By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU ashiundu@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Thursday, May 24 2012 at 10:42
Posted Thursday, May 24 2012 at 10:42
Parliament’s Defence and Foreign Relations Committee has proposed that Kenya’s mission in Ireland should be “closed down”.
The lawmakers said that the mission in Dublin “does not serve any significant diplomatic and economic purpose”.
The mission, with a
yet-to-be-approved budget of Sh106 million, will miss out on the
allocations in the next financial year because the MPs are categorical
that the money should go into opening a new consulate in Jeddah, Saudi
Arabia.
The MPs said that because of
the complaints of mistreatment of Kenyans, many of them employed in
Saudi Arabia as househelps, there was a need to “take services closer to
the Kenyans many of them working or living in Saudi Arabia”.
The severing of diplomatic ties
with Ireland in favour of Saudi Arabia, the MPs added, was because
Ireland was no longer a lucrative political or economic hub. Instead,
they said, the State ought to join hands with the Saudi’s because Jeddah
is “one of the largest economic and commercial centres in the world".
The MPs have also recommended
that Sh470 million of the money from NSIS be used as allowances for
staff in Kenya’s foreign missions. The committee also want Sh450 million
for a chancery building in Kampala, Uganda. The Treasury had earmarked
Sh2 million for this.
Uganda’s is Kenya’s highest trading partner.
The Committee has also proposed
Sh800 million for the purchase of a chancery in New York, USA, the home
of the United Nations. Looking at South Sudan, and the MPs have
recommended Sh170 million for a mission in Juba, saying that it is
crucial for Kenya to “recognise Juba’s economic potential”
The chairman of the committee, Adan Keynan, also fulfilled his threat to punish the spymaster for ignoring committee meetings.
Mr Keynan’s team got even with
the National Security Intelligence Service as it slashed the budget of
the crucial body by a massive Sh2.8 billion. The MPs said the spy agency
had gotten the money in the last budget for “modernisation” and that it
was not expected that the said modernisation would “be funded in
perpetuity”.
The committee has been having
an icy relationship with the spymaster Michael Gichangi, who has skipped
the committee’s meetings over the controversial dossier that alleges
that President Kibaki is under investigation by the British government
for his role in the post-election violence. The UK has termed the
dossier as a forgery.
For the first time in years,
the committee did not invite the Director General of NSIS to defend his
budget. This was to punish Mr Gichangi, for what the committee said was
his “previous perpetual disobedience of committee summons”.
The House team wants the Sh2.8
billion from the spy agency allocated to the military, to the Ministry
of East African Community and to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The MPs are of the view that
the military gets Sh688 million to build “single-accommodation” housing
units for 10,000 “junior officers”. The MPs argue that it is this
shortage that made the military to freeze recruitment in the last
financial year.
“This situation is not tenable
in the long run as it will end up compromising national security,” the
committee noted in its report. The military, the MPs added, is set to
recruit in the 2012-2013 financial year.
The full budget for the housing units is Sh7.2 billion, and the government wants to build them through “offshore borrowing”.
The re-allocation to the East
African Community is Sh240 million “to cater for the deficit to EAC
subscriptions that arose from depreciation of the Kenya shilling” and
also some Sh100 million for Kenya’s role at the helm of the regional
bloc.
The report will be tabled in
Parliament and if approved without amendments, the Treasury will be
obligated to go as per the House directions.
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