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Billions lost as civil servants steal Sh2.45 Billion from public coffers

Marcielyne Wanja by Marcielyne Wanja
March 13, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read

A new compliance review by the Public Service Commission reveals a sharp rise in financial misconduct within Kenya’s public sector, with civil servants implicated in the loss of Sh2.45 billion in public funds during the financial year ending in June. The amount represents a 280.7 percent increase from the Sh643.6 million recorded in the previous financial year, highlighting persistent weaknesses in internal controls and accountability systems across government institutions.

Despite the scale of the losses, recovery efforts remained minimal. Only Sh1.7 million was recovered during the review period, a significant decline from the Sh4.98 million retrieved in the previous evaluation. The gap between the funds lost and those recovered illustrates the ongoing challenges facing enforcement agencies in tracing and reclaiming stolen public resources once they are diverted.

The surge in losses occurred even as the number of public officers implicated in corruption-related cases declined. The commission reported that 151 public officers were linked to misconduct across 19 government agencies, down from 337 officers across 28 agencies in the financial year ending June 2024. This represents a 49.9 percent decline in the number of officials reported in corruption cases, suggesting that while fewer individuals were implicated, the financial value of the misconduct increased substantially.

Cases reported during the period included allegations of fraud, abuse of office, theft, bribery and the receipt of improper benefits. Investigations were completed in 99 cases, representing 65.6 percent of the reported incidents. However, four cases were discontinued and 41 cases remained under investigation at the time the report was compiled, while the status of seven cases was not indicated, pointing to gaps in monitoring and documentation within some institutions.

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Out of the cases investigated, 29 cases, equivalent to 19.2 percent, resulted in criminal charges being filed in court. Three cases, or two percent, ended in acquittals. A majority of the cases, 100 incidents representing 66.2 percent, were instead referred for administrative action, which typically includes internal disciplinary measures such as suspension, demotion or dismissal rather than criminal prosecution.

Court proceedings have also progressed slowly. Of the cases filed in court, 15 cases (9.9 percent) had been concluded, while 30 cases (19.9 percent) were still ongoing. The outcome of 106 cases (70.2 percent) was not indicated in the report, underscoring continuing weaknesses in case tracking and reporting systems. Overall, only three cases resulted in convictions, while another three cases ended in acquittals and the outcome of 143 cases remained unspecified.

Oversight agencies have repeatedly warned that corruption continues to drain significant public resources from the national budget. The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission has previously estimated that Kenya could be losing up to one-third of its annual budget to corruption, although the National Treasury has disputed the scale of the estimate.

The commission’s analysis shows that misconduct cases were most prevalent in State corporations and semi-autonomous government agencies, which accounted for 12 of the 19 institutions reporting incidents. Ministries and State departments followed with four institutions, while public universities accounted for three institutions with officers implicated in misconduct.

Fraud emerged as the most common form of wrongdoing, accounting for 49 cases or 32.5 percent of reported incidents. Abuse of office followed with 31 cases, representing 20.5 percent of the total. Theft accounted for 20 cases (13.2 percent), while improper benefits and bribery were reported in 14 cases and 11 cases, respectively.

These patterns highlight the various channels through which public officials exploit their positions, ranging from manipulation of procurement systems to direct misappropriation of funds. Procurement-related corruption remains particularly vulnerable due to the large sums involved in government contracting and infrastructure spending.

Analysts argue that prolonged investigations, weak asset recovery mechanisms and reliance on administrative sanctions continue to undermine efforts to deter corruption. The inability to effectively trace, freeze and recover stolen assets once funds move through complex financial networks remains a major obstacle in holding perpetrators accountable.

The findings add to long-standing concerns about governance within Kenya’s public sector, where repeated corruption scandals involving billions of shillings have rarely resulted in high-profile convictions. As government agencies continue to strengthen compliance frameworks, improving transparency, case tracking and asset recovery mechanisms is expected to remain central to efforts aimed at safeguarding public finances.

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