Rais Samia, teuzi za Ma-DC, RC, RAS na DAS zirudishe kwa vijana walio katika utumishi wa umma

Hivi ndivyo ilivyokuwa ni kipindi cha mwendazake tuu ndio kilifuruga utaratibu huu ,mpaka wakurugenzi wakawa wanawekwa makada wa chama ,ataa wakati wa Kikwete hakukuwa na wakurugenzi makada na ataa kama walikuwepo ilikuwa siri,nina maana Raisi haturudishie utaratibu unaofuata sheria ,katiba na kanuni za nchi kwa watendaji serikalini ,ila kuhusu Dc na Rc uzoefu unaonyesha kutumia makada wa vyama ingawa ilichukua watu wenye experience kwa kiasi kikubwa ,tena wakitakiwa kutenganisha uchama katika utendaji wa kazi ya umma
 
Uhuru Kenyatta rais wa Jamhuri ya Kenya mwaka 2013 naye alijaribu kuteua kikosi cha watu walio nje ya utumishi wa umma na ili kimsaidie kufanya kazi za serikali baada ya kukatishwa tamaa na wale wasomi waliokulia serikalini kushindwa kuleta matokeo chanya :

Year 2013

Will Uhuru’s technocrats succeed where ‘Dream Team’ failed?


Then President Moi comes up with a strategy that will see the country clean out its decadent systems and at the same time restore investor and donor confidence.

The worrying scenario marked the origin of the infamous Dream Team, a Government-sponsored cabal of well-paid technocrats drawn from the private sector and headed by renowned paleontologist Richard Leakey.

The team hit the ground running with an agenda to streamline the civil service, restore crumbling parastatals back to profitability and embark on a charm offensive with the donor community and investors.

Less than two years later the team was unceremoniously disbanded after several attempts to kick-start the economy failed to bear fruits.

Fourteen years later and Kenya is once again finding itself with an executive that is composed of well-trained and highly educated men and women with long experience from the private sector.

It has been touted as the Cabinet that will push the economy to double-digit growth and move Kenya closer to becoming an African economic powerhouse.

New dispensation

In a departure from tradition, ministries are now referred to as State Departments, which will be headed by Cabinet Secretaries seconded by Principle Secretaries and then followed by directors heading various departments.

However, even as the appointed executives wait public and parliamentary vetting, debate still rages on as to whether the new team will succeed where the dream team failed.

Samuel Nyandemo, an economist at the University of Nairobi, says the economic conditions when the dream team was set up made it difficult for the new appointees to operate.

“In 1999 Kenya’s economy was deplorable and it was not feasible to expect the dream team to turn it around overnight and by their own volition,” he said.

“There was no political good will and the team faced resistance from inside Government and civil service that were against reforms.”

Dr Nyandemo reckons that under the current environment, the economy is relatively stable and the new executive is not starting out from scratch, as was the case with their predecessors.

In addition to this, there is considerable goodwill both from within and outside Government and the general consensus is that Kenya’s economy needs transformatory leadership to take it to the next level.

But despite the optimism, sceptics are quick to point out the greed shown by the MPs in their spirited fight to force a pay hike despite the 2010 Constitution limiting their powers to adjust salaries. This, they argue, is a clear pointer to the political risks that the Uhuru’s technocrats are likely to face.

“There is no guarantee in politics, good intentions can always be resisted once vested interest creeps in,” explained a senior Government official who declined to be named.

But Nyandemo states that it is important to understand that the success of the new executive is dependent on the entire administrative structure and it would be unfair to expect the new cabinet secretaries to wholly drive the development agenda.

“Economic success is dependent on a balance of technocrats and politicians in the administration because both have their respective roles to play in the leadership system,” he said.

This, however, presents a challenge of politicising the process, a scenario that has played out several times in the history of the country.

Part of the failure of the dream team was attributed to interference from politicians who perceived that the distribution of resources and government appointments was supposed to be done as a political reward.

Political interference was also blamed on the delay of the constitutional reform process, which at one time stalled after politicians amended the draft constitution prompting the public to reject it in the 2005 referendum.

Moses Ikiara, a former executive director at the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis and current head of the Kenya Investment Authority reckons that the recent changes in the structure of government and the civil service places the new executive at a favorable position in terms of turning around the economy.

“The dream team did not fail per se because they planted the first seeds of the overall structure of Government,” Dr Ikiara explains.

