On the morning of Tuesday, August 26, 2025, anti-graft detectives from the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) swooped down on Siaya County’s Finance Department, arresting Hezron Junior Opiyo, a soft-spoken accountant long regarded as a rising star in the devolved unit’s financial bureaucracy.
The charge? Embezzlement of over KES100 million in public funds through a complex web of fraudulent allowances—ghost payments for non-existent trainings, workshops, and official duties.
By evening, photographs of Opiyo being escorted from EACC’s Kisumu offices to the Kisumu Port Police Station were circulating on social media, triggering disbelief and debate across Siaya County. To some residents of Uranga, Opiyo’s home village, the news came as a bolt from the blue. To others, it was an arrest long overdue.
Opiyo, 38, is the son of Bishop Hezron Opiyo, the respected founder of the Good Samaritan Church in Uranga. Friends describe him as “humble, polite, and generous”, a man who occasionally donated to church events and sponsored youth programs.
“Junior was always the one people looked up to,” said a local elder in Uranga, requesting anonymity. “He never flaunted money, though people whispered about his fast rise.”
His professional rise was equally impressive. Employed during the tenure of former Governor Cornell Rasanga Amoth, Opiyo became a key figure in the Finance and Economic Planning Department—one of the most sensitive dockets in county governance. When Governor James Aggrey Bob Orengo assumed office in 2022, he retained Opiyo, reportedly for his experience and familiarity with Siaya’s intricate financial systems.
EACC’s Spotlight Since 2023
Behind the quiet demeanor, however, a storm had been brewing. EACC’s Third Quarterly Report of 2023 listed Opiyo among officials under probe in what was then a KSh400 million allowances scandal. According to that report, investigators suspected systemic abuse of training and facilitation allowances—routine payments meant to cover per diems, transport, and stipends for county staff attending official engagements.
Opiyo was flagged as having allegedly received KSh18,980,830 in suspicious disbursements over a five-year period. The matter was forwarded to the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (ODPP) in August 2023, and by November the same year, further inquiries were recommended.
Still, no arrest came—until now.
How the Alleged Fraud Worked
The heart of the scheme, according to investigators, was simple yet devastatingly effective:
Step 1: Create fictitious trainings. Dummy workshops were booked on paper, with fabricated attendance lists and internal memos.
Step 2: Process allowances through IFMIS. The Integrated Financial Management Information System, intended to enhance transparency, became a conduit when approval chains were weak.
Step 3: Disburse to “beneficiaries.” Funds were released to bank accounts controlled by insiders or proxies, while the supposed events never happened.
“This is one of the oldest tricks in the book,” notes an EACC investigator familiar with county corruption trends. “Ghost workshops don’t leave physical trails unless someone audits venues or calls participants. And in Siaya, the internal audit was asleep at the wheel.”
The Money Trail and Asset Seizures
EACC says it has already initiated civil recovery proceedings for KSh102,950,307, believed to be traceable to Opiyo. Assets allegedly linked to the loot include several trucks and a hardware store in Siaya town. While court filings to confirm asset freezes remain under wraps, sources within the Assets Recovery Agency (ARA) indicate that preservation orders could be gazetted soon.
“Follow the lorries,” quips a senior officer. “They’re often the first purchase in rural money-laundering because they look like legitimate business investments.”
A Betrayal From Within?
Intriguingly, insiders claim Opiyo’s downfall may have been triggered by a betrayal from a close confidant—possibly someone within his financial circle who turned whistleblower under Kenya’s Bribery Act of 2016 protections.
Residents of Uranga are abuzz with speculation. “Junior trusted people too much,” says a youth leader. “When money enters friendships, loyalty goes out.”
If proven, this wouldn’t be the first time insider testimony cracked a county corruption ring. Whistleblower-driven investigations accounted for nearly 30% of EACC breakthroughs in 2024, according to commission data.
Why Allowances Are the Perfect Fraud Magnet
Experts say the Siaya scandal underscores a national vulnerability: allowances as soft targets for looters. Unlike procurement fraud—where tenders and invoices create big paper trails—allowances are small, frequent, and easier to mask as legitimate.
Common gaps include:
Weak verification: Attendance sheets rarely cross-checked against actual event logs.
Poor segregation of duties: Same officers originating and approving payments.
End-month clustering: Batches of claims processed in a rush to “absorb budget” before the fiscal year closes.
“The devil is in the per diem,” says Dr. Sarah Owuor, a governance expert at Maseno University. “Counties have turned allowances into slush funds. Unless we deploy real-time analytics and randomized audits, this will keep happening.”
The Politics of Retention
Why was Opiyo retained after the 2023 probe? County insiders suggest that removing senior finance officers is politically delicate.
“You can’t fire everyone linked to Rasanga overnight,” explains a former county executive. “Continuity matters, especially with IFMIS passwords and supplier databases.”
Governor Orengo’s administration has not commented publicly on whether it knew of EACC’s active interest in Opiyo. However, the arrest could pressure the governor to audit his entire finance team—a move fraught with political risk, given Siaya’s factionalized landscape.
Credibility Questions for Investigators
Opiyo’s defenders—mainly allies from Uranga and clergy circles—are crying foul, alleging selective prosecution. They point to the fact that no high-ranking county executives have been arrested in the allowances dragnet, despite EACC acknowledging that seven related cases totaling KSh700 million remain open.
“If this is about justice, why only Junior?” asked a church elder during a Wednesday vigil at Good Samaritan Church. “Who signed off those payments? Where are the bosses?”
EACC insists the probe is ongoing and “more arrests will follow.”
What Lies Ahead: The Court Battle
Opiyo faces charges under the Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act (ACECA), including:
Fraudulent acquisition of public property (Section 45)
Abuse of office (Section 46)
Dealing with suspect property (Section 47)
If convicted, he could face a fine equal to twice the amount lost or a jail term of up to 10 years—or both.
For now, Opiyo remains in custody as lawyers prepare bail applications. His legal team is expected to argue that the payments were “system-approved” and that Opiyo did not personally benefit. The prosecution, on the other hand, will lean on IFMIS logs, bank trails, and whistleblower testimony.
The Systemic Fix Siaya—and Kenya—Needs
As the scandal unfolds, experts warn that without structural reforms, Siaya’s case will be just another headline in Kenya’s devolution corruption diary. Recommended measures include:
Hard segregation of duties: Different officers to originate, verify, and approve payments.
Public allowances dashboard: Quarterly online reports showing purpose, cost, and participants.
Randomized field audits: Verifying that “training venues” and “beneficiaries” actually exist.
AI-driven anomaly detection: Flagging unusual allowance patterns before money moves.
Whistleblower rewards: Strengthen the Bribery Act’s incentives to expose fraud.
The Opiyo saga is not an isolated failure. It’s a symptom of how devolved finance systems—meant to bring equity and accountability—can become the perfect playground for quiet looters. Until Kenya addresses the human loopholes in IFMIS and institutionalizes transparency, the next “humble accountant” could already be scripting tomorrow’s mega-scandal.
For Siaya, the coming weeks will test not just one man’s innocence or guilt, but Governor Orengo’s political resolve, EACC’s credibility, and the public’s patience with a system that too often polices the small fish while letting the sharks swim free.








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