Experts call for digitisation of public procurement
Source: The Standard
Kenyan governance experts, civil society actors and county leaders have intensified calls for full digitisation of public procurement citing automation as the most effective tool against corruption in a sector that consumes nearly a third of government spending.The call came during thelaunch of the Citizens Watch Moduleby the Institute of Social Accountability (TISA), an 84-page manual developed with civic organisations and county networks to help the public monitor government contracts from planning to completion.The module provides step-by-step guidance on tracking budgets, analysing tenders, verifying contract delivery and demanding accountability.TISA Executive Director Diana Gichengo said citizen action must now focus on contracting, the point where public funds often disappear.Follow The Standard
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on WhatsApp“Transparency International estimates Kenya loses up to Sh3 billion daily through irregular contracting, inflated project variations and opaque tendering,” she noted.Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
The call came during thelaunch of the Citizens Watch Moduleby the Institute of Social Accountability (TISA), an 84-page manual developed with civic organisations and county networks to help the public monitor government contracts from planning to completion.The module provides step-by-step guidance on tracking budgets, analysing tenders, verifying contract delivery and demanding accountability.TISA Executive Director Diana Gichengo said citizen action must now focus on contracting, the point where public funds often disappear.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp“Transparency International estimates Kenya loses up to Sh3 billion daily through irregular contracting, inflated project variations and opaque tendering,” she noted.Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
The module provides step-by-step guidance on tracking budgets, analysing tenders, verifying contract delivery and demanding accountability.TISA Executive Director Diana Gichengo said citizen action must now focus on contracting, the point where public funds often disappear.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp“Transparency International estimates Kenya loses up to Sh3 billion daily through irregular contracting, inflated project variations and opaque tendering,” she noted.Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
TISA Executive Director Diana Gichengo said citizen action must now focus on contracting, the point where public funds often disappear.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp“Transparency International estimates Kenya loses up to Sh3 billion daily through irregular contracting, inflated project variations and opaque tendering,” she noted.Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
“Transparency International estimates Kenya loses up to Sh3 billion daily through irregular contracting, inflated project variations and opaque tendering,” she noted.Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
Hilary Onyango,a lead consultant for the module, added that entrenched procurement misconduct has become institutionalised.“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
“The legal framework is strong, but without digitisation and public oversight, loopholes persist,” he said.Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
Civil society leaders warned that dual systems combining manual and digital processes maintain opacity.They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
They argue that full automation, from needs assessment to contract awards and payments is critical to reduce human interference and curb inflated costs.The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
The module encourages use of digital platforms, geotagging, SMS reporting and contract-tracking dashboards alongside public mobilization to demand transparency.County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
County leaders backed the shift, citing improved scrutiny and reduced project mismanagement. Examples from Wajir, Meru, Baringo, Kisumu and Kakamega show citizen-led digital oversight helping trace contracts and flag irregularities.Follow The Standard
channel
on WhatsApp
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