In medieval Europe, kings rarely paid
every loyal man with money. Money was infinite. Offices were not. So, the crown
developed an alternative instrument of reward. It was called the benefice. A
title here.
A custodianship there. A state honour elsewhere. The institution
retained its sacred purpose and function, while politics gave it an additional raison d'être.
It became a way of feeding a political coalition.
This practice was not restricted to
political circles. We see benefice exemplified in the Bible. Nehemiah was a
cupbearer to the Persian King Artaxerxes.
This was a position of intimate
personal loyalty to the monarch, not a position of administrative, fiduciary, engineering,
or governance expertise. His qualification was proximity to power and personal
trustworthiness. His entire value to the king was relational, not technical.
He was appointed Governor of Judah,
effectively becoming the chief administrative officer of a ruined province, with
no prior governing experience, no construction expertise, or financial
management knowhow. Jerusalem's walls had been rubble for over a century.
But he
rebuilt them in 52 days. He reorganised the province's governance, renegotiated
the tax burden on the poor, expelled corrupt creditors and restored the city's
institutional life.
He did it by understanding the community
he was serving, its specific vulnerabilities, its factional dynamics, its spiritual
needs in ways that an administrator dispatched from Persia could not have done.
His loyalty to the king got him the appointment. His familiarity with the
community made his appointment consequential.
I submit that this is the frame through
which the appointment of Calvince Okoth, popularly known as Gaucho, to the
board of Mama Lucy Kibaki Hospital should be read. Nairobi Governor Johnson
Sakaja, appointed him for a three-year term. Gaucho himself thanked the governor,
President Ruto and the Raila Odinga family in the same breath. This should tell
you the political architecture of the appointment plainly.
This was a benefice. It was a reward for
political loyalty and grassroots mobilisation.
Shortly after as expected, the outrage
arrived centred largely on his credentials and suitability. What are his
qualifications? What does he know about hospital budgets?
How can he supervise
medics who have undergone seven years of education? He is a goon. He is an
insult to education and professionalism. The reactions overflowed with people
defending meritocracy, institutional integrity and the sanctity of the
healthcare system. It was, in its way, a very impressive performance of
concern.
But let us begin by interrogating what the
law actually says. Gaucho was appointed under Section 9(j) of the Facilities
Improvement Financing Act, 2023. This is a statute that governs how county
hospital boards are constituted and how the Facilities Improvement Fund is
managed at facility level.
The Act explicitly provides for community
representation on hospital boards. It does not require medical qualifications
for all members. It does not require a degree.
It envisions a board that
includes people who understand the community the facility serves, alongside
those who bring technical expertise. The board is not a clinical team. It is an
oversight and governance structure whose job is policy direction, financial
accountability and community voice. Not surgery.
Dennis Miskellah, the KMPDU deputy secretary
general, made this plain. Board members do not handle day-to-day hospital
operations. They provide oversight and policy direction. Under Section 11 of the
FIF Act, the law mandates the inclusion of residents representing marginalised
groups and community interests. In practice, this translates to seats for women,
youth, faith-based leaders and grassroots voices.
This is not a flaw in the statute. It is
the design. Community representation is a deliberate governance choice rooted
in the principle that the people most affected by a public institution should
have a voice in how it is run.
Gaucho, who built his name in Eastlands, the
exact community Mama Lucy Hospital primarily serves, is precisely the kind of
appointment the community representation provision was designed to enable.
Nehemiah understood this instinctively.
When he arrived in Jerusalem, he did not immediately convene a committee of
credentialled engineers to assess the broken walls.
He rose in the night and
walked the rubble himself. He saw what the community was living with, the
broken gates, the burned sections and the gaping holes, before he spoke to any
official. His governance intelligence came from proximity, not from parchment.
When Nehemiah eventually spoke, he spoke
with the authority of someone who had seen the problem firsthand. The Eastlands
resident who has watched family members wait many hours at Mama Lucy before
being attended to, who has been told there are no drugs, who has been told
there is no blood in the blood bank and who has been told to come with their
own gloves from the private chemist down the road, that resident carries the
same kind of firsthand knowledge as Nehemiah. It is not a substitute for
clinical expertise. It is the missing voice at the table, the voice that asks
not how the facility is managed, but how it is experienced.
This does not mean the appointment is
beyond scrutiny. The relevant scrutiny, however, should not be about
qualifications. It is about the distinction Nehemiah himself embodied, which
was the difference between a benefice that feeds a coalition and one that
rebuilds the walls.
And this is where the benefice frame cuts
both ways, and where the analysis requires precision. Nehemiah's appointment
was political. But he made a choice that most benefice recipients do not make.
He chose Jerusalem over Artaxerxes, the benefactor. He chose the community's
walls over the court's comfort. That choice was not guaranteed by his
appointment. It was not produced by any credential. It was a decision made by a
man who understood that the office he had received, carried important
obligations to the people it was supposed to serve.
Gaucho faces the same choice. He did not
arrive at Mama Lucy board through a competitive merit process. He arrived
through a benefice logic under the FIF Act which gave his appointment legality.
Those are the facts. And facts are stubborn.
Begs the question. What comes next?
What comes next is the wall. Mama Lucy
Kibaki Hospital serves the most densely populated part of Nairobi. It carries
the patient load of communities who cannot afford many private facilities, and
who show up at the emergency room with very few options.
The board that provides
oversight to this facility, governs something that matters enormously to people
with minimal alternatives. The drug and blood stockouts matter. The long queues
matter. The missing gloves matter.
The broken generator matters. These are Mama
Lucy’s broken walls. They have been rubble for a long time. These are the gaps
the qualifications debate is actively preventing us from addressing because
they do not generate the same satisfying outrage. But they are the framework
which if addressed, will actually change what happens at Mama Lucy.
The question is not whether Gaucho has a
medical degree. The question is whether like Nehemiah, he will walk these walls
in the night before he speaks in the morning. The qualifications debate is the
easier conversation.
It has the convenient feature of directing public anger at
the beneficiary. It assumes that the
problem is that a man has been appointed to a public hospital board without the
right CV. Replace him with someone carrying the appropriate degrees, and the institution
is restored.
But the reality should be different. Public
institutions should not be governed only by technocrats speaking to each other
in acronyms. Mama Lucy cannot be wholly insulated from the social realities of
Eastlands.
The residents should not arrive only as patients and taxpayers while
governance is reserved for an elitist priesthood of certified people who do not
use the facility.
Finally, my unsolicited advice is to
Gaucho. Nehemiah arrived in Jerusalem as a political appointee, an outsider, a
man whose critics questioned everything about him except the rubble he had come
to address. He succeeded not because the king's favour protected him, but
because he made a choice about his assignment.
You have been handed a seat at a table
that Eastlands has never sat at. The appointment came through political
channels. So did Nehemiah's. What happens next is entirely yours to determine.
Show up to every meeting. Walk the wards. Ask the questions that the professionals
have stopped asking because professional familiarity is the enemy of the fresh
eye. Be the voice of the community that built no credentials at university but
built everything else that makes Eastlands what it is.
The walls of Jerusalem
were not rebuilt by the most qualified man in the Persian Empire. They were
rebuilt by the man who chose the community over the court, who refused to give
up and who understood that the benefice was only the beginning of the story, not
the story itself.
To
whom much is given, much is required - Luke 12:48