Corruption is a major concern in Kenya leading to the establishment of institutions to curb it.
Even with the establishment of Integrity Clubs by the EACC, the government is grappling with ways to engage young people when it comes to the fight against corruption.
Some expenditure reports indicate that money went toward building water points, only audits to reveal the information to be false.
In 2018, President Uhuru Kenyatta and his then Swiss counterpart Alain Berset signed the Framework for the Return of Assets from Corruption and Crime in Kenya, which is a mechanism to recover money swindled from state coffers by corrupt individuals hidden in Switzerland.
As anti-graft crusaders ponder on how to enlighten youth, so that they do not engage in corruption and educate them on values and ethics, would teaching ethics at a tender age help in curbing corruption in the country?