Jump to navigation

The missing man in Arusha

Pending a court challenge, axed Secretary-General Mathuki has not resigned from the EAC despite being absent from his post since his recall

Confusion reigns over the status of Peter Mathuki the outgoing Secretary-General of the East African Community. Last month, Mathuki was abruptly recalled by Kenyan President William Ruto, and announced as Kenya's next ambassador to Russia, after EAC lawmakers moved impeachment motions against him over the alleged misappropriation of US$6 million from the bloc's budget. Mathuki has denied any wrongdoing.

A letter from the Kenyan government to the EAC's Council of Ministers on 15 March, stated that Mathuki 'is now to serve the Republic in a different capacity'.

However, the EAC's internal procedures state that a member government wanting to withdraw a senior staff member must give six months' notice. Since Ruto is keen to post Mathuki in the coming weeks that would require other EAC members to agree to waive the notice period. A court challenge which questions the legality of Mathuki's recall is also pending at the EAC's court.

Mathuki was due to be vetted for his Russian posting by the Kenyan parliament on 8 April, a process that was expected to be a fait accompli.

In the meantime, Mathuki has not resigned from the EAC and so officially remains in post despite being absent from Arusha since his recall, and the EAC has been in limbo for a month. South Sudan's President Salva Kiir Mayardit has called an EAC leaders' summit for 15 April that is set to formally end Mathuki's three-year tenure and replace him with United Nations official Caroline Mwende Mueke (Dispatches 20/3/24, Quiet diplomacy doesn't work for sacked official).



Related Articles

Democratic deficit

The six-nation East African Community has taken a proactive stance on regional trade in recent years, waging a battle against the United States by threatening to impose tariffs on ...


Bigger promises, smaller budgets

As the finance ministers in Uganda and Tanzania prepare their national budget statements for 14 June, they are likely to include references to their commitment to a single currency...


Scrambling for a Pax Swahili

Kenya's entry into the Congolese crucible is driven more by hopes of diplomatic and commercial gains than military adventurism

It is hanging by a thread. A truce, signed in Luanda with only the tacit participation of the principal antagonist, guaranteed by a phone call between Kenya's former President Uhur...


Court out of cash

Hamstrung by its member countries refusing to pay their annual contributions, the East African Community is perennially short of cash. On 29 May, the bureau of the East African Leg...