President Uhuru Kenyatta speaking during this years National Prayers Breakfast at Safari Park hotel
in Nairobi on June 20, 2013. President Kenyatta Thursday warned that
the incessant clamour for higher pay by MPs, teachers, nurses and other
civil servants would adversely affect the country’s development plans.
PHOTO/BILLY MUTAI
NATION
By AGGREY MUTAMBO amutambo@ke.nationmedia.com, June 20
2013
In Summary
- He was categorical that pay demands by public servants was exerting pressure on the government and threatening financing of basic services and development projects.
- The President spoke as the Kenya Union of Post-Primary Education Teachers (Kuppet) prepared to meet with a mediator appointed by Labour Cabinet Secretary Kazungu Kambi after launching a strike three days ago.
- Kuppet acting secretary-general Moses Nthurima confirmed they had been invited to meet the mediator at the at the Ministry of Labour offices.
President Kenyatta Thursday warned that the
incessant clamour for higher pay by MPs, teachers, nurses and other
civil servants would adversely affect the country’s development plans.
The warning came as MPs plotted a constitutional
amendment to remove themselves from the ambit of the Salaries and
Remuneration Commission so that they could have the freedom to set their
own salaries without hindrance; and teachers, nurses and local
authority workers in some stations went on strike to press demands for
better pay.
The President warned that agitation for higher
salaries could derail the country. He asked to workers to carefully
assess the impact of their deeds, saying: “I appeal to all Kenyans not
to lose sight of the big picture in their calls for championing
individual and group interests.”
He was categorical that pay demands by public
servants was exerting pressure on the government and threatening
financing of basic services and development projects.
Meet with mediator
“We must remember that our sectorial demands as
counties, interest groups, trade unions and so on have a direct impact
on other sectors of our country as well. Let us carefully assess the
effects of our demands on other sectors of our national endeavours of
our country,” he said.
The President spoke as the Kenya Union of
Post-Primary Education Teachers (Kuppet) prepared to meet with a
mediator appointed by Labour Cabinet Secretary Kazungu Kambi after
launching a strike three days ago.
The two-and-a-half-month-old government has been besieged by a wave of salary demands.
Yesterday, the President led MPs, Senators,
Cabinet Secretaries, top civil servant and business leaders in appealing
for divine intervention.
“I appeal to Kenyans to pray for God’s guidance and intervention in addressing the critical challenges we are facing today,” he said during the National Prayer Breakfast at the Safari Park Hotel in Nairobi, his first as President.
Only last week, MPs clinched a deal with the
Salaries and Remuneration Commission after a two-month squabble over the
pay they should earn.
In spite of the deal brokered by Deputy President
William Ruto — where MPs dropped their fight to reverse the lower salary
effected by the SRC in exchange for a new monthly motor vehicle
maintenance that increases their pay packet to what they were demanding —
MPs are now preparing to amend the Constitution so they are no longer
classified as State Officers.
This will free them to determine their own salaries since they then will not be under the SRC.
Kuppet and the Kenya National Union of Teachers
(Knut) are also asking the government to pay up the allowances it
promised years ago.
Yesterday, Kuppet officials insisted they would press on with the industrial action until an agreeable solution was arrived at.
The officials also met with the Central Organisation of Trade Union last evening to seek support.
Kuppet acting secretary-general Moses Nthurima
confirmed they had been invited to meet the mediator at the at the
Ministry of Labour offices.
On Wednesday, nurses at the Kenyatta National
Hospital also abandoned work after accusing the management of reneging
on a salary increment deal reached earlier in April. They vowed to stay
away from the wards unless the government pays them their 46 per cent
salary increase and 23 per cent house allowance.
Despite the call for workers to drop their strike threats, the
President pledged to ensure the cost of living remained low and asked
politicians to concentrate on serving the electorate.
The unemployed youth, the poor and hungry and
those with disabilities, he said, were all looking up to the elected
leaders for solutions to their problems.
“I assure Kenyans that my government is taking all
measures to reduce the cost of living to ensure the basic necessities
are affordable to all Kenyans.”
“I call upon all leaders at the national and
county level to focus on practical ways of improving the lives of their
people and especially addressing the plight of the needy and vulnerable
members of our society.”
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