Parliament to reinforce accountability in struggling universities
Education
By
Mike Kihaki
| Nov 30, 2025
The Public Investments Committee (PIC) on Governance and Education has intensified its examination of Kenya’s universities and technical colleges, signalling a renewed push by
Parliament to address mismanagement and persistent financial weaknesses across the sector.
Chaired by Bumula MP Wanami Wamboka, the committee spent a full day reviewing governance lapses in several institutions amid growing public concern over declining academic
standards, stalled projects and mounting debts.
Many universities are struggling with multi-billion-shilling deficits, unremitted pension contributions, irregular staffing practices, abandoned income-generating ventures and
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prolonged leadership disputes.
The PIC’s latest engagements underscored the scale of the crisis. At the Kenya Private Security Regulatory Authority, legislators questioned a stalled staffing plan and warned the
Director-General against making financial or hiring commitments outside his mandate.
Pwani University faced scrutiny over procurement irregularities, misclassified expenditures and a Sh29 million payment processed without proper documentation.
The Auditor-General was instructed to trace the funds and verify compliance with financial laws.
At Kiambu National Polytechnic, the committee queried why Sh2.8 million had remained idle in an account for an extended period, directing the Ministry of Education to clarify its
utilisation. Samburu Technical and Vocational College was challenged to diversify revenue streams after reporting only Sh76,000 in annual income, with members urging adoption
of viable income-generating activities such as farming.
Moi Teachers Training College was faulted after the Finance Officer was found to lack required professional accreditation, prompting a summons for the former principal over
unresolved audit issues.
Moi University’s long-running financial troubles also came under focus. The institution’s Head of Finance was declared unfit for failing to provide documentation on unaccounted
legal fees, while the former Vice-Chancellor will be required to explain the non-remittance of staff pension deductions.
The committee intends to summon the institution’s last three vice-chancellors to shed light on the university’s decline.
Despite the concerns, members commended the current Moi University Vice-Chancellor for improving student enrolment and reclaiming irregularly leased university land.
“We cannot allow institutions to operate in darkness when billions of public money pass through their systems,” Wamboka said, adding that the committee will continue pushing for
accountability and stronger governance.
“Kenyan students, workers and taxpayers deserve institutions that are transparent, well-managed and future-focused,” he added.