President Ruto Appoints Simon Gikuru Deputy State House Comptroller

    President William Ruto has re-established the position of deputy comptroller of State House, Head of Public Service Felix Koskei has said.

    In a statement on Tuesday, Mr Koskei said the President has appointed Advocate of the High Court Simon Gikuru to the role.

    Mr Gikuru has over a decade of experience in law, management, strategic planning, policy formulation, financial administration, consultancy, logistics, and conflict resolution.

    The new deputy State House comptroller was one of 50 Chief Administrative Secretaries (CASs) whose appointments were quashed by the High Court after a three-judge bench found that the law had not been followed in setting up the office.

    President Ruto had appointed him to serve in the Ministry of Information, Communication and the Digital Economy headed by Cabinet Secretary Eliud Owalo.

    He is the immediate former Secretary General of the Amani National Congress Party and has previously worked as Managing Associate at Chege Kamau & Company Advocates and the Group Managing Director of Amoo Holdings International Limited, a regional logistics firm that had operations in Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, Tanzania, and DRC.

    The incoming deputy Comptroller, State House holds a Master of Law (LL.M) degree from the University of Nairobi, a postgraduate diploma in law from the Kenya School of Law and a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) degree from Makerere University, Uganda.

     

    He has also undertaken postgraduate training in Global Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the internationally acclaimed Manning School of Business, University of Massachusetts.

    “With the immense expertise and experience of the newly appointed officials, the Head of State and Government is confident that the two public officers will contribute enormously towards the realisation of our shared aspirations for a fair, just, and equitable nation with shared prosperity for all, as espoused in the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BETA),” Mr Koskei said.