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Nyeri Governor Mutahi Kahiga with his deputy Caroline Karugu

Nyeri Governor Mutahi Kahiga with his deputy Caroline Karugu during a past event.


| File | Nation Media Group

Nyeri governors’ power fight boils over

The differences between Nyeri Governor Mutahi Kahiga and his deputy Caroline Karugu have spilled over into the courts.

In a petition certified urgent by Justice Nderi Nduma of the Employment and Labour Relations court, Ms Karugu accuses the Governor of withholding her salary, allowances and other dues.

In the suit, Nyeri County Secretary Gachichio and Governor Kahiga are listed as the respondents.

Nyeri Governor Mutahi Kahiga and his deputy Caroline Karugu during a meeting at the county headquarters in Nyeri town on December 10, 2018.

Ms Karugu alleges the county secretary has, under the instructions of the governor, failed to pay her despite being a county employee.

In a sworn affidavit dated September 2, she says she last received her monthly salary of Sh685,250 on November 2019.

Since June 2019, she further claims, the county has not been allocating fuel allowances to her office, despite the fact that she has an official car.

The fuel expenses, which she says she has had to cater for using her own resources, have accumulated to Sh442,107.

As the deputy governor, Ms Karugu says, her office requires security, which she accuses the county administration of failing to provide.

“I have been hiring guards whom I pay Sh15,000 monthly,” she says.

She further contends that as from November 2018, she has not received her entertainment and periodical phone allowances as required by the law.

She accuses the governor of failing to renew her personal assistant’s contract since December 2019.

Ms Karugu says her office secretary was transferred to a different department following the closure of the Deputy Governor’s office in November 2019.

“In the entire span of the year 2020, my office was closed and inaccessible to Nyeri residents. How am I supposed to fulfill my mandate as required?” she asks in court papers.

She says whereas she is mandated to run the county when her boss is away, she has instead been sidelined with regard to official activities and has not been invited to any executive committee meetings since April 2019.

Through lawyer Harrison Kinyanjui, Ms Karugu says she has tried to hold meetings to iron out  issues with her boss but to no avail.

“Our first scheduled meeting was disrupted by the closure of Nyeri government offices at the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic,” she says.

She says she tried video conferencing and phone calls after writing to the governor to set up  appointments, but with no success.

Lawyer Kinyanjui told Justice Nderi that Ms Karugu was relieved of her duties in a manner that was inhuman and in violation of her constitutional rights.

The deputy governor further terms the respondents’ actions discriminatory and targeted at her because she is female.

Ms Karugu wants the court to declare all decisions made by the county executive committee as from April 2019 null and void.

She also wants the respondents compelled to grant her access to her office and pay the allegedly withheld dues within 24 hours.

The case will be heard on September 16.

Ms Karugu took office on May 4, 2018 following the death of the then-elected governor Wahome Gakuru.

Mr Kahiga, who had been Gakuru’s running mate, was then nominated as governor, leaving the deputy governor’s position vacant.

Ms Karugu had been one of Gakuru’s campaign advisers and hailed from Nyaribo in Nyeri Central, where the late governor also came from.

Following Ms Karugu’s appointment as deputy county boss, a resident, Mr Benson Njuki, moved to court challenging Kahiga’s actions.

 In documents filed before the High Court in Nyeri, Mr Njuki faulted Mr Kahiga for appointing a deputy before the law was approved by the National Assembly.

The petitioner argued that the law that would have guided the nomination of a deputy governor in case of a vacancy was yet to be approved by the National Assembly.

But the court, through County Secretary Benjamin Gachichio, heard that Mr Kahiga filled the vacancy following an advisory opinion issued by the Supreme Court on March 9, 2018, which  paved the way for governors to appoint deputies.

The suit was dismissed and the Nyeri County Assembly approved her appointment to the post on the basis of her qualifications.

Before joining the county administration, Ms Karugu served as the Chief Executive of Jabali Microserve Limited, a social investment organisation.

President Uhuru Kenyatta had also named her an independent non-executive director of the Geothermal Development Company Board.

The differences between the two started with claims that the deputy county chief was skipping county executive committee meetings and failing to report to work.

He also accused her of reassigning the duties he gave her as his boss.

Her office was first said to have been closed for renovations, but she now claims it was never reopened again.

The two have been hitting out at each other on social media.

At some point a billboard about the construction of a pit latrine in an early education centre was erected in Konyu ward, Mathira, with the governor’s name and image plastered on it.

The billboard, which went viral on social media, also attracted the attention of Ms Karugu, who termed it a publicity stunt.

“I wish to disassociate from these persistent cheap publicity stunts and I consider them extremely unfortunate and ill-advised. Even the mere contemplation of such events is a total abuse of the intelligence of the people of Nyeri County,” a post on her Facebook page read.

On another occasion, Governor Kahiga received 13,000 litres of hand sanitiser from Kibos Sugar Company.

The governor had the sanitiser repackaged in small containers bearing his image, which were then distributed to residents.

“Dear CS Mutahi Kagwe, once these donations get to you kindly send them directly to individual users. Please avoid the ‘in-between’ (the governor),” Karugu posted on her Facebook page.

 While welcoming the third cohort of interns last year, Governor Kahiga remarked that he regretted picking his deputy as she no longer attended county functions.

In a reaction during an interview with the Nation, the Deputy Governor said Mr Kahiga’s remark was just an excuse for failure to deliver and that he had not given her any specific duty.