“It takes time to transform public institutions and departments and some of the results we are seeing today in terms of improved efficiency in the civil service are as a result of what the dream team begun.

“However, the situation today is not the same as it was in 1999 and the running of both public and private institutions in the country has changed a great deal. We have performance contracting in place, a new constitution and other layers of the civil service have improved as well.”

He, however, notes that only time will tell whether or not the new team will be instrumental in oiling the wheels of Kenya’s growing economy or whether Kenyans will see a repeat of 2001.

Source : Will Uhuru’s technocrats succeed where ‘Dream Team’ failed?
 
Ushauri mzuri maana DED mfano huwa ni Succesful District Planning Officer! DAS anatakiwa atoke katika Administration etc.

Utafiti wa kina kuhusu changamoto kwa maafisa waandamizi ktk serikali kuu na serikali za mikoa ktk bara la Afrika umebaini yafuatayo :


Source : University of California Press African Successes

Chapter Eleven—​

The Unofficial Lives​

The behavior of most African public servants cannot be understood if we confine our observations to the office place. The demands of private life have an especially profound effect on the official actions of African administrators.[1] Of course the informal has a significant effect on the way formal roles are performed in American organizations too, as we have known for over half a century.[2] But the ideal of the separation of personal and job roles is very strong in the West, and it is possible to describe official actions there without referring to administrators' private obligations. Africa simply does not permit such a narrow, focused view. Kinship duties frequently impinge on work roles, and unless we understand how our four administrators handled the unofficial demands on their lives, we will not unlock some of the most important secrets to their official successes.

To appreciate fully the behavior of the four men we have been studying we have to put it in the context of what was going on around them. The stereotype of African bureaucrats would be something like the following: They are overwhelmingly concerned with the welfare of their family and ethnic brothers and sisters. Considerations of the broader public or national interest have distinctly lower priority for them. They have private businesses on the side, and these occupy a good deal of their attention during official working hours. The story is told of the official who has two jackets so he can hang one over his office chair and then leave for most of the day to handle his business. More commonly, they come to the office late, leave early, and are slow to answer messages. What does motivate these bureaucrats in their official duties is the prospect of personal gain. Contracts routinely require a 10 percent kickback to the responsible official. Vital permits are more easily and quickly ob-


― 221 ―​
tained through the payment of a bribe. Much of this income will be used to support relatives and community projects at home. Officials may hope to become popular enough in this way to run for Parliament someday. Outside the bureaucrats' offices will be knots of petitioners from their home areas, hoping to use their influence to secure government jobs. As a result of this patronage, the ministry's offices and halls will be filled with junior staff who have little to do and whose conversation interferes with the work of those who are needed. Patronage leads to much incompetence in the public service, and there seems to be little ability to get rid of it. This stereotype is precisely that—an exaggeration. But it does have its grounding in reality. Only a minority of civil servants fit all the parts of this stereotype, but the behavior of a large number conforms to at least one of its components. John Montgomery comments in his study of managerial behavior in southern Africa that this "personalistic interpretation . . . is perhaps oversimplified [and the corruption part of it exaggerated], but [it] turns out to be a recognizable explanation of observed realities."[3] Jon Moris, using his Tanzanian experience, would agree.[4] David Gould, writing about Zaire, Nigeria, and Ghana, would even reject the qualification about corruption.[5]

Workaholics​

As we seek to differentiate the four administrators from the stereotypical African bureaucrat, let us begin, as we would with a manager anywhere in the world, by asking how they handled the pressures of their jobs. All four men held extraordinarily demanding positions and reveled in their work. Ishmael Muriithi spent so much time traveling, both internationally and domestically, that his wife "used to joke, 'You only come here [in] passing.'" When Simeon Nyachae was chief secretary, each day he got up at 5:00 A.M., arrived at the office by 7:00, had a meal sent in so he could work through the lunch hour, and did not leave the office until 7:00 P.M. Harris Mule needed only four hours of sleep and frequently did professional reading until two in the morning. He often did not leave the office until 8:00 P.M. Charles Karanja was infamous with his family for his inability to sit still and his need to be always at some kind of work. All four men had the stamina to put in more hours on the job than most of their colleagues and the powers of concentration to make that time highly productive.

