Wavinya Finally Explains Sammy Kioko’s KSh 19M Claim as Machakos Drama Deepens
Machakos Governor Wavinya Ndeti has now given her most detailed explanation yet on the growing Sammy Kioko KSh 19 million payment standoff, following the comedian’s hospitalisation after a dramatic confrontation with county askaris in Machakos Town.
Fresh reports published today show that her statement focused on the legal ownership of the tender, why the money remains unpaid, and the violence that turned the supplier dispute into a national talking point.
According to Wavinya, county procurement records do not list Sammy Kioko as a registered supplier. She clarified that the inspectorate uniforms at the center of the dispute were supplied by Movata Designs, meaning any payment claim must legally be pursued by that company or by someone holding proper legal authority such as a power of attorney or formal company appointment. This shifts the public conversation from whether the county owes money to who has the legal standing to demand it.
The governor also acknowledged that supplies were indeed made, but said the delivery was partial and came near the close of the 2023/2024 financial year, preventing inspection and formal acceptance from being completed in time.
Because of this, the amount was moved into the county’s pending bills framework under Public Finance Management rules, where it now awaits verification and clearance.
Her administration further revealed that the disputed amount is now part of a much wider inherited pending bills burden of KSh 3.812 billion, currently undergoing verification by the Machakos County Pending Bills Verification Committee following recommendations from the Auditor-General and the Controller of Budget.
The county says all legitimate claims will be paid, but only after strict legal and audit checks and in line with the First-In, First-Out (FIFO) principle to ensure older verified debts are cleared first.
Wavinya also strongly condemned the violence that erupted during Kioko’s protest on March 31, saying the county government does not condone force in any form.
Her response appears aimed at cooling public outrage after images and videos of Kioko being wrestled to the ground and later rushed to hospital sparked online anger from entertainers, journalists, and contractors.
The deeper issue behind the headline
Beyond the KSh 19 million itself, this story has now evolved into a larger governance and transparency debate in Kenya’s county system.
The county may have a valid legal argument on supplier identity, but the public optics remain damaging: a supplier-linked claimant was injured while demanding payment, reinforcing long-standing frustrations among Kenyan contractors over delayed county bills.
Community reactions online also show growing debate over whether the issue is a legal technicality or proof that the real problem is years of unpaid public tenders.
Wavinya, visibly frustrated, has provided an explanation regarding the Sammy Kioko matter.
— The Mayor (@themayor_ke) April 1, 2026
However, why would she refer to someone as "kamama"? pic.twitter.com/LVp172RN2g
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