President Ruto showed up at the National Police College in Embakasi and watched 1,837 chiefs plus assistant chiefs grab their certificates after finishing courses on paralegal work and security management. This marks the third batch from a program that has pushed almost 6,000 grassroots administrators through structured training since the government decided these officers needed actual skills instead of winging it like they have been for years.
Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen said the whole thing came out of nationwide security consultations where people complained about how the administrative system was falling apart. The chiefs handle everything from settling disputes to running government programs, and Ruto pointed out that they helped digitize farmer registries that got over seven million people signed up. The government plans to drop more reform details when they launch the security report at the State House.
Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen said the whole thing came out of nationwide security consultations where people complained about how the administrative system was falling apart. The chiefs handle everything from settling disputes to running government programs, and Ruto pointed out that they helped digitize farmer registries that got over seven million people signed up. The government plans to drop more reform details when they launch the security report at the State House.