Kenya. President Moi quickly settled to work.
He released all political detainees, including former Butere MP, Martin Shikuku, former Gem MP Wasonga Sijeyo, among others. Former Vice President Jaramogi Oginga Odinga was in the political wilderness.

In demonstrating his magnanimity, President Moi appointed Jaramogi Oginga the chairman of the Cotton Lint and Marketing Board in 1980.
[SIZE=6]Special attributes[/SIZE]
These are among the special attributes that defined his presidency. After he assumed office, President Moi coined a political slogan “Nyayo” from Kenyatta’s “Harambee” call.
The Nyayo slogan that remained synonymous with Moi until his death loosely translates to “following in the footsteps.”
It signified his desire to stay the course charted by the first President, while still expecting loyalty and respect from all government officials, politicians and the citizenry.
Nyayoism became his creed for peace, love and unity. He believed that progress could only take place when a people are united.
A general election was held on 8 November, 1979 as was constitutionally required. It was the third since Kenya attained Independence in 1963 and the first since the death of Mzee Jomo Kenyatta. Earlier, on 1 October, the date of the general election was announced, after the legislative term of the National Assembly elected in 1974 expired on 25 September, 1979.
In that election, 742 candidates declared interest in the 158 National Assembly seats. Although all the aspirants belonged to Kanu (Kenya African National Union), which was Kenya’s sole political party since 1969, more than half of the outgoing Members of Parliament lost their seats including seven Cabinet Ministers. President Moi, who was the sole candidate for the presidency, was declared winner after he garnered more than 3.7 million votes.
[SIZE=6]Moi government[/SIZE]
He formed his government, which comprised 25 ministers on 28 November, 1979. He also appointed 10 of the 12 nominated Members of Parliament to complete the composition of the National Assembly. A number of councillors were nominated to serve in Municipalities, City, County and Town Councils.
I was lucky to be nominated to the Nzoia County Council after the 1979 general election.
Kanu had entrenched its tentacles across the country and some of its members were rewarded with appointments to the councils, Parliament, diplomatic postings, boards of government institutions, among others.
Kanu stalwarts such as Ezekiel Barng’etuny from Nandi, Mulu Mutisya from Machakos, Isaack Salat from Bomet and Sharif Nassir from Mombasa, were the many grassroots individuals who had unfettered access to the President
[SIZE=6]*****[/SIZE]
President Moi was a generous man who rewarded good deeds and loyalty.
In almost every district, he had a close ally and he supported their families. Noah Katana Ngala, the son of Ronald Ngala, former Ganze MP and Moi’s ally in Kenya African Democratic Union (Kadu), benefited from the Moi ties.
He was made minister. Musalia Mudavadi got to Parliament at 29 years due to his late father’s relationship with Moi dating back to his days as Education Officer in Baringo.
Hosea Kiplagat, Abraham Kiptanui and Joshua Kulei, former prison warders who worked closely with Moi when he was Vice President and Minister for Home Affairs were rewarded with plum corporate jobs.
Hosea became chairman of Cooperative Bank, Abraham (State House Comptroller) and Joshua Kulei (successful businessman). In Baringo, Moi helped William Morogo to become MP for Mogotio and Cabinet Minister, and his brother Eric Morogo as MP for Rongai.
Their father, former Baringo Paramount chief Chebet Morogo, was Moi’s friend. Fred Gumo who became MP for Westlands Constituency in Nairobi was a beneficiary of the close relationship his father, Pius Magero Gumo, had with Moi. Elder Gumo was a Nairobi and Kitale businessman who knew Moi from the early 50s. He owned an entertainment joint in Kaloleni, Eastlands in Nairobi that was frequented by politicians before Kenya gained Independence.
Mohammed Mahmoud was elected Ijara MP and appointed Minister in Moi’s government courtesy of his brother, General Mahmoud Mohamed who helped Moi quell the 1982 coup attempt.
William Ole Ntimama, a former colonial District Officer in Baringo, was made chairman of Narok County Council, and later assisted to become MP for Narok North and Minister.
Kuria Kanyingi was a General Service Unit (GSU) officer in Gilgil who happened to be at the right place at the right time.
When President Moi’s vehicle broke down along Nakuru-Nairobi road and he fixed it, he was assisted to become Chief Motor Vehicle Inspection boss and Limuru MP.
Throughout my public life, I fostered good relationship with people in President Moi’s administration.
Hezekiah Oyugi, Zakayo Cheruiyot and Wilfred Kimalat who variously occupied the powerful Internal Security (now Interior) PS office, which is domiciled under the Office of the President, and whose responsibilities touch on power, politics and money, were cordial.

These politicians reward people they know

Peter Kenneth also used to tap that ass. She is one of the main reasons why he grew wealthy coz she had connections.

She met PK when he was just an ordinary banker

Nilitaka kusema kitu but wacha tu. Ntasema after August 9th.

When was that? Because he led Kenya Re and KFF before becoming Gatanga MP.

About her tribe?

The looting gene is very strong in these ones

https://offshoreleaks.icij.org/stories/sally-kosgei

ati nini

I know of several kaleos with PhDs lakini their contribution to the body of knowledge is nadda. Nil. Hao ni wizi tuu ndio wanaweza.

Moi sio julius Sunkuli, Moi used to “visit” several girls school headmistreses.

Moi used to do her. Apparently, she was his favorite mistress.

Sunkuli had a scandal us kukula underage. Hio story ikaisha

I can’t believe that the journalists would waste time and space to let this woman try and justify what Moi did to ruin this country.
For example: why would Moi appoint Kanyingi to a prime position just because he repaired his car? Were the no other more qualified professionals? SMH

She has a flower farm in Gatanga.

I am on record stating that journalism should never be taken as a stand alone course but rather as a common unit in other programmes or strictly at Masters level. This was just after @digi and @Micymas were inducted into the journalism Hall of Fame and became respected journalists.

Kumbe anaishi Muthaiga? Homes there cost around 500m… Every time I drive through Muthaiga, I wonder how those guys made it so big to afford such… At least I know Kibakis, Kidero, Jimmy Wanjigi and Njonjos homes there… And now Kosgei… Anyway…