EACC sensitizes Bungoma MCAs on new conflict of interest law
Staff and Members of the County Assembly (MCAs) of Bungoma follow proceedings during a sensitization session held by EACC on December 4, 2025. PHOTO | COURTESY
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The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) on Thursday
briefed staff and Members of the County Assembly (MCAs) of Bungoma on the
requirements of the new Conflict of Interest Act, 2025, which came into force
in August.
The sensitization session, held
at the Paskari Nabwana Hall, was led by EACC Deputy Director for Ethics
Compliance Patrick Owiny, accompanied by Ethics Officer Awino Oluoch.
The commission outlined key provisions of the law, which
introduces stricter rules for identifying, preventing and managing conflicts
between public duties and private interests.
According to EACC, the Act
requires public officers to proactively avoid situations where personal
interests may interfere with objective decision-making, and to make timely
declarations when actual, potential or perceived conflicts arise.
The commission highlighted
Section 19 as one of the law’s most far-reaching reforms, fully prohibiting
public officers from trading with or benefiting from contracts involving their
own institutions.
Officers are barred from supplying goods, works or services to
their reporting entities, participating in procurement processes where they
hold private interests, or benefiting directly or indirectly from such
contracts.
EACC also outlined new criminal
sanctions introduced under the Act. Offences such as misuse of official
information, preferential treatment, concealing conflicts of interest,
accepting prohibited gifts and issuing false declarations now attract fines of
up to Ksh.4 million or imprisonment for up to 10 years.
Corporations face fines of up to Ksh.10 million, in addition
to mandatory penalties equal to twice the benefit gained or the loss caused.
Speaker of the County Assembly, Emmanuel Situma, welcomed the
sensitization and urged MCAs and staff to comply with the law, saying the
Assembly would take firm action against violations.
Clerk of the Assembly, Charles
Wafula, said the meeting was convened to ensure all officers understood the
law’s requirements, noting that lack of awareness would not be accepted as a
justification for non-compliance.


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