KHRC, Civil Society Groups Seek Clarification on ODPP Senior Appointments

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KHRC, Civil Society Groups Seek Clarification on ODPP Senior Appointments
KHRC, Civil Society Groups Seek Clarification on ODPP Senior Appointments

A coalition of civil society organisations has petitioned the Public Service Commission (PSC) seeking urgent clarification on recent job advertisements and staffing changes at the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP).

The National Integrity Alliance (NIA), which brings together several lobby groups including Inuka Kenya Ni Sisi!, Transparency International-Kenya, Institute for Social Accountability (TISA), and the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC), says the request is aimed at safeguarding transparency and accountability in the country’s justice institutions.

On January 30, the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) wrote to the Public Service Commission (PSC) expressing worries about how seven senior management-level officers in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) were removed from their roles and reassigned after the current DPP took office in 2023.

The officers whose redeployments have raised eyebrows include two Deputy Directors, three Senior Assistant Directors, and heads of Finance and Procurement.

The civil society coalition also questioned the recent job advertisement issued by ODPP on December 29 last year, seeking clarification on the selection criteria, qualifications of shortlisted candidates, and the rationale for allowing only twenty minutes for interviews for senior-level positions.

NIA maintained in their demand letter that despite ODPP being an independent office, public oversight of staffing and administrative decisions is essential to ensure compliance with constitutional and legal standards.

“Public oversight helps prevent abuse of power, political interference, or arbitrary decision-making, and ensures that prosecutorial discretion is exercised lawfully, rationally, and in a manner that promotes justice,” the letter read in part.

Meanwhile, the coalition has requested an urgent written response from the PSC, noting that interviews for the advertised positions are scheduled for the coming week.

At the same time, copies of the petition were also forwarded to the Director of Public Prosecutions, the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission, the Directorate of Criminal Investigations, and members of the ODPP Advisory Board.

The PSC has not yet responded to the petition, and it is unclear whether the commission will provide clarity before the scheduled interviews.

The developments come at a time when the President William Ruto’s administration is mulling a mass transfer of public servants as part of its strategy to streamline employment within the Public Service and eliminate bias.

PSC, in its draft Affirmative Action Regulations of 2025, which are currently undergoing public participation, revealed plans to redistribute common cadre employees in September last year.

The law requires at least 5 per cent of public service jobs to be held by persons with disabilities (PWDs), while the National Cohesion and Integration Act requires public establishments to reflect Kenya’s diversity and bars any one ethnic community from making up more than one-third of an entity’s staff.

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