Isaac Mwaura backtracks on claim Public Seal was moved from AG’s office
Government Spokesperson Isaac Mwaura during a press briefing on May 19, 2025. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Government
Spokesperson Isaac Mwaura has taken a U-turn
on his previous remarks that the Public Seal was moved from the Attorney
General's custody to the Office of the Head of Public Service.
Speaking to the
press on Thursday, Mwaura explained that the clause was proposed in the
National Administration Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2023, which sought to make the
Head of Public Service (HOPS)
Felix Koskei as the sole custodian of the Public Seal.
He reiterated that
Parliament deleted the proposal before the Bill
was passed into law, emphasising that the seal remains with the Attorney
General.
"The Public Seal
is actually under the custody of the Attorney General as per Article 9 of the
Constitution and if you look at the Office of the Attorney General Act clause
2: Designation of Terms, it clearly states exactly that," he stated.
"This needs to
go on record that the Public
Seal is not with the Head of Public Service
and that misinformation came as a result of Parliament and it was a proposal
that was deleted."
The Public Seal has
been a subject of contention as it is used to stamp critical documents to
represent the government and certify official documents.
Mwaura had earlier on claimed that the Seal was moved to Koskei's office according
to the law.
“The process is
anchored in legislation, which recognizes the HOPS as the appropriate holder of
the seal,” he told the press on Monday.
Former Attorney
General Justin Muturi, who has recently been exposing alleged underhanded deals
concocted by President William Ruto, claimed that the seal was in Koskei's
hands, citing a recipe for disaster for the country.
"If documents
can be signed and bear the Public
Seal without the AG's legal advice, that is
a serious issue. I'm sure that they are avoiding accountability by transferring
such matters to the HOPS office," he told The Standard.
Muturi claimed that
the transition was secretly done via the Bill
and passed quietly in Parliament to avoid public scrutiny.
"That
tradition was upended last year when Parliament quietly passed amendments
shifting the Seal's custody to the
Head of Public Service, a position with no direct constitutional mandate and
whose holder is neither vetted by Parliament nor subject to the same legal
scrutiny as the AG," he added.


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