Anonymous22 days ago
Kenya's National Infrastructure Fund, signed into law on March 9, 2026, aims to mobilize KSh 5 trillion ($39 billion) over a decade to finance highways, railways, airports, and energy systems — shifting from debt-driven to investment-led infrastructure financing. But the Auditor General, opposition lawmakers, constitutional lawyers, and civil society have raised serious concerns about oversight gaps, the bypassing of budget controls, and the risk of political interference in a country ranked 130th on the global corruption index.