The Foreign Affairs Ministry sought Sh523.8 million to support former Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s campaign, as he ran for the African Union Commission (AUC) Chairperson position, in line with the foreign policy of Kenya, 2024.

The Controller of Budget (CoB) Margaret Nyakang’o has however said in the Budget implementation review report of the first nine months for Financial Year 2024/25, that her office approved Sh216.3 million.

The initial amount was approved by National Treasury on November 14 but CoB approved the Sh216.3 million on February 5, just about two weeks to the AUC elections date.

This came as the third quarterly report revealed that while the State agencies requested additional funding amounting to Sh48.8 billion, Nyakang’o only approved Sh42.22 billion.

She also said that State House sought Sh1.5 billion to cater for utilities, rent, local presidential visits, hospitality services, fuel expenses and maintenance of motor vehicles, amount approved by National Treasury on February 27 and CoB approved Sh1.1 billion on diverse dates.

CoB’s first approval of Sh160.6 million was made on February 28, second one of Sh401.6 million on March 7, the third one of Sh221.1 million and the last one of Sh374.4 million on March 19.

“Article 223 of the Constitution allows the national government to access additional funding during the budget implementation by spending money that has not been appropriated if the amount appropriated for any purpose under the Appropriation Act is insufficient or a need for unbudgeted expenditure arises for which no amount has been appropriated, or money has been withdrawn from the Contingencies Fund,” Nyakang’o has explained.

“During the first nine months of FY 2024/2025, the Controller of Budget authorised a total of Sh42.22 billion under article 223 of the Constitution,” she added.

She said that all the affected additional funding was regularized in Supplementary II budget estimates as required by Article 223 (2) of the Constitution except for Sh1.24 billion disbursed by the World bank and spent by the State Department for Social Protection and Senior Citizen Affairs under Kenya Social and Economic Inclusion Project.

At the same time, she cited budget implementation challenges, which included accumulation of significant pending bills, which stood at Sh511.75 billion by March 2025, limiting cash flows and affected suppliers’ operations, especially SMEs.

She also said there was low revenue outturn, with only 62 per cent of the annual target collected in the first nine months, occasioning delayed disbursement of funds and low absorption rates across MDAs and County Governments.

The Foreign Affairs Ministry sought Sh523.8 million to support former Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s campaign, as he ran for the African Union Commission (AUC) Chairperson position, in line with the foreign policy of Kenya, 2024.

The Controller of Budget (CoB) Margaret Nyakang’o has however said in the Budget implementation review report of the first nine months for Financial Year 2024/25, that her office approved Sh216.3 million.
The initial amount was approved by National Treasury on November 14 but CoB approved the Sh216.3 million on February 5, just about two weeks to the AUC elections date.

This came as the third quarterly report revealed that while the State agencies requested additional funding amounting to Sh48.8 billion, Nyakang’o only approved Sh42.22 billion.
She also said that State House sought Sh1.5 billion to cater for utilities, rent, local presidential visits, hospitality services, fuel expenses and maintenance of motor vehicles, amount approved by National Treasury on February 27 and CoB approved Sh1.1 billion on diverse dates.
CoB’s first approval of Sh160.6 million was made on February 28, second one of Sh401.6 million on March 7, the third one of Sh221.1 million and the last one of Sh374.4 million on March 19.

“Article 223 of the Constitution allows the national government to access additional funding during the budget implementation by spending money that has not been appropriated if the amount appropriated for any purpose under the Appropriation Act is insufficient or a need for unbudgeted expenditure arises for which no amount has been appropriated, or money has been withdrawn from the Contingencies Fund,” Nyakang’o has explained.
“During the first nine months of FY 2024/2025, the Controller of Budget authorised a total of Sh42.22 billion under article 223 of the Constitution,” she added.

She said that all the affected additional funding was regularized in Supplementary II budget estimates as required by Article 223 (2) of the Constitution except for Sh1.24 billion disbursed by the World bank and spent by the State Department for Social Protection and Senior Citizen Affairs under Kenya Social and Economic Inclusion Project.
At the same time, she cited budget implementation challenges, which included accumulation of significant pending bills, which stood at Sh511.75 billion by March 2025, limiting cash flows and affected suppliers’ operations, especially SMEs.

She also said there was low revenue outturn, with only 62 per cent of the annual target collected in the first nine months, occasioning delayed disbursement of funds and low absorption rates across MDAs and County Governments.

Published Date: 2025-06-12 14:10:00
Author:
By Irene Githinji
Source: The Standard
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