Kenya: House Education Committee Turns to Govt As Lecturers Strike Persists

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NAIROBI — Talks between the National Assembly Education Committee,university lecturers, and public universities failed to kick off on Tuesday amid a stalement over a strike declared unprotected by courts.

For the second consecutive week, the Inter-Public Universities Councils Consultative Forum (IPUCCF) failed to provide the committee with documents confirming the government’s commitment to disburse Sh4.3 billion to resume learning in higher education institutions.

This prompted Education Committee Chairperson Julius Melly to call off the meeting and summon three Cabinet Secretaries to help break the impasse that has kept students out of school for months.

The MPs summoned Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Migos, his Labor counterpart Alfred Mutua, and National Treasury CS John Mbadi to provide details on steps taken to end the strike.

“I will adjourn this session until we can have a properly constituted meeting, with the inter-ministerial committee present before this committee,” said Melly.

The IPUCCF failed to confirm the availability of the Sh4.3 billion, which the exchequer is expected to release to end the strike.

IPUCCF Chairman Fred Simiyu Baraza stated that only the Ministry of Education could issue a confirmatory letter regarding the disbursement, explaining that it is not within the forum’s authority to make such commitments.

“As an agency, IPUCCF does not issue commitment letters; we are under the Ministry of Education and do not have the document you are looking for,” Baraza explained.