10-point agenda committee says report ready, set to be released on Tuesday
President William Ruto meets the committee overseeing the implementation of the 10-point agenda and the National Dialogue Committee (NADCO) report at State House on January 21, 2026. PHOTO | PCS
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The committee
overseeing the implementation of the 10-point agenda and the National Dialogue
Committee (NADCO) report will submit its status report on Tuesday, March 10,
after a planned release on Saturday was pushed forward.
In a statement to
newsrooms on Saturday, the Committee Overseeing the Implementation of the Ten
Point Agenda and NADCO Report (COIN-10) said the report is ready and will be
presented to the principals, the joint Parliamentary group and the public early
next week.
The committee was
initially supposed to submit its report on March 7, which coincides with the
anniversary of the signing of the agreement between the United Democratic
Alliance (UDA) leader President William Ruto and the late longtime Orange
Democratic Movement (ODM) party chief Raila Odinga.
The Agnes
Zani-led team noted that the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) established the
framework under which the implementation committee was formed to oversee the
10-point agenda and the NADCO report.
According to the
statement, the committee was mandated to hold extensive consultations with
various stakeholders, including government ministries, departments and
agencies, civil society organisations and members of the public before
compiling its findings.
“Pursuant to the
establishment of the committee to oversee the implementation of the ten-point
agenda and the NADCO report, the committee was mandated to conduct extensive
consultations with stakeholders, including government ministries, departments
and agencies, civil society organisations and Kenyans,” the statement read.
However, the
submission was delayed following changes to plans for a joint Parliamentary
group meeting between ODM and UDA that had been scheduled ahead of the
anniversary date.
“COIN-10 was aware
of plans to have the joint parliamentary group just before the 7th of March,
arrangements that were varied following the tragic demise of Johanna Ng’eno,
the now deceased MP for Emurua Dikir constituency,” the committee said.
The report will
now be submitted to President Ruto and the ODM leadership at the joint Parliamentary
group meeting now set for Tuesday, as well as to the general public on the same
day.
The 10-point
agenda was formulated following an agreement between President Ruto and Raila last
year, aimed at addressing key national issues, including governance,
corruption, strengthening devolution and the country’s debt burden.
The Linda Ground
wing of ODM has previously said the agenda is a continuous process meant to move the country forward, noting
that discussions around the implementation would continue beyond the initial
timeline.
Siaya Governor James
Orengo of the Linda Mwananchi faction, however, on Saturday issued a scathing
statement on the first anniversary of the MoU, declaring that the occasion had
soured into something far darker than a celebration.
"Instead of
7th March 2026 being a day of joy and celebration of the MoU, it has turned out
to be a day of betrayal and rage," Orengo said.
More than 140 days after the death of Raila Odinga, Orengo warned that the former opposition leader's ODM party was being systematically dismantled from within.


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