The True Cost of Corruption in Kenya’s Drylands
Corruption in Kenya is no longer a whispered inconvenience, it is a systemic rot choking our institutions and community aspirations. The latest National Ethics and Corruption Survey from the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) reveals that the average Kenyan pays a bribe of KES 7,411 for basic services. For pastoralist communities, this figure represents not just money but the erosion of dignity, justice, and constitutional protection.
Land governance is among the sectors worst hit. Community Land Management Committees (CLMCs), established under the Community Land Act, have become battlegrounds where bribery, favoritism, and administrative sabotage distort recognition and service delivery. When newly elected CLMCs are obstructed, sidelined, or fragmented by powerful land officers, registrars, local administrators or political operatives, it is not just unethical it is unconstitutional.
This is not merely a matter of poor service. It is a deliberate assault on civic agency. The EACC report highlights land registration as one of the top bribe-prone services. Yet behind that statistic lie communities forced to pay to prove ownership of ancestral lands, youth locked out of participatory governance, and elders who travel for miles only to be met with bureaucratic stonewalls unless they “facilitate.”
Community voices give testimonies to reality on the ground; “We elected our CLMC to protect our land, but now we are told we can not start work unless we pay. Is this democracy or auction?” Fatuma, women leader from Kina Dedha. “I walked to the registrar’s office with our documents. They said they lost them. Then someone whispered that I should ‘talk nicely’ if I want progress.” Youth mobilizer from Kulamawe Dedha. “We are not asking for favors. We are asking for what the Constitution promised us. But corruption has made our rights negotiable.” Interim chairman, CLMC.
To truly combat corruption, we must move beyond punishment and toward structural reform. That begins with- Full recognition and operationalization of CLMCs free from political manipulation. Enforced transparency in county land registries and oversight of service delivery actors and Civic education that empowers communities to report corruption and demand ethical governance.
The drylands are not empty they are alive with wisdom, culture, and constitutional hope. The real cost of corruption in the drylands is measured in silenced voices and stalled community land rights progress. Can CSOs mobilize and create watchdogs and civic visionaries, and ensure that integrity is not a luxury, but the foundation of our republic.