"Tunajua Wanakutumia" Peter Salasia Reveals that MP Nyoro is Being Used by the Government

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Mumias East MP Peter Salasya has sparked political debate after publicly teasing President William Ruto, claiming the Head of State is quietly relying on Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro as an informal advisor within government despite official structures.

Speaking during a public engagement, Salasya suggested that Nyoro’s growing influence around the presidency reflects trust in his economic ideas, arguing that frequent consultations and visible proximity point to a behind-the-scenes advisory role to the advisers and ordered a comprehensive audit of all offices created within the Executive since 2010.

The ruling follows a petition challenging the legality of advisory positions that critics say had ballooned into a costly parallel government.

According to court findings, taxpayers may have lost up to Sh2.44 billion through salaries, benefits and operational costs linked to the advisory offices.

High Court Judge Bahati Manmuya described the appointments as “secretive, unprocedural and a brazen abuse of public funds,” noting that the advisers strutted the corridors of power, spoke in the President’s name and pocketed millions without lawful authority.

Among those affected are members of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, national security advisers, political and governance advisers, and sector-based advisers in food security, livestock, women’s rights and youth empowerment.

All 21 individuals are now barred from drawing salaries or accessing public resources.

While acknowledging that the President may have acted in good faith, the court warned that good intentions cannot override the Constitution.

“The actions, decisions and omissions in the process exhibit multiple and severe breaches of the Constitution,” the judge ruled.

The decision delivers a significant political and administrative blow to President Ruto’s leadership style, which has relied heavily on advisory structures.

The ruling is expected to trigger further scrutiny of executive spending and reignite debate over the growing burden of advisers on the public wage bill.




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