Text Only
Search

 
Two Kenyan Cabinet Members Resign Over Corruption Scandal


13 February 2006
listen to the interview with Joseph Odindo - Download (MP3) audio clip
listen to the interview with Joseph Odindo - Listen (MP3) audio clip

Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki has announced the resignation of two senior cabinet members implicated in corruption scandals.  Speaking on state television earlier today, Mr. Kibaki said his energy and education ministers have stepped down so full investigations of the scandals can proceed.

The energy minister, Kiraitu Murungi, is accused of taking part in the so-called Anglo Leasing scandal, in which senior officials allegedly used a fake company to win huge government contracts. The education minister, George Satioti, is accused of being part of the so-called Goldenberg affair, an even bigger financial scandal dating to the early 1990s.

Announcement of the resignations came on the heels of two corruption-related developments over the weekend.  A group of Kenyan parliamentarians traveled to London and interviewed exiled former anti-corruption investigator, John Githongo.  Also over the weekend, the report by the commission investigating the Goldenberg corruption scandal was published on orders of President Kibaki, who received the commission’s findings on February 3rd. 

Joseph Odindo is a senior editor for Kenya’s leading newspaper, the Daily Nation.  He told English to Africa reporter Ashenafi Abedje the newly published report doesn’t shed much new information.  He says, “It simply makes it possible for Kenyans to understand the roles individuals played in the Goldenberg scandal and how the whole scheme was executed.”  Odindo says, “Much of the information has been in the public domain during the inquiry and published in newspapers.” 

The Daily Nation editor says the published report does not formally implicate former president Arap Moi.  He says it does reference Mr. Moi a few times – with commission members saying the former president “should have known about certain decisions made by his ministers.”  Odindo says as the looting affected the economy in a serious way, the judges say Mr. Moi “could not have failed to know what was happening to the economy, and that this was linked to Goldenberg.”

Joseph Odindo says the challenge now before Kenyan officials is “to take convincing action on the Goldenberg report and on the whole Anglo Leasing affair.”  He says, “Dealing with these issues has a political cost, as some of the people involved in the Goldenberg affair are an integral part of the Kibaki administration.”  This, he says, “multiplies President Kibaki’s difficulties.”  

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Bomb Explodes Near US Iraq Ambassador's Convoy

  More Stories
Two US Marines Killed in Southern Afghanistan
Kim Jong-il Reported To Have Pancreatic Cancer
Netanyahu Calls for Peace Summit With Palestinian Leaders 
China's Xinijiang Calm as Relatives of Riot Victims Mourn
US Legislators Decry Secret Bush-Era Program
Launch of Space Shuttle Endeavour Scrubbed Again
Five Iranians Detained by US in Iraq for 2 Years Return Home
Mexican Police Kill One Gunman in Michoacan Violence
Officials: Maoists Kill 26 Police in Central India
Obama Returns Home From European, African Trip
Alleged Coup Plot Puts Guinean Army on High Alert 
Lithuania Swears In First Woman President
Curfew Lifted in Honduras
Al-Qaida in North Africa Frees Swiss Hostage
Park in the Sky Opens in New York  Audio Clip Available
China Rushing Supplies to Quake-Hit Zone  Audio Clip Available
Thousands Remember Europe's Worst Massacre Since World War II