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Luxury Cars And Unpaid Volunteers: Fresh Questions Over Africa Judo Championships Money
Questions are mounting over the lifestyle of senior figures linked to the Kenya Judo Federation after stakeholders claimed some officials were recently seen driving high-end luxury vehicles shortly after the Africa Judo Championships hosted in Kenya.  The claims have angered athletes, volunteers and insiders who say the optics are insulting at a time when more than 240 volunteers are reportedly still waiting for payment after supporting the continental tournament. The contrast is brutal. On one side are volunteers who gave their time, energy and labour to help deliver a major international event. On the other side are officials allegedly enjoying comfort while the people who worked on the ground remain unpaid. Observers now claim that the fuel costs for some of the luxury vehicles being driven by officials could have paid a meaningful number of the volunteers who are still crying for their allowances. That is why this scandal is no longer just about accounting. It is about morality. It is about a sports system where athletes and volunteers sacrifice while officials allegedly benefit. It is about a federation where public money appears to move, but the people who make the sport possible are left stranded. The Africa Judo Championships should have been a proud moment for Kenya. Hosting such a continental event should have boosted the sport, inspired young players, strengthened Kenya’s judo profile and shown that public sports funds can be used properly. Instead, the tournament is now being followed by allegations of unpaid volunteers, questionable payments, incomplete kitting, procurement concerns, delayed athlete facilitation and claims that federation officials may have benefited more than the players and workers. Earlier allegations claimed that members of the federation executive committee received Ksh 500,000 each from funds linked to the tournament, while volunteers remained unpaid. There were also claims of NDAs allegedly aimed at keeping internal financial arrangements quiet. If officials were paid while volunteers were left waiting, then the public deserves to know who approved those payments, from which account, under what budget line, and why the people who worked during the event were not prioritized. The situation becomes even more disturbing when viewed alongside the complaints from players. Some athletes say they left small informal jobs to attend a two-week training camp, believing they would be facilitated and paid after the championships. Instead, some were allegedly left stranded because the money they expected was not for luxury, but survival. Others say they were promised full kitting, including tracksuits, shoes and bags, but only a small number of players received incomplete kits. Meanwhile, some officials allegedly walked away with several tracksuits, multiple pairs of shoes and extra bags. There are also questions about a failed Japan training camp after athletes allegedly processed visas but were later told tickets were not issued because ministry funds had not been released. Put together, the pattern is damning. Volunteers allegedly unpaid. Athletes allegedly unpaid. Kits allegedly missing or incomplete. International training allegedly collapsed. Procurement allegedly questionable. Officials allegedly comfortable. This is exactly why stakeholders are demanding a forensic audit of the Kenya Judo Federation, including all accounts held at Kenya Commercial Bank, Cooperative Bank or any other financial institutions linked to federation operations. Investigators should examine whether public funds released for the Africa Judo Championships were used strictly for the event, whether procurement laws were followed, whether volunteers were budgeted for, whether athletes were fully facilitated, whether kits were properly procured and distributed, and whether any official or connected party benefited irregularly. The Asset Recovery Agency should also take interest in any unexplained assets acquired by officials, relatives, proxies or associated businesses during the period when major sports funds were being handled.  Kenyan sports has suffered for too long because federations operate like private clubs while surviving on public money. Athletes train in hardship. Volunteers work on promises. Young players abandon small jobs to attend camps. Parents sacrifice transport and food. Then officials appear in polished suits, big offices and luxury vehicles to speak about sports development. That hypocrisy must end. If public money was misused, those responsible should not only be removed from office. They should be investigated, charged, jailed where evidence supports prosecution, and any stolen assets recovered. Because Kenyan athletes do not need speeches. They need their money, their kits, their trips, their dignity and their future back.
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