Interior and National Administration Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen is set to hold a high-level security meeting in Kerio Valley on Monday, April 28, 2025.
The meeting is part of the ongoing government’s efforts to consolidate peace in the volatile region.
According to Murkomen’s communication team, the meeting which will be held at the Chesongoch Sisters Facility in Elgeyo Marakwet County, will bring together top security and National Government Administrative Officers (NGAO) drawn from Marakwet East, Baringo West, Tiaty, Kerio Valley, and Pokot Central sub-counties.
Has Operation Maliza Uhalifu been successful?
It comes as Operation Maliza Uhalifu (OMU) — a multi-agency security operation launched in 2023 to flush out bandits and address emerging crimes in the North Rift — continues to register significant progress.

During the recent commissioning of OMU’s second command center in Kirimon, Laikipia County, CS Murkomen noted that the first phase of the operation had restored economic activities, and reopened schools, hospitals, and critical infrastructure across the the vast region.
The new Kirimon command center is part of the government’s recent efforts to intensify the crackdown on bandits. It complements the first one in Chemolingot and covers Laikipia, Samburu, Isiolo, and parts of Meru.
The Kerio Valley meeting also follows successful Jukwaa La Usalama security and service delivery forums in the Coast and Lower Eastern regions.
What will Murkomen’s Kerio Valley meeting focus on?
A key focus of the Kerio Valley meeting will be the ongoing reforms in the National Police Reservists (NPR) program, particularly the establishment of a clearer command structure, revetting, improved welfare and kitting as well as a comprehensive retraining program.
The government is keen to ensure NPRs operate under a streamlined chain of command and are equipped to better support the National Police Service and NGAOs in insecurity-prone areas.

Another reform on the table is the licensing of Chiefs to own firearms in security-risk areas — a proposal that the Interior CS has strongly championed. Chiefs who have undergone paramilitary training, and whose security is demonstrably at risk, are set to be licensed to possess firearms.
The CS has also been pushing broader administrative reforms, including a promotion and reward scheme, better remuneration, and improved kitting for police officers, chiefs and their assistants.
“The end beneficiaries of all these security reforms are wananchi who will be able to go about their businesses and take their children to school undisturbed,” he said.
Additionally, the Cabinet Secretary is expected to push for closer collaboration with Members of Parliament to leverage the National Government Constituencies Development Fund (NG-CDF) for the construction and equipping of NGAO offices.
This initiative aims to bring government services closer to locals, especially in hard-to-reach and high-risk areas.