Head of Public Service Mr Francis Kimemia. Mr Kimemia was Monday
recalled before a parliamentary committee to respond to corruption
allegations by the anti-graft agency.
By CAROLINE WAFULA cwafula@ke.nationmedia.com And ALPHONCE SHIUNDU ashiundu@ke.nationmedia.com, Monday, May 27 2013
In Summary
- One MP who spoke to the Nation said EACC was the sole complainant. “They accused him of blocking the sacking of Kenya Airports Authority managing director” the MP said.
Civil
Service boss Francis Kimemia was Monday recalled before a parliamentary
committee to respond to corruption allegations by the anti-graft
agency.
The closed-door session at Nairobi’s
Continental House was the first of President Uhuru Kenyatta’s cabinet
nominations to be held in camera.
Monday’s meeting was a follow-up of another vetting session of the nominee by the committee on Friday.
The Friday meeting lasted four hours. Monday, the meeting began at 7.30am and went on until 11am.
Cumulatively, Mr Kimemia’s nomination has been investigated for nine hours.
The
complainant was the EACC which raised issues about a project to expand
the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and the scandal over the
purchase of an embassy in Tokyo, Japan.
In the Tokyo
deal, Sh1.1 billion was lost. It is alleged that one of the public
servants involved had complained that Mr Kimemia had interfered with the
investigations into the embassy scandal.
He was also questioned about the Sh56 billion greenfields airport project, said the MP who spoke off-the-record.
One MP who spoke to the Nation
said EACC was the sole complainant. “They accused him of blocking the
sacking of Kenya Airports Authority managing director” the MP said.
The
MP added that EACC was of the view that Mr Kimemia ought to have taken
steps against Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary Thuita Mwangi before
Mr Mwangi obtained court orders.
The MP, who spoke on
condition of anonymity so as not to breach House rules, said it was not
clear whether Mr Kimemia had the authority to take some of the action
EACC thought he ought to have taken and the whole issue was “neither
here nor there”.
Other sources said Mr Kimemia had been
questioned about complaints by some PSs that he used his office to try
and influence awards of tenders.
The Nation could not
independently verify the information. But the committee was of the view
that the EACC was still in the early stages of the investigations and
they were yet to communicate to Mr Kimemia.
When
reached for comment on the specifics of the allegations against him, Mr
Kimemia declined to comment. He said he was in a meeting and promised to
call back.
“You don’t want me discussing those details
(of the meeting with the parliamentary committee) while I am in this
meeting,” said Mr Kimemia by phone.
He had not done so by time of going to press.
Calls
to the EACC Chief executive Halakhe Waqo went unanswered. A public
relations officer promised to give the commission’s response, but had
not done so by the time of going to press.
Ms Irene
Keino, a commissioner with the EACC advised the Nation to talk to Mr
Waqo because he is the one who appeared before the MPs.
She added: “Our Act bars us from sharing information until the matter goes to court”.
Ms Keino said she was in Naivasha at another meeting,
Though
on Friday the meeting was open to the public and the media, on Monday
the committee locked the public out. The chairman of the House committee
on Administration and National Security, Mr Asman Kamama, was also
evasive about the specific allegations against Mr Kimemia.
The
committee’s explanation about the closed-door hearing was that EACC had
sought to have the public locked out of the meeting after it said the
information it had supplied to the committee was confidential and the
basis of ongoing investigations regarding the nominee.
“We
wanted to discuss the arising issues when members are fresh hence the
early morning meeting. We also wanted to have time to start compiling
the report, that is why we met them very early, it was not out
mischief,” said Mr Kamama.
The Constitution prescribes
that committees can only lock the public out of their meetings based on
the permission of the Speaker, who has to show “justifiable reasons”.
Mr
Kamama said the committee had, after the session with the EACC, gotten
“sufficient information” on the allegations against Mr Kimemia, and that
all these will be contained in the report for the House to make a
determination on whether to approve his nomination or reject him.
“Parliament will decide the fate of Mr Kimemia,” said Mr Kamama, a former district administrator.
Mr
Kamama said the committee had not yet decided whether the allegations
under the EACC’s investigation were enough to propose his rejection to
the National Assembly. He said that decision will have to be arrived at
the committee meeting.
The report on the suitability of
Mr Kimemia for the powerful position of Secretary to the Cabinet is set
to be tabled before Parliament this afternoon.
The
EACC’s Chief Executive Officer Mr Halakhe Waqo was questioned at an
early morning session with members of the committee at Parliament’s
Continental House.
The meeting kicked off at 7am with
the commission responding to questions concerning the letter before Mr
Kimemia was given a chance to respond.
The commission
is opposed to the appointment of Mr Kimemia who has been nominated by
President Uhuru Kenyatta to continue holding the powerful position. Mr
Kimemia’s name was forwarded to Parliament for vetting in accordance
with constitutional procedures.
It is at this stage
that the Anti-Corruption Commission raised a red-flag, urging against
his endorsement by the committee. In a letter to the committee, the
commission claims the nominee is being investigated for mega corruption
hence is unfit to hold the post.
-Additional reporting Alphonce Shiundu
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