
In a bombshell report that threatens to upend Kenya’s political order, Auditor‑General Nancy Gathungu has declared the Ruto-led Kenya Kwanza government a national “crime scene”, exposing nearly KSh 37.9 billion in stalled and mismanaged public projects across 24 ministries and state agencies.
Unprecedented Accusations Shake the State
The report—covering the 2023/2024 fiscal year—asserts that dozens of critically important development initiatives remain abandoned or incomplete, with no clear accountability or legal documentation. “Accounting officers failed to account adequately for the management and use of public resources,” Gathungu’s audit notes bleakly.
Several senior officials are directly implicated: projects ranging from road construction to healthcare upgrades and irrigation schemes, all visibly stalled despite disbursed funds. One source inside the Auditor‑General’s office told Wamuzi News that some contracts were issued without procurement files, with blank entries in official records. “We saw signatures on ledgers without supporting paperwork,” the insider disclosed.
Political Earthquake in the Making
Despite being published less than 48 hours ago, the report is already stirring fierce reactions from both ruling and opposition factions:
- ODM leader Raila Odinga has called on the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) to fast-track investigations into implicated civil servants and cabinet secretaries.
- Deputy President Kithure Kindiki, facing growing criticism, stated in response that reforms will begin “immediately”, but called the audit “politically motivated” and vowed to challenge its findings.

Opposition leader Moses Wetang’ula issued a scathing public statement demanding the resignation of responsible officials and full forensic audits, warning that “this report marks the collapse of Kenya Kwanza’s moral legitimacy.”
Eyewitness Leak Hits Social Media
Wamuzi News has obtained a redacted version of an internal audit appendix, which names 12 ministries—including Lands, Transport, Agriculture, and Health—as having commenced projects without functional oversight. A whistle-blower, using the pseudonym “Kijana”, confirmed via encrypted message: “All this money was drawn, but it disappeared. We tracked delivery trucks—some never arrived.”
Grassroots political activists in Kisumu and Machakos say citizens have begun blocking access roads to stalled sites, chanting slogans like “accountability now” in protests echoing the larger street movement against government impunity.
Why This Matters
Kenya, already aflame with protests over police brutality, economic hardship, and political repression, now confronts massive institutional corruption at the highest level. The Auditor-General’s findings add incendiary fuel to public outrage, raising the stakes ahead of 2027 elections.
Implications | Why it matters |
---|---|
Fiscal collapse | KSh 37.9 b misallocated in vital sectors |
Erosion of trust | Citizens no longer believe in government transparency |
Political risk | Main opposition may use findings to galvanize protests |
Legal jeopardy | EACC likely to open formal corruption investigations |
What’s Next
- EACC is expected to open formal investigations within the week, focusing on top-tier auditors and project managers.
- Parliament’s Public Investments Committee (PIC) is preparing a special hearing—in coordination with Gathungu’s office—set for early August to summon implicated officials.
- Civil society groups like TI-Kenya and the Kenya Human Rights Commission plan a nationwide audit symposium, urging donors to freeze funding until reforms take place.
- Wamuzi News remains in possession of full audit spreadsheets; we intend to release data-mapped visuals, ministry-by-ministry breakdowns, and insider whistle-blower interviews.
This Wamuzi News exclusive is still unfolding. We are tracking responses from the EACC, statements from President Ruto’s office, and will continue to update with leaked files and eyewitness testimonies. This audit has the potential to reshape political alliances and fuel a movement demanding structural reform.