Outrage as jobseekers recount betrayal in state-led gulf employment drive
Tuesday, 29 April, 2025
Outrage as jobseekers recount betrayal in state-led gulf employment drive๐๐ฎ๐ง๐ ๐ ๐๐จ๐ฐ๐๐ซ๐๐จ๐ง๐๐๐ฒ, ๐๐ ๐๐ฉ๐ซ๐ข๐ฅ ๐๐๐๐
In December 2024, optimism filled the air at Kabete National Polytechnic and KICC, where hundreds of jobseekers gathered, hoping to secure life-changing jobs abroad. They had responded to calls for recruitment under the Diaspora Jobs Programme, a flagship initiative of the Ministry of Labour and Social Protection and the National Employment Authority (NEA).
But just months later, those dreams have crumbled into despair. On Monday, the Senate Committee on Labour and Social Welfare, presided over by Ag Chair Seki Lenku Ole Kanar (Kajiado), heard testimony after heartbreaking testimony from individuals who said they had been promised employment in the Gulf, only to find themselves stranded, in debt and with little recourse.
The session was part of an inquiry triggered by a Statement Request by Senator Gloria Orwoba earlier this month, which exposed the troubling experiences of many candidates selected at Kabete Polytechnic.
The victimsโ accounts bore striking similarities. John Mwangi, a scaffolder from Kiambu County and Calvin Nyamweya, a casual labourer from Kisii County were among those who narrated how, after interviews, they were informed of their successful applications and instructed to pay KES 15,000 for medical examinations. Candidates were also required to surrender their passports to agents operating on-site.
Within days of the successful interview, Godfrey Githae, a carpenter from Nyeri County, was contacted and directed to Room 109 at Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) to sign an Offer Letter. However, he says those like him who signed were not given copies of the documents and it was there that payment demands were made.
โUnlike others, I had not been requested to pay any fees at Kabete," said Githae, who had secured a carpenter position in Iraq. "But when I went to KICC, I was told to pay a total of KES 55,000. The KES 15,000 was for medicals, which I borrowed from my wife and the additional KES 40,000, borrowed from my aunt-in-law, was supposedly for visa and attestation, among other expenses.โ
Some like Fredrick Keene, who paid in cash, were never contacted again. Others, the Committee heard, paid through official-sounding channels: the initial KES 15,000 often via a Safaricom Paybill registered to Monisa Company Ltd and sums of KES 40,000 via bank deposits to Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB).
Sen Orwoba pressed witnesses for clarity on the modes of payment, seeking to piece together how funds were collected under the guise of a government-supported programme. Her concerns were echoed by Sen Miraj Abdullahi, who sharply questioned why any payments were demanded at all.
โThis was a government programme. Why were Kenyans asked to pay such fees?โ she asked, visibly agitated. She recalled a damning Senate report on First Choice Recruitment that recommended disbanding NEA, lamenting, โIt is unfortunate that the recommendations of our report calling for the disbandment of the agency have not been implemented, exposing Kenyans to these challenges.โ
In a particularly revealing moment during the sitting, Sen Orwoba disclosed that her efforts to seek justice for the victims have led to significant pushback. Eight companies, she said, have now come together to sue her for defamation. In a further twist, she revealed that the Cabinet Secretary for Labour had sworn an affidavit stating he was unaware of any Kenyans having