Five tribes occupy 70% of all jobs in State corporations - Report
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Five of Kenya’s largest ethnic communities
continue to dominate government employment opportunities, holding more than
more than 70 percent of all State corporations.
A new report by the National Cohesion and
Integration Commission (NCIC) reveals that the Kikuyu, Kalenjin, Luo, Luhya,
and Kamba communities control majority of senior government jobs, leaving
little room for representation among other 38 ethnic groups.
The commission warns that the growing ethnicity in
public sector recruitment poses a serious threat to national unity and social
cohesion.
The report
released as the term of the NCIC’s current commissioners comes to an end has
raised alarm over the persistence of ethnic dominance in Kenya’s parastatals,
painting a grim picture of inequality despite years of diversity reforms.
NCIC
Commissioner Danvas Makori said: “What is shocking is that 8 communities out of
46 control almost 90% of the jobs”
According
to the 2025 ethnic and diversity audit, these five communities, alongside the
Kisii, Meru, and Mijikenda, occupy an overwhelming 88 percent of all positions
in State corporations, leaving just 12 percent to be shared among 37 minority
groups.
“Moi
Teaching and Refferal Hospital is absolutely non-compliance by far...with 67%,”
Makori added.
NCIC Chairperson
Samuel Kobia said: “There has been a clear demonstration that we don’t have
equitable distribution of opportunities.”
Several
government institutions have also been flagged for the imbalance. The report
citing political patronage as a key driver of the biased hiring patterns,
revealing that the same eight communities control 86 percent of all CEO
positions.
Notably, the Kikuyu, Kalenjin, Luo, and Luhya
alone account for nearly two-thirds of top leadership roles.
“I'm not
against phone calls but call on behalf of wanyonge pia...sio tu watu wakubwa,”
said Makori.
The audit
also exposed a glaring gender gap with 62 percent of employees in State
corporations being men, while women hold just 22 percent of CEO positions, far
below the constitutional two-thirds gender requirement.
Public
universities have not been spared either. The NCIC report reveals that the same
five dominant communities control 85.7 percent of all university jobs, leaving
the remaining 38 ethnic groups to share less than 15 percent of opportunities.
The
Kikuyu community leads with 22.9 percent representation, followed by the
Kalenjin at 15.7 percent, Luo at 15.6 percent, and Luhya at 15.4 percent.
“Where
there is no compliance, we launch ethnic audit…even in counties,” noted Kobia.
The
commission warned that the ethnic favouritism and gender imbalance in public
employment threaten to erode national unity and social cohesion if not urgently
addressed.


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