The Office of the President is in the
spotlight over suspicious transfer of Sh8.3 billion into and out of
government’s secret security accounts.
The Auditor-General’s report, released a month ago, flagged some of the cash movements.
A
source with close knowledge of the workings of the OP said the large
cash transfers were part of the reason President Kenyatta transferred
senior officials and procurement staff.
The leaks point
to serious behind-the-scenes infighting at OP, whose top officials are
powerful because of their proximity to the presidency, their control of
large budgets and security responsibilities.
Former
Director of Finance and Administration at the President’s Office Joseph
Kirubi was removed from OP in March alongside more than 100 procurement
staff after the Head of State ordered their redeployment.
AMMOUNT 'IS SCANDALOUS'
On
Monday, Defence Principal Secretary Mutea Iringo, who as Internal PS
during the transition was the accounting officer, pointed out that his
transfer last Thursday had nothing to do with audit queries.
“Someone
is trying to be malicious. My transfer has nothing to do with it. The
mentioned amount is scandalous, it cannot be,” Mr Iringo said when
contacted by the Nation.
His boss at the time,
Mr Francis Kimemia who was Head of Public Service, was also demoted to
the less glamorous job of Secretary to the Cabinet.
The big job went to former Treasury Permanent Secretary Joseph Kinyua, who also doubles as President Kenyatta’s Chief of Staff.
The Nation
has seen copies of documents which showed withdrawals of cash through
accounts registered under the Commissioner of Police and Office of the
President, long after the Office of the Commissioner of Police was
scrapped and an Inspector-General of Police sworn in in December 2012.
The Auditor-General’s report questioned these withdrawals and another Sh2 billion which had not been accounted for.
“During
the year under review, the ministry transferred a total amount of Sh8.3
billion to Kenya Police Service through contra-entries on cash book and
Ministry headquarters recurrent bank account amounting to Sh1.4 billion
and Sh6.9 billion respectively.
“On March 14, 2013
alone, Sh2 billion was transferred through account number
0-101-000-6530101 through voucher number 272 under the account name
Police Commissioner which was closed in December 2012.”
PAYMENT VOUCHERS
The
Sh2 billion was withdrawn only four days after the declaration of
official presidential results by the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission.
The Auditor-General’s report
states: “The transfer of Sh1,415,000,000 through contra entries was not
supported by payment vouchers contrary to section 5.5.11 of the
Government Financial Regulations and Procedures.”
The
auditor further revealed that Sh2.8 billion out of the Sh8.3 billion
transferred from OP to the said “police commissioner’s account” was not
receipted and that a further examination of the Police Account revealed
the withdrawal was not approved by the accounting officer.
In
the audit report, the Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National
Government, which took over some dockets previously under the Office of
the President, is said to have attempted to prove the financial
movement of Sh2.3 billion of the Sh2.8 billion under audit as
unaccounted funds claiming it was re-channelled to the ministry from the
police headquarters.
But auditors were unconvinced.
The
report states: “The ministry purports that cash amounting to Sh2.3
billion was transferred from Kenya Police headquarters back to the
Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National Government.
“However,
the justification and utilisation of the alleged security funds by a
non-security agent has not been explained. Further, the explanation for
the remaining Sh511,000,000 has not been factual.”
PROHIBITED REALLOCATION
The
report states that the Ministry of Interior, then under Mr Iringo as
PS, claimed that it transferred Sh400 million to the National
Intelligence Service.
But the auditors rejected the
explanation arguing that the law prohibited reallocation of funds from
one government entity to another.
Said Mr Iringo: “We
gave all responses to the audit queries as raised by OAG. Everything
must have been explained to them. There is nothing we never explained.”
Further,
the ministry’s claim that it paid Sh25 million to the Criminal
Investigations Director on March 8 was also rejected after verification
of cheque number 08619 through which the payment was made was found to
have originated from the ministry and not from the Kenya Police
headquarters.
Payment vouchers seen by the Nation revealed a sequence of payments, mostly cash, and around the time the country was engaged in elections.
The
Inspector-General of Police was unavailable for comment while Mr
Kirubi, who is now at the Ministry of Mining, did not respond to calls
and several text messages.
The last Commissioner of Police, Mr Mathew Iteere, retired on December 24, 2012.
But
OP officials continued to credit millions of shillings to the
Commissioner of Police’s official account as late as June this year.
Normal
practice at the security docket is to open an account into which a
specific amount of money is put for use by the person in charge of the
police to discharge his duties.
This confidential expenditure is normally not questioned, with the auditors saying it is open to abuse.
Intriguingly,
Mr David Kimaiyo had taken over as Inspector-General of Police on
December 21, 2012 and a new account was supposed to have been opened for
him.
Four times, millions of shillings was also deposited in his account.
There are numerous examples that the Nation
has seen of millions credited into the account of the Commissioner of
Police, long after it ceased to exist, and the money then withdrawn by
OP officials.
PAYMENTS QUESTIONED
Date | Amount (SH) |
2-Jan-13 | 150 million |
8-Jan-13 | 10 million |
15-Jan-13 | 60 million |
22-Jan-13 | 150 million |
22-Jan-13 | 200 million |
8-Feb-13 | 30 million |
12-Feb-13 | 200 million |
18-Feb-13 | 10 million |
14-Mar-13 | 2 billion |
19-Mar-13 | 100 million |
19-Mar-13 | 6 million |
19-Mar-13 | 200 million |
11-Apr-13 | 10 million |
26-Apr-13 | 10 million |
10-May-13 | 300 million |
15-May-13 | 10 million |
17-May-13 | 200 million |
24-May-13 | 300 million |
29-Jun-13 | 400 million |
29-Jun-13 | 10 million |
29-Jun-13 | 300 million |
Source:
Total Cash Transferred to Commissioner of Police from Office of the
President, Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National Government
during F.Y. 2012/2013
No comments:
Post a Comment