Lobby groups want DCI to probe governors, senators bribery claims
National
By
Pkemoi Ngénoh
| Feb 18, 2026
Council of Governors Chairman Wajir Governor Ahmed Abdulahi addresses a press briefing in Kilifi County on February 9, 2026. [Nehemiah Okwembah, Standard]
The Kenya Devolution Civil Society Organisations, which brings together lobby groups from counties, now want the Directorate of Criminal Investigations to probe governors and senators bribery allegations.
This comes following claims by governors that they were being asked to pay bribes when they appear before Senate committees for grilling.
The claims, the civil society groups said, point to deep-seated corruption within the oversight architecture meant to protect citizens.
READ MORE
Rwanda tea earns higher auction prices as Kenya lags
Aviation policies limit Kenya tourism numbers
Parliament seeks bigger say in control of Kenya's Sovereign Wealth Fund
From waitress to property mogul: Gamble that paid off
Konza deploys drones to restore degraded land in landmark conservation initiative
Equity shareholders approve record Sh21.7 billion dividend payout
Brookside revs up partnership with hoteliers to expand niche market
IMF struck out of Kenya's Sh7 trillion 'Odious debt' case, granted immunity
Kenya, Germany strike deal on smallholder irrigation expansion
"We call upon Directorate of Criminal Investigations and Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to immediately investigate these allegations," they said in a joint statement
"Bribery of public officials undermines the foundation of devolution, if true both those who pay and those who receive bribes must face the full force of the law," read the statement
The group argued that in order to fix accountability gaps and restore public trust the law ought to be amended to allow accredited civil society organisations groups with a governance mandate.
This, they said, will allow them to oversee proceedings of the Senate, the National Assembly and all 47 County Assemblies.
"The observer status would allow the Civil Society Organisations to monitor proceedings in real-time and report to the public, deter corruption and provide technical input on governance and accountability matters," they said.
They explained that the presence of a neutral party in the proceedings will also ensure that oversight is conducted in the open and that the gap between the parliament and the people will be closed.
"When governors refuse to account for public funds, they deny citizens their transparent governance. When senators demand or receive bribes to clear governors, they turn oversight into commercial transaction," the group added
At the same time, they asked the Senate to make public all proceedings, documents and evidence.