Kenya : Kenya anti-graft chief asks minister to quit
on 2011/6/15 16:44:15
Kenya

20110615
Reuters
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya's anti-corruption chief has asked Education Minister Sam Ongeri and his permanent secretary James Ole Kiyiapi to resign over the loss of billions of shillings in the ministry.

Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta said on Monday that 2.27 billion shillings was lost over a period of four fiscal years (2005-2009) in the education ministry, roughly equivalent to 1 percent of the education budget in that period.

Patrick Lumumba, head of the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission (KACC) said the minister and the top civil servant should take responsibility for the loss.

"The Minister and the Permanent Secretary in charge of the Ministry should take responsibility and resign, and that if they don't resign the Honourable President of the Republic of Kenya should dismiss them," Lumumba said on local Citizen Television late on Tuesday.

"That is what is done in civilised democracies. You cannot continue to preside over a herd of animals, where animals continue to disappear and you don't take responsibility."

Another 1.65 billion shillings was embezzled in the ministry of health between 2007 and 2008, Kenyatta added.

According to KACC, East Africa's biggest economy loses up to 40 percent of its gross domestic product to graft annually.

No Kenyan minister has ever been convicted of corruption, a pervasive problem in the nation of 39 million people.

Weak laws have slowed KACC's battle against the vice, analysts say, but Kenya's new constitution is expected to give it the power to arrest and prosecute suspects.

Kenya slipped down the rankings of Transparency International's 2010 corruption perceptions index, falling to 154 out of 178 countries.

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