INVESTIGATIONS

The Fall of Kenyatta National Hospital: Examining Corruption and Mismanagement

Corruption and Mismanagement: The Downfall of Kenyatta National Hospital

A comprehensive investigation by this publication, supported by a whistleblower’s letter and validated through internal documents and interviews, uncovers a troubling trend of corruption, cover-ups, and criminal negligence within Kenya’s oldest and largest referral hospital.

Central to this controversy is Dr. Evanson Kamuri, the hospital’s Chief Executive Officer, under whose leadership the institution has devolved into a hub of procurement fraud, fictitious projects, and a stark neglect for public health. The ramifications of this systemic failure are severe and potentially life-threatening.

The Oxygen Plant That Nearly Killed Patients

In May 2022, the Ministry of Health awarded a lucrative contract to Biomax Africa Ltd for the installation of a medical oxygen plant meant to generate 8,000 liters per minute.

But what KNH received was a death trap.

The installed plant could barely produce a third of the required oxygen (only 2,800 LPM) and lacked basic functionality to measure oxygen purity—putting thousands of lives at risk.

Despite knowing the plant was defective, KNH management allegedly coerced internal oversight committees to sign off on the substandard facility.

More damningly, the hospital used over Kshs. 100 million of public funds to procure a transformer and generator—costs that were to be borne by the contractor under the tender agreement.

The poorly functioning plant is now consuming more electricity than the rest of the hospital combined, ballooning KNH’s annual electricity bill by Kshs. 500 million, a 120% increase—funds that could have gone to medication, staffing, or patient care.

A Web of Financial Scams and Political Protection

Documents and insider testimony reveal a systematic looting of KNH’s finances.

At least Kshs. 65 million, allegedly received as a “facilitation fee” from the oxygen contractor, was quietly misappropriated.

Sources claim Dr. Kamuri has used high-level political connections—including ties to a former Deputy President—to shield himself from accountability.

Millions of public funds are said to have been diverted to political campaign financing, including for the Azimio la Umoja coalition during the 2022 elections.

“The hospital has been turned into a personal bank,” said a senior staff member at KNH who spoke on condition of anonymity.

“Tenders are given to friends and political allies, and oversight mechanisms are completely undermined.”

The Ghost ERP System

Seven years after the award of a contract to Alltab Africa to implement an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system to digitize hospital operations, the system remains a phantom—less than 40% complete, despite 94% of payments already made.

Even worse, KNH entered into a “maintenance” agreement for the uncommissioned system with a new vendor—at exorbitant costs.

Millions more were paid out in what insiders describe as a deliberate scheme to milk the institution dry, with kickbacks allegedly funneled to Dr. Kamuri, the procurement director, and Ms. Rose Njoroge, a top legal officer linked to attempts to quash investigations by the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC).

Cancer Patients Suffer as Cartels Fight for Control

The hospital’s LINAC (Linear Accelerator) cancer treatment machine has been out of service for months, yet procurement for a replacement has been caught in a web of manipulation.

After a legitimate bidder failed the mandatory evaluation, insiders claim KNH’s procurement leadership is now sabotaging the process to allow their preferred vendor another chance.

Former Health PS Harry Kimutai, who allegedly enjoyed lavish benefits from the KNH budget while in office, is said to have planted loyal operatives in the hospital’s procurement unit.

One name repeatedly mentioned in connection with multiple scandals, including the ERP saga, is Mr. John Miring’u, a procurement officer alleged to be part of a longstanding corruption network within the institution.

Breach of Public Trust

Under Article 73 and Chapter 6 of the Constitution, public officials are expected to uphold integrity, transparency, and accountability. But KNH leadership has done the opposite.

“KNH has become the embodiment of everything wrong with public service,” said an anti-corruption investigator familiar with the ongoing probe. “What we’re seeing here is not incompetence—it’s organized theft.”

A Plea for Action

Calls are growing louder for immediate intervention. Senior medical staff and whistleblowers are urging Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale and Principal Secretary Mary Muthoni to dismantle the KNH cartel, beginning with the removal and prosecution of top executives linked to the rot.

“The survival of Kenyatta National Hospital, and indeed public healthcare in Kenya, hinges on swift and decisive action,” reads a letter submitted to the EACC and Ministry of Health.

The agency has yet to announce a formal investigation into the allegations, but internal sources confirm that preliminary inquiries have begun.

The Cost of Inaction

For ordinary Kenyans—especially the poor who rely on KNH for affordable healthcare—the cost of this corruption is measured not in shillings, but in lives lost due to substandard care, delayed treatment, and misallocated resources.

As one cancer patient told us, “They keep saying the machine is coming, but every month we wait is another month closer to death.”

The time for reports and memos is over. Kenyans demand answers. And justice.

 

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