I would be happy if you could delve in to this so called scandal.
There is a lot of media sensationalism that has over time acquired a tincture of truth without the facts being in place.
Here is my simple take: Naomi Shaban acting with rogue elements in Ruto's ministry (by then the most hated man for Kibaki-ists) were behind the heist.
There were other beneficiaries (MPs, Senior Civil Servants, etc).
The whole thing was intended to smear Ruto and Raila in one swoop. Unfortunately Raila acted rashly and turned on Ruto - a huge mistake (like I said then).
I can be willing to substantiate any part of this any time.
What I find hard to understand is why you do not give due credit to Raila's efforts. He is so far the only person to ever fire his staff accused of corruption. He did not defend them. Once he had the information he sent them packing. Kibaki did eventually take some of the civil servants in the warmth in a typical machiavellian fashion.
Now name one other politician in Kenya (other than Moi and Raila) who has ever fired anybody accused of corruption
Got the paragraph in red vigorously nodding my head in complete agreement and cheering Raila on when I remembered this:
1. (C) Summary. Severe tensions within the coalition government have been building in recent days and erupted on February 14 into what both sides are characterizing as a "crisis."
The revelation of major corruption within the Ministry of Education, headed by a minister allied to President Kibaki, sparked retaliatory release of a long-delayed forensic audit of the maize scandal allegedly tied to the Prime Minister's office as well as Minister of Agriculture Ruto.
In an effort to protect himself, Odinga on February 13 announced the resignations of two officials in his office. Caught off guard, President Kibaki responded by suspending eight senior officials implicated in both scandals. Seeking to regain the upper hand, Odinga on February 14 announced he was suspending the Minister of Education and Minister of Agriculture.
The President's office immediately disputed Odinga's authority to suspend the ministers, and announced that the two remain in place. Odinga is also seeking to reopen agreements on contentious issues with respect to the constitutional review process reached by the Parliamentary Select Committee a week ago.
We are in close touch with both sides to urge them to resolve the current imbroglio.
....
Based on credible reports from multiple sources, it seems clear that the maize scandal touches the families of both President Kibaki and Prime Minister Odinga, and key members of their teams (though Odinga's side is likely more culpable on the maize scandal; Minister of Agriculture Ruto has been openly hostile toward Odinga and is working closely with the Kibaki side, so Kibaki has an interest in protecting Ruto).
https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/10NAIROBI171_a.html
Didn't bother reading the rest of the statement.
Gosh, our politicians play politics with the starving voters.
Tsk tsk.