'No money lost on eCitizen': Gov't dismisses Auditor Genaral's report
Treasury PS Dr. Chris Kiptoo appears before the National Assembly’s Public Accounts Committee (PAC) on August 7, 2025. PHOTO | COURTESY

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The government now
says no money was lost on the eCitizen platform, explaining that accounting
systems after the contractual agreements with the system vendors sealed all the
loopholes for corruption in the platform.
Speaking when he
appeared before the National Assembly’s Public Accounts Committee on Thursday,
Treasury Principal Secretary Dr. Chris Kiptoo said the government fully owns
the platform and has all the access passwords.
PS
Kiptoo said Auditor General Nancy Gathungu's findings were nothing but an
inaccurate distortion of facts, maintaining that no money was lost in the
system.
The
PS, in a joint rejoinder with his counterparts Dr. Belio Kipsang (Immigration
and Citizen Services) and Eng. John Tanui (ICT), dismissed the Auditor General’s findings that reported a loss of about Ksh.11 billion from the government’s
digital payment platform, at least since 2023.
“I want to assure Kenyans that from 2023 onwards, I want to
assure Kenyans no money has been lost,” PS
Kiptoo stated.
Kiptoo
added that the government had put enough legal and fiscal measures to prevent
loss of public funds through the system.
“For many years, almost 10 years, there was no
contractual obligations between the vendor and the government, so we have tried
to regularise the law,”
he noted.
The
PS however admitted to a failure by relevant authorities to implement the
prorated service charge, which has not been in place, instead employing a flat
rate charge of Ksh.50 convenience fee, which led to an overcollection of Ksh.1.8
billion from the taxpayers.
“The passwords and administrative rights for eCitizen are managed by the Directorate of Citizen Services under the Ministry of Interior,” said Kiptoo.
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