For relaxation Ishmael Muriithi was an avid tennis player until late in his career. When Simeon Nyachae was a provincial commissioner he used to walk regularly; as chief secretary he had a squash court installed at his home and would play by himself and do exercises every night, retiring regularly by 10:30 P.M. His entire life was run with a military-


― 222 ―​
like discipline. Harris Mule was able to turn off the pressures of work quickly and relax into conversation. He used to enjoy going to bars with his friends when he was a young man—the usual relaxation for Kenyan men. But as his responsibilities increased he reduced his alcohol consumption and no longer frequented bars. He often spent the evening talking with a couple of very close friends instead, usually in a room at the back of his sister's Nairobi shop. None of the four administrators used alcohol to relax. Charles Karanja's drinking was very modest. Nyachae abstained completely and would not even take coffee, remnants of his Seventh-Day Adventist upbringing.

Sons of Their Villages​

The character of risk in the agricultural systems of preindustrial society causes small producers to invest heavily in personal relationships as a hedge against adversity. Not only do close ties with social equals, such as relatives and neighbors, provide help when one experiences calamities such as drought or illness; bonds to one's social or economic superiors can also result in personalized assistance. For these latter, unequal types of relationships, the recipient promises support in return for the help that he or she receives. This social dynamic lies at the root of the patron-client relationships that pervade preindustrial societies and dominate most of their political processes.[6]

Men such as Karanja, Mule, Muriithi, and Nyachae were valued "sons" of their villages. Their upward mobility gave them access to resources that could make a large difference to the life-chances of their parents' neighbors and kin, most of whom were relatively poor. Their communities would not let them go. Relatives and neighbors gave these "sons" great status, insisted that they still belonged to the village (no matter how long they had lived away from it), and did everything possible to help them protect their positions. One senior official told me: "Once you reach that level, there will be so many people from your home and tribe helping you. They will not want to see that position of influence lost to them, so they will inform you and warn you of what they hear, even coming to your house at night." In return the villagers expect contributions to community projects, assistance with jobs, help with school fees, and emergency aid. If unchecked, these expectations can suffocate the financial well-being even of the well-to-do. How did this book's four "sons" manage these village ties?

The first expectation of adult males is that they build houses in the communities of their birth to reaffirm their membership, even if they are living elsewhere. Furthermore, for those in senior positions, these houses have to be "modern" and substantial—houses that reflect their


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status and to which they might plausibly retire someday. Three of the four men accepted this obligation; only Mule did not.

For Nyachae the decision was straightforward; two of his wives continued to live in Kisii after he left, and he needed housing for them. He provided it in a particularly impressive manner. The home consists of three large buildings, only one of which is used by his wives. On the spot that Chief Nyandusi had indicated his son should build, Nyachae constructed a round house of several rooms with a peaked roof. The design is striking and distinctly modern, but its shape evokes the filial piety and tradition out of which it was built. (See plate 26.) The home as a whole is impressive, enough so that President Moi has stayed in it when visiting Kisii. The buildings are a strong, visual statement that Nyachae's "home" is Kisii. (However, Nyachae lived most of the time in his large and extremely elegant Nairobi house.)

Charles Karanja built a house at his birthplace of Karatu in 1961. (See plate 27.) He was interrupting his career to go to Canada for further studies and needed a place for his wife and children while he was gone. He bought a farm in upper Kiambu in 1964, after his return, and lived there until 1974, a considerable distance from Karatu. He then bought a coffee estate in the same administrative division as his birthplace and built a very large house there, where he now lives. (See plate 28.)

Ishmael Muriithi built a house near Nyeri town on land given to him by his father. He rented it out, however, and never used it himself. This action was sufficient to meet community expectations, but he never developed real ties to the property. Instead of his being buried there when he died, as would have been traditional, his grave was placed higher up in the Aberdares at his mother's house, where he was born. (See plate 12.) (Muriithi lived outside Nairobi in a modest stone house that had been built by the European from whom he bought his farm.)

Karanja, Muriithi, and Nyachae were able to make reasonable use of the houses that they built at home. But this should not obscure the fact that these houses also fulfilled the important symbolic purpose of affirming their community memberships. Many other Kenyan men build such houses without having any practical use for them, lending them to relatives or using them for vacations a few days a year. They are nothing but monuments to the strength of their communal ties.

Harris Mule was alone among the four in not building a house in his place of birth, although he bought a farm there and visited it at least once a month. He identified with the community and assisted it, but he did not see the practical purpose in constructing a house there—it was too far from Nairobi for commuting yet close enough so he could make day visits to it when he had business to conduct. In any case, his mother had a good house in which he could visit if necessary. He put his money


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into the purchase of a moderate home in Nairobi instead. People in Mbooni were troubled that he had not built there, and it was one of several things about Mule that the villagers could not understand.

