High Court rules KRA revenue service assistant recruitment was unconstitutional
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A
High Court in Busia has declared the recruitment of 1,406 revenue service
assistants by the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) unconstitutional as two ethnic communities
benefitted immensely from the recruitment drive.
A
petition filed by Peter Kabinga on October 12, 2023, argued that out of the
recruits, 785 came from two communities in Kenya while 621 came from the rest
of the Kenyan communities.
The
Chairman of the Board of Directors KRA, Anthony Mwaura, was listed as the first
respondent while the second respondent is the KRA Commissioner General,
Humphery Wattanga.
Kabinga
affirmed that the Eng. Mwaura hailed from Thika, Kiambu but has roots in Kiharu
in Murang’a, and both Thika and Kiharu benefitted greatly from the recruitment
as compared to other areas.
He
continued to state that the Thika town constituency got 50 slots while the Kiharu
constituency got 40 slots compared to areas such as Kitutu Chache, Funyula,
Kisumu East, Bomachoge Borabu, and Teso North among others got a slot each.
Eng.
Mwaura affirmed that the exercise attracted countless applicants and that
physical interviews could not be conducted, hence they opted to conduct
aptitude tests, and those with the highest scores were recruited.
He
also said that they gave prominence to merit based on the aptitude test and
that regional balance and ethnic diversity come afterward.
The
High Court noted that the recruitment exercise was unconstitutional as it
offends the preamble of the Constitution.
“A
declaration of the June 2023 recruitment of the 1406 revenue service assistants
was unconstitutional as it offends the preamble of the Constitution and the
provisions of Articles 10, 27, 56, and 232 (g) (h) (i) of the Constitution,”
reads court papers.
Justice
William Musyoka has barred KRA from recruiting staff for all levels until an
ethnic diversity and regional balance policy is deployed as stated in the
constitution.
“An
order barring the respondents from recruiting and appointing staff at all
levels, until an ethnic diversity and regional balance policy is deployed,
giving effect to the values and principles stated in the preamble and Article
232(g)(h) (i) of the Constitution, which policy should be in place within 30
days of this order,” the order reads in part.


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