EACC is Designed to Fail unless the president changes his approach

in #ethics7 years ago (edited)

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Fighting corruption is a matter of goodwill from the highest authority in charge, and it will never matter the person put at the helm of the docket. In this regards, the tenure of the retired Rev. Wabukala shall soon end if not evicted like the other lot with no progress at all.

With the streak of corruption cases touching the top notch government officials including the Deputy President and relatives to the President, how can there be proper closure to ethical misdemeanors? If there is any possibility of effective and efficient legal proceeding, then it must, therefore, start from a clean slated president as well as his deputy.

In the Kenyan dimension, all these seem to be far-fetched ideas, and unless something so drastic happens, corruption shall remain the biggest challenge for Kenyans.

The current Kenyan budget is estimated at 2 trillion shillings, and according to the former Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission boss Philip Kinisu, a third of the budget is lost through corruption. If all these money is lost and they are causing problems to the country, who are the real culprits? And what are the measures taken?

“Jameni mnataka nifanye nini” translate as “what else do you want me to do,” was a hilarious sentiment ever uttered by a sitting president and it served to bring out the incapability on the part of Mr. Uhuru Kenyatta. If the president is the head of state and can mobilize state resources to deal with an issue that he feels is of national importance, there is no way he can be defeated and as such his statement magnified how tied his hands were due to the scandals that literally hung on his door knob.
If there is any advice to the question of the President, then I must say that he should disown everybody including his deputy and family until their alleged involvement in corruption is cleared.

In the long line bosses to the docket of high hope, there has always been an unceremonious departure that started with John Harun Mwau, then PLO Lumumba, Mumo Matemu, and Philip Kinisu. Now that faith and religion has also come in to play a role, Kenyans only wonder how foolish their government considers them.

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