Patronage​

One of the basic forms of assistance that villagers expect from their well-placed "sons' is jobs. Outside the doors of the influential there frequently will be long lines of those seeking an "in" to employment. Most of these petitioners will be modestly educated, looking for entry-level jobs. But a few among them will be well credentialed and in pursuit of plum positions.

The administrators in charge of public entities in Kenya generally have complete discretion in hiring their most junior staff and

Thus most of the progeny of these four men entered the matajiri class with their fathers. It seemed unlikely that many of them would achieve the same prominence or startling increase in wealth. Yet the new class had succeeded in reproducing itself. There were two important differences between this second generation and the first, however. The second did not have its parents' roots in rural villages. The friends of these young people were primarily like themselves—urban and from affluent families. This generation would not have the same ties of obligation to the peasantry as their fathers had. And very few of these children went into the civil service, unlike their fathers and grandfathers. This phenomenon is general among the offspring of senior civil servants. What had seemed to be the beginning of family dynasties in the public service (similar to those on the continent of Europe) was not to be.[19] It appears that the civil service is to be populated, not with a hereditary administrative elite, but with new waves of upwardly mobile rural refugees.

Conclusions​

By virtue of their senior positions in the public service, all four men achieved incomes and standards of living far higher than those of their parents. They also came under incomparably greater financial pressures. Village neighbors and relatives wanted help with jobs. Expectations for harambee contributions were on an unending escalator. And they had to provide for the education and future of their children. They themselves had worked their way up through publicly supported institutions and had won their own positions through intelligence and hard work. However, their very affluence often sapped their children's will to work. The four men were forced to pay for expensive private schools and universities and to worry about businesses that their children could enter, so as to pass on membership in the matajiri class they themselves had struggled so hard to create.

These pressures were distracting in themselves and made opportunities for extra income very tempting. Many of those in their positions succumbed and became corrupted. By and large, the four men we are studying did not, meeting the financial strains through either modest living standards or business acumen instead. The extent of this self-


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denial was an important factor in determining the degree of their success. It gave them the respect and cooperation of their professional colleagues and made them less vulnerable to damaging accusations in the rough-and-tumble of bureaucratic politics.

The unofficial lives that we have reviewed here illustrate how Kenyan senior public servants become patrons to their communities and secure matajiri class membership for their children, whether their careers accomplish something for the public good or not. These breakthroughs were easier and more lucrative for the first generation of African public servants because new business opportunities were so numerous. The later generations would be jealous of their wealth and, finding it harder to achieve, be much more tempted to cut corners to get it.

The patronage role civil servants played gave them local political status and blurred the distinction between administrator and politician in the public's eyes. Civil servants who were tempted to play political roles often did so at the peril of their administrative careers. Visible participation in electoral politics by Simeon Nyachae and Charles Karanja ultimately cost both of them presidential favor. The power that a civil servant exercises in Kenya derives from the person of the president. Attempts to amass support from the grass roots, far from contributing to one's influence, will be seen as threatening to the president's power and probably lead to one's "fall from grace."


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Source : University of California Press
 
Mkuu soma ujiajiri! Nguvu za Masikini ndiyo mtaji wake-by BWM
 
Hakuna Rais hapo nchi ipo ipo tu Mungu atusaidie Watanzania.
 
Ni ushauri Bora Sana aiseh, tuimarishe utumishi wa umma, hata huko vijana wapo..
 
Hakuna Rais hapo nchi ipo ipo tu Mungu atusaidie Watanzania.
Acha wenge mkuu. Raisi tunaye na you nyuma yake tunamuunga mkono. Isingewezekana watanzania wote wawe madc. Hao waliochaguliwa watatuongoza
 
Hapo unaota labda Ras,Das na DED ndio wawe watumishi wa umma.

Kumbuka watumishi wa umma wengi ni wapinzani wa serikali kasoro wale wenye vyeo lakini walio wa kawaida hawaikubali serikali
 
Hapo unaota labda Ras,Das na DED ndio wawe watumishi wa umma.

Kumbuka watumishi wa umma wengi ni wapinzani wa serikali kasoro wale wenye vyeo lakini walio wa kawaida hawaikubali serikali
Hakuna Rais hapo ndio ukweli wenyewe
 
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