Mombasa MP Zamzam Mohamed calls for youth inclusion in PSC jobs

She advocated for the seamless transition of retiring employees to open up positions for the younger generation.
Mombasa Woman Representative Zamzam Mohamed is pushing for more youths to be employed within the Public Service Commission (PSC).
She advocated for the seamless transition of retiring employees to open up positions for the younger generation.
More To Read
- Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad hits out at State over withheld road funds
- Body retrieved from collapsed septic tank in Bamburi Mwisho
- Optimism in Mombasa as Salaam Microfinance Bank opens Shari’ah-compliant branch
- Kenya’s gang crisis: Report exposes 309 criminal groups gripping major counties
- Body of missing man recovered from collapsed building in Mombasa
- Mombasa forms task force to probe fatal building collapse, safety lapses
“In the space where our children who have studied and excelled in various fields should be given job opportunities by those who are in positions,” said Zamzam.
The lawmaker urged those who have served in the government, especially in leadership positions, to allow others to take over those roles when they retire.
“Many of our children have graduated from universities and vocational training centres. Our children have studied in different institutions, but job opportunities have been scarce for them,” she said.
She called for consideration, noting that many of the youth are missing out on job positions as the scarcity bites.
She also urged the government to ensure those who retire receive their allowances promptly.
"Many retired government employees are yet to receive their allowances and are living in poverty,” she noted.
Zamzam pointed out that some employees had been employed on a contract basis for far too long.
“I recently went to an organisation where the director has been on a contract for two and a half years. He has not been formally appointed and this disappoints me. Even some teachers who have been on internships end up teaching temporarily for a very long time. The same applies to doctors,” said Zamzam.
She said such individuals should be considered when the opportunity arises.
Top Stories Today
- Sakaja urged to ensure Nairobi CBD CCTV cameras work after MP Were's killing
- Black smoke signals no pope elected at first vote
- DCI orders Philip Aroko to surrender himself over MP Were’s murder
- At least 13,500 families to receive compensation after Mau Forest evictions
- Kenya records more male births than female for tenth straight year
- Kenya pushes Washington to scrap Trump-era tariffs
- Confusion over President Ruto’s 250,000 housing jobs as sector shrinks
- Respiratory illnesses, malaria lead hospital visits in Kenya
- Private sector activities rise to a 27-month high in April
- Revealed: Insider deals and offshore links driving up Kenya’s energy costs
- Petition exposes Sh975bn debt linked to Treasury’s budget law breach
- UHC medics reject Duale’s directive on payroll transfer to counties
- Senators push for suspension of Sh23.5bn parks project
- Those behind dad’s killing must be unmasked, MP Were’s son vows
- People trusted by MP Were helped plan his murder - Murkomen
- Court halts auction of Tuju’s properties over Sh4.5bn loan dispute
- Four filmmakers linked to BBC documentary released on Sh10,000 bail
- City lawyer linked to Sh1.5bn bank heist released on Sh30m bond
- EACC detectives arrest three senior NYS officials, proxies in Sh2bn graft probe
- 2024 records highest cases of extrajudicial killings in last six years - report