Corruption

NHIF CEO Summoned Over Missing Sh200 Million

A parliamentary committee has summoned the management of the National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) to explain why it has not refunded Sh200 million meant for a police insurance cover to the ministry of Interior as required by law.

The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) of the National Assembly wants NHIF Chief Executive Officer, Dr Peter Kamunyo, to explain why the refund is taking ages.

The delay was flagged by Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu in her report on the accounts of the Interior ministry for the 2018/19 financial year.

Interior Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho, while appearing before the committee on Monday over the ministry’s audit queries for the period under review, said that efforts to have the money recovered from NHIF had hit a brick wall.

This forced PAC chairman Opiyo Wandayi to order  Dr Kamunyo to appear before the committee.

“The NHIF CEO must appear before this committee to explain where the money is. This is public money and the PAC is committed to ensuring that public funds are used prudently,” Mr Wandayi, the Ugunja MP, said.

The Sh200 million is in addition to the Sh4.79 billion for a comprehensive medical insurance cover awarded to NHIF on September 26, 2017 so as to cushion the members of the National Police Service who might exhaust their limits.

The insurance cover was for a two-year period – from October 1, 2017 to September 30, 2019.

Although the amount was refundable at the end of the contract period, Ms Gathungu, in the audit report before the PAC, noted that it was yet to be refunded.

“It was not possible to determine whether the National Police Service got value for money that was due for refund at the end of the comprehensive medical cover contract,” Ms Gathungu says in the audit report.

Threat to stop payments

On Monday, Mr Kibicho threatened to withhold further payment of insurance premiums to the NHIF until the money is refunded.

“As a ministry we have written to NHIF but it has completely refused to respond to our inquiries,” he told the watchdog committee.

“In the meantime, we will use other measures including withholding the Sh200 million premium due to them until they respond.”

Mr Kibicho however, told the committee that the ministry will have no problem if NHIF provides evidence to show how the money was used as stated in the contract document.

Previously, NHIF was not allowed to engage in the provision of commercial insurance services to public entities and private companies as provided for under section 19 of the Insurance Act.

However, through a Gazette notice of April 17, 2020, Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yattani exempted NHIF from the provisions of the law, effectively allowing the public insurer to engage in the insurance business.

Section 19 of the Insurance Act provides that any insurance provider operating in the country must be registered with the Insurance Regulatory Authority (IRA), the industry regulator. NHIF is not a member of the IRA.

In 2012, the government mandated NHIF to provide medical cover to civil servants and members of the disciplined services – the police and prison officers.

The government cited the high cost of private insurance and lack of structures to provide a medical cover of such a magnitude.


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