Sunday, 5 January 2014
RAILA ODINGA backs MUTHAURA appointment by president UHURU KENYATTA
Sunday, 5 January 2014 by DAILY SAGA
Cord leader former DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER RAILA ODINGA supported the appointment of FRANCIS MUTHAURA
In Summary
- CORD leader puts in a good word for a man who was once thought to be one of his main tormentors
- Mr Odinga warns that a chairman who does not understand issues creates a lot of problems for the CEO, adding that the Executive should admit it made glaring mistakes in some appointments
- President asks critics to stop “fighting over morning dew, while the rains are yet to fall”
- The former Prime Minister faults the Head of State on the parastatal appointments that have kicked up a storm, singles out Abduba Dida.
- Mr Odinga said government appointments should recognise competence and ensure both efficiency and regional balance.
Mr Odinga said government appointments should recognise competence and ensure both efficiency and regional balance.
He
spoke as President Kenyatta defended the appointments of 36 parastatal
heads following claims of favouritism. Mr Kenyatta said there were more
positions in government to be filled.
In an interview
with the Sunday Nation, Mr Odinga said his support for Mr Muthaura does
not mean a blanket endorsement of all those who have been appointed.
“Far
from it. Competence, background and reputation matter. A chairman who
does not understand the issues creates a lot of problems for the CEO,”
Mr Odinga said.
But he also added that the appointments should reflect the face of Kenya.
Mr
Odinga said there were glaring mistakes in some of President Kenyatta’s
appointments “which the Executive should admit, apologise for, and do a
correction”.
For instance, he said, naming of former
presidential candidate Abduba Dida to head the Constituency Development
Fund board was illegal.
“Appointment to that position
is purely parliamentary. It has nothing to do with the Executive, the
same way the Executive cannot purport to appoint the chairman of the
Parliamentary Service Commission,” Mr Odinga said.
“This
is one appointment where the Executive need not go frontal with
Kenyans. They just need to admit that a mistake was done and do a
correction. Kenyans will understand.”
President
Kenyatta and his Deputy, Mr William Ruto, have come under heavy
criticism for appointing their allies and political losers to head
parastatals, disregarding youth, women and regional balance. The
appointments also go against the promise to reform parastatals after a
task force submitted its report last year.
Asked what
his position was on picking of politicians and retirees to head
parastatals, Mr Odinga said: “The issue should not be the age and the
gender of the appointee or whether the appointee is or was a politician.
“It should be the ability of the appointee and whether the laid-down procedures have been followed.”
He
said boards of directors were today increasingly involved in
development of policy and supervisory roles over parastatals, thus
appointees should have sufficient experience and technical knowledge of
what the institutions do.
“This is anticipated in
Vision 2030 and the Constitution promulgated in 2010. If a politician is
competent in these areas, I see no problem if they are appointed,” Mr
Odinga said.
He said successful parastatals in the
previous government were those whose chairpersons and board members had
relevant technical experience.
“With this in mind, I feel Francis Muthaura is a suitable choice to chair the Lapsset board,” Mr Odinga said.
He
said Mr Muthaura was deeply involved in the conceptualisation of the
Lapsset project when he was Head of Public Service and he was certain
that Mr Muthaura would steer the corporation well “because his heart is
in it”.
“He is professional and I am sure he will not
interfere much with the day-to-day running of the organisation. Muthaura
cannot be looking for a job. He is keen to serve his country for as
long as he is alive, and I cannot think of a better person for that
position. Lapsset will now move forward. I’m sure about that,” Mr Odinga
said.
DANGER
He said
corporation chairmen should be non-executive and should be paid
honoraria and sitting allowances. He warned of danger when the
chairmanships of state corporations are dished out as jobs “for people
who have nothing to do and who are looking for salaries”.
“Due
diligence needs to be done on those being appointed so that it is not a
case of ‘so and so who worked for us, does not have a job now, so let
us give him something so that he can earn a living’,” Mr Odinga said.
He added that board members should be professionals.
“If
board members are daily reporting to the institution and drawing
salaries, they become part of the mess the corporations may land in.
