/ 10 August 2005

Kenya to start ‘ruthless’ war on corruption

Kenya’s justice minister has admitted his government is losing the fight against corruption and vowed a ”ruthless” anti-graft war in a stark admission of long-standing donor complaints, in remarks published on Wednesday.

In a rare acknowledgement of rampant official malfeasance and failing efforts to curb such abuses, Kiraitu Murungi said the credibility of President Mwai Kibaki’s government is on the line as corruption persists despite repeated vows to end it.

”The fight against corruption has lost momentum,” he said in a Tuesday speech to officials with several anti-graft agencies.

”Kenyans have become sceptical. They are disillusioned. Our strategy is being dismissed as mere pretence.

”It is said to be a ‘talk and do nothing’ strategy,” Murungi said. The old networks of corruption have not been broken. They have become very bold. They are no longer afraid of our talk about corruption.”

He then reeled off a lengthy list of persistent allegations, including ”bribery, embezzlement, fraud, extortion, nepotism, buying of votes, abuse of power, conflict of interest, judicial corruption and misappropriation of public funds”.

”The impunity of yesterday persists,” Murungi said, according to a copy of his speech sent to news agency AFP on Wednesday.

”We must destroy these networks without mercy. We must be ruthless.

”We have spent some time aiming at the enemy. Time has now come for us to pull the trigger and spill blood,” he said.

Kibaki’s opposition coalition swept into power in 2002 elections largely on promises to rein in the rampant corruption, but his administration has come under stinging criticism in recent months for failing to follow through on those pledges.

Donors estimate that graft has cost the Kenyan government up to a billion dollars since 2002, nearly a fifth of the country’s 2004/05 official government spending of about $5,5-billion.

Because of corruption, Germany and the United States have withheld millions of dollars in aid and other donors have warned of consequences if inaction on graft continues. — Sapa-AFP