City Hall to hire 500 new county askaris, commonly known as kanjos

Nairobi County askaris during an operation to arrest traders violating by-laws on Ronald Ngala Street in Nairobi. FILE PHOTO | NMG

What you need to know:

  • The county government will outsource services from other agencies for guarding services.
  • Sh180 million has been budgeted for to recruit the new officers earmarked to plug a gaping staff shortage.
  • The officers are tasked with ensuring compliance to county by-laws and orders, provide security to county installations, properties and sentries.

City Hall is looking at hiring 500 additional inspectorate officers, commonly known as kanjos, as it grapples with shortage of staff in the security and compliance department.

Towards this, Sh180 million has been budgeted for to recruit the new officers earmarked to plug a gaping staff shortage.

However, in the meantime, the county government will outsource services from other agencies for guarding services.

According to the county government, the recruitment will be carried out in a phased approach with an eye on having in place a proper succession plan in a department that is struggling with aging staff.

Already, advertisement for the positions has been made as City Hall seeks to have enough officers to deal with hawkers, parking boys, muggers, and petty offenders in the city.

“A total of 500 new officers will be recruited in the next financial year as the county looks at having the required workforce aimed at improved service delivery and prompt response,” reads in part the Nairobi County Annual Development Plan for the financial year ending June 30, 2023.

The sub-sector, comprising city inspectorate department, investigation and information analysis department, and administration and support services, currently relies on 2,567 inspectorate and compliance officers to execute its mandate.

The officers are tasked with ensuring compliance to county by-laws and orders, provide security to county installations, properties and sentries.

They also investigate cases, gather intelligence, and analyse information on issues of interest to the county.

The Ann Kananu-led administration is also looking at spending Sh58 million towards capacity building for the officers by rolling out training programmes for the staff.

In June this year, the Ann Kananu-led administration inked a deal with the National Police Service to train more than 1,000 of its inspectorate officers at Kiganjo Police Training College and Administration Police Training College, Embakasi.

According to Director of Enforcement Services Dr Mark Leleruk, the four-month training was targeted at introducing a new culture of professionalism and integrity into the unit with graduate inspectorate courses knitted into the programme.

“We intend to build capacity of our staff through rolling out training programmes as well as ensure proper succession plan. We intend to rebrand and get rid of the culture associated with corruption and brutality, especially when dealing with hawkers,” said Dr Leleruk.

But in the long term, the county government plans to build a Sh200 million modern training facility in the county that will be dedicated to training the county inspectorate officers.

Another Sh100 million will go towards purchase of uniform for 1,000 lower cadre new recruits in a phased manner, a process that had already begun.

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