
The Senate Standing Committee on Labour and Social Welfare has issued a fresh summons for August 20, 2025, compelling both Cabinet Secretary for the National Treasury, John Mbadi, and Cabinet Secretary for Cooperatives and MSMEs, Wycliffe Oparanya, to appear before Senators. This follows a pattern of previous no-shows that has sparked escalating frustration among lawmakers.

Key Issues 🔑
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Kenya Railways Corporation retirees have been awaiting pension payouts for years.
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KEMRI (Kenya Medical Research Institute) former staff remain unpaid.
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The one-off honorarium for ex-councillors, approved in 2018, is still undelivered.
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Kenya Cooperative Creameries (KCC) ex-employees are owed KES 204 million in terminal benefits and savings—some pending for nearly three decades.
- Mbadi’s office reportedly responded to a petition with advice to dismiss it on legal grounds—a move that drew ire from Senators.
- Committee Chair Senator Julius Murgor condemned Mbadi’s repeated absence, stating that Cabinet-level decisions can only be addressed with the Cabinet Secretary himself present.
- Vice chair Senator George Mbugua pledged persistent oversight, affirming: “Even if it takes two years … we will not relent until justice is served.”
- enator Enock Wambua (Kitui) emphasized that appearing before Parliament is a constitutional duty—not a favour. He added pointedly that Mbadi, as a former MP, should understand this better than most.
- Mbadi already faces a potential KSh 500,000 fine for twice skipping Senate appearances. Further failure to attend the August 20 session could trigger sanctions, including arrest or referral to parliamentary disciplinary action.
- Both CS Mbadi and CS Oparanya are set to face the Senate committee at 10:00 AM.
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Thousands of elderly retirees and former public servants are facing severe financial hardship due to legal and systemic delays.
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Parliament’s insistence on Cabinet-level accountability underscores the importance of executive responsiveness in public-sector pension administration.
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The situation underscores gaps in the implementation of long-standing committee resolutions—some dating back to 2018 or earlier.