The little money there is in education has been 95% used well to pay for teachers, buy books and other supplies.. What is the total of money per auditor general that has been misused that was supposed to go to education? I do not want to discuss corruption in other dockets as that money being stolen there was already allocated for other things than education. I say it is responsibility of a parent to ensure that his or her child are adequately catered for in school. A little effort by locals where this schools are can help "build" desks for these kids.. you do not need that much to build a "FORM" that kids can sit on
You should think of the entire budget instead of merely what is nominally allocated to education. The reason for that is obvious: there is only so much money, and money that is being wasted or stolen elsewhere could be put to better use in education and elsewhere. The larger point is that money is being stolen and wasted all over the place, and in such circumstances it makes little sense to insist that it is all a matter of the government not having enough tax-payer money. Even with the budget of an individual household, one never says "it's OK to waste money here and not worry about expenditures elsewhere because of this and that allocation". Think of the national budget as the budget for the "national household", and you will get a better picture, which you can then improve by reflecting on "supplementary" budgets.
It's not as though the the various allocations are handed down in stone, and so theft and waste in one place must not be connected to the supposed lack of money elsewhere. But if, for a moment, we accept your view, what say you on theft and waste in the education vote?
You have stated that
the only hope for Kenya more discovery of oil fields
Part of that "larger point" is that this will not help in the present culture of theft and waste. Kenya, without oil, is already giving Nigeria some stiff competition in the Corruption Stakes, and one hates to imagine what it would be like when oils starts to seriously flow. I hope that this oil thing doesn't get going until there's a more responsible government in place.
I say it is responsibility of a parent to ensure that his or her child are adequately catered for in school.
You certainly have some unusual views. In most places---and even in Kenya, I think---most people see basic education as one of the things that the government is obliged to provide, and that includes all that involved, beyond just teachers and books. Providing walls, roofs, desks, etc. should not be responsibility of parents. It is particularly important in a place like Kenya for the government to ensure that school-children have the proper sort of educational experience (and that includes "environmental" factors). In any case, if, as you claim, it does not take much to provide "desk"/"form", then why isn't the government doing it?
Beyond what
you think is the responsibility of a parent and what I might think, what does the Kenyan Ministry of Education itself say on what the government should provide? Is the government providing it? If so, to what extent; if not why not?
I bet you some of the kids sitting on the floor have sofas at home.
Sorry, I don't get it. What does that have to do with the government's obligations to provide a proper environment for public education? Should our expectations of the government be limited to what we can provide for ourselves as individuals? If so, why bother with having a government at all?
Take the statement you have just put forth, on the situation depicted in that photo doesn't matter, and extend it to other aspects of life.