They need to be detached individuals who drop in from time to time to
chair meetings and receive briefs and also offer insights,” he said.
Mr
Odinga warned that if chairmen are appointed to earn a living and
without due diligence, then there is the possibility of conflict with
CEOs appointed competitively to deliver results.
President
Kenyatta has, however, asked Kenyans to be patient, saying the jobs he
had given out were just a small percentage of what was available.
Through
the Director of External Communication, Mr Munyori Buku, the President
said the concerns raised had come too early in the day.
“The complaints are akin to fighting over morning dew while the rains
are yet to fall. Only a small part of government has been filled up,”
said Mr Buku.
According to other State House sources,
the 36 parastatal positions whose heads have been named are part of the
186 positions available.
Speaking in Uasin Gishu on
Friday evening, Mr Ruto criticised political leaders who were
questioning the Jubilee government’s appointments.
“Those
making a lot of noise in the Jubilee government are remnants of past
governments and instead of always criticising President Kenyatta’s
appointments of heads of different government departments, they should
come to me and ask why the President is doing so,” Mr Ruto said.
“As
we begin the year, leaders should know that Kenyans expect a lot from
us. We should come together despite which coalitions we voted for so
that we can unite all Kenyans and make sure we implement all the
programmes in both the national and county governments for the benefit
of the nation,” he said.
He said leaders who only look at Kenyans through tribal lenses had no place in the society.
In
Mombasa, a group of Muslim leaders faulted President Kenyatta’s
decision to appoint Mr Muthaura as the Lapsset authority chairman.
They
argued that the President erred in law by appointing Mr Muthaura to the
same position that his predecessor, Mr Mwai Kibaki, had appointed Prof
Shaukat Abdulrazak 10 months ago.
The Council of Imams
and Preachers of Kenya (CIPK) leaders asked Mr Kenyatta to consider
revoking Mr Muthaura’s appointment and reinstating Prof Shaukat.
CIPK
national secretary-general Sheikh Mohammed Dor, national chairman
Sheikh Mohammed Idris and organising secretary Sheikh Mohammed Khalifa
asked Mr Kenyatta to offer the former Head of the Civil Service another
job.
“We have no ill-feelings against Mr Muthaura. Our argument is based on merit,” they said.
“The
President is expected to respect the legal decision made by his
predecessor who appointed Prof Shaukat to the head the Lapsset project.
“We
wish to also remind him that part of the agenda of his Jubilee
government before coming to power was to offer jobs to young technocrats
like Prof Shaukat and not senior citizens.”
MWINYI CRIES FOUL
Separately, Changamwe MP Omar Mwinyi also accused the President of overlooking young people in his recent appointments.
Other
political leaders, including Mr Shariff Ali (Lamu East), Ms Shakila
Abdalla (Lamu County Women’s Representative) and Mr Abdulswamad Nassir
of Mvita said Mr Muthaura lacked expertise in port development.
However,
Kajiado West MP Moses ole Sakuda and Kangema’s Tirus Ngahu said the
President had not broken any law by appointing former politicians and
former civil servants to the parastatal jobs.
The MP
said the President is the custodian of the Jubilee manifesto and has the
right to choose those who can help him realise it. Mr Sakuda said Mr
Kenyatta will only need five years to prove his choices were right.
Tigania
East MP Mpuru Aburi (ODM) and his Igembe North counterpart Joseph
M’Eruaki (TNA) challenged Mr Kenyatta to be “sensitive to the balance of
power in his key strongholds”.
“All the more than 20
parastatal jobs held by Meru sons come from one sub-group. Yet we have
more people and constituencies. Our people feel slighted,” said Mr
Aburi.
“We hunted the antelope together. But when it is
down, all the major parts are going with certain people. We are asking
for a prime part, not the meat that will remain,” Mr M’Eruaki said.
Mombasa
Senator Hassan Omar said: “Political rewards cannot be separated from
such appointments but no one should be discriminated against.”
Mr Omar questioned the promise that more positions were on the way
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