Residents of Kiambaa Sub-County have been encouraged to embrace the Stima Mashinani initiative being rolled out in Karura and Kagongo villages.

Share news tips with us here at Hivisasa

Speaking to journalists in his office on Friday, Kiambaa MP Paul Koinange said that the project which is an initiative of Pesa Mashinani is aimed at providing electricity at the grassroots level and was going to benefit at least 3000 people in the area.

The MP said so far the project had benefited several homes and that the government was collaborating with Kenya Power Company to light more homes through the project.

Koinange said it was through the project that high mast floodlights have been erected in strategic areas in the sub-county to curb insecurity cases with at least 18 of them being constructed within the past financial year.

“This project will be a major contributor towards education as it is going to benefit even local schools and a lack of electricity should not be the contributing factor towards failure in education like in the recent years where people used kerosene lamps for lighting,” he said.

The legislator said that every citizen who had filed an application form through the local chief’s office two months ago would not be left out as the project is indiscriminate and targets low income earners by paying for the electricity connection leaving them to pay for the monthly bills.

The MP advised those who had not applied to apply for the recently launched stima loan by the government, an initiative of KPLC in partnership with French Development Agency (FDA) meant for low income families that cannot afford the connection fees upfront by giving them loans at 5% off administration fee.

However, Joseph Mwangi, a resident, said that he is unaware that people filled application forms at the chief’s office for them to get power in their homes and premises.

“The news came to many of us as a surprise because the means which it was communicated is still unclear, and for that reason, majority of us have been left out yet we would have loved to be included,” he said.