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Peter Ndegwa

Safaricom CEO Peter Ndegwa

Kenya’s leading telecommunications giant, Safaricom, is facing mounting scrutiny after claims emerged that its board quietly extended the tenure of group CEO Peter Ndegwa without issuing any public communication, fueling outrage among shareholders, regulators, and consumer rights groups.

As of mid-April 2026, Ndegwa remains firmly in office despite his expected contract lapse on March 31, raising serious governance questions for one of East Africa’s most influential listed firms.

Governance Storm Over “Silent Extension”

The controversy stems from what critics describe as a troubling lack of transparency. Unlike previous leadership transitions, there has been no formal announcement regarding Ndegwa’s contract renewal, exit timeline, or succession plan.

Consumer lobby group Consumers Federation of Kenya has warned that the situation has devolved into “speculation and guesswork,” an unusual state for a publicly traded company of Safaricom’s stature.

“Shareholders deserve clarity. Silence on leadership succession is not just poor governance—it undermines confidence,” COFEK said in a statement.

Safaricom’s board charter reportedly caps CEO tenure at seven years, placing Ndegwa close to the upper limit, yet the company has offered no clarity on whether an extension has been formally approved.

A Sharp Departure from Past Leadership

The unfolding controversy stands in stark contrast to the transparent tenures of Ndegwa’s predecessors.

Founding CEO Michael Joseph oversaw a decade of structured growth before a clearly communicated exit in 2010, while his successor Bob Collymore had his contract extensions publicly announced in advance.

Both leaders maintained a clear governance framework that analysts say strengthened investor confidence and institutional credibility.

Ndegwa’s tenure, by comparison, is now being defined as opaque, with critics arguing that the absence of clear communication has eroded trust.

Internet Outage Sparks Lingering Questions

Public criticism intensified following the June 2024 nationwide internet outage, which coincided with Gen Z-led protests against the Finance Bill.

While Ndegwa attributed the disruption to undersea cable issues, monitoring groups disputed the explanation, noting inconsistencies in the scale and timing of the outage.

The incident drew condemnation from rights groups, including the Kenya Human Rights Commission, which later cited court orders barring internet shutdowns.

Although Ndegwa issued a public apology, the episode left lingering questions about whether external pressure may have influenced network operations.

Explosive Data Privacy Allegations

Further controversy erupted in October 2024 after investigative reports alleged that Safaricom had enabled security agencies to access customer call data records without proper judicial oversight.

The reports triggered strong reactions from civil society organizations, including Muslims for Human Rights, which accused the company of facilitating surveillance practices that could violate constitutional protections.

Safaricom denied the claims and defended its data handling practices, but tensions escalated after it reportedly withdrew advertising from Nation Media Group following the publication of the exposé.

Press freedom watchdog Reporters Without Borders criticized the move, warning of potential media intimidation.

Monopoly Concerns Resurface

Beyond governance and privacy issues, Safaricom is also under renewed scrutiny over its dominant market position.

Data from the Communications Authority of Kenya shows the company controls a majority share of mobile subscriptions and an overwhelming portion of mobile money transactions through M-Pesa.

Consumer advocates argue that such dominance stifles competition and disadvantages smaller players, calling for stricter regulatory oversight.

Ndegwa has previously dismissed such concerns, urging competitors to invest more aggressively—remarks that critics say overlook structural barriers in the market.

Rising Pressure on the Board

Despite the growing controversies, Safaricom continues to post strong financial performance, including record earnings and expansion into Ethiopia.

However, analysts warn that financial success alone may not shield the company from governance backlash.

“The issue is no longer just performance—it’s accountability,” a Nairobi-based market analyst noted. “Investors want transparency on leadership, especially in a company this critical to the economy.”

Calls for Transparency

Stakeholders are now demanding immediate action from Safaricom’s board, including:

  • Public disclosure of Ndegwa’s contract status
  • A clear succession roadmap
  • Greater transparency on governance and oversight

For many Kenyans, the board’s silence has become the central issue.

As pressure mounts, the question remains whether Safaricom will address the concerns head-on—or continue to weather a storm that is rapidly escalating into one of the most contentious corporate governance debates in the country.

Safaricom’s leadership uncertainty, combined with unresolved scandals and growing monopoly concerns, has placed the telecom giant at a crossroads, where transparency and accountability may prove just as critical as profitability.

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Flamboyant lawyer Ahmednasir Abdullahi is crying foul after Safaricom switched off his Sim card Sunday morning.

Taking to his official Twitter handles this morning, Ahmednasir said Safaricom had unceremoniously switched off his line despite him being their loyal customer for the past 25 years.

“After 2 and half decades of being a loyal customer of Safaricom, they unceremoniously switched off my line this Sunday,” he said.

The senior counsel added that he will be moving to the giant telecommunications company’s competitor starting Monday October 17, 2022.

He noted that after moving to one of Safaricom’s competitors, he will never turn back to use their service again.

Ahmednasir further blamed the Safaricom CEO Peter Ndegwa for what had befallen him.

Safaricom CEO Peter Ndegwa. Photo/Courtesy

“Tomorrow I will move to one of the competitors and will NEVER use their service again.I knew that short man will burn to ashes the House built by Michael!” added Ahmednasir.

Regular plans to switch off unregistered lines kicked off Saturday midnight.

The Communication Authority of Kenya (CA) had announced that it will not extend the deadline for the fourth time after it was extended on April 15, 2022.

CA was forced to extend registration exercise amid complaints from the members of the public, a majority of whom were yet to be registered.

Switched off lines will no longer access crucial services such as M-Pesa or Airtel Money, send texts or make calls after deactivations.

As of Friday , Safaricom was leading with the number of registered clients with 38 million (91 per cent) followed by Airtel 13.4 million (48 per cent) and Telkom Kenya 1.8 million (40 percent).

As a result, CA said that a total of 500,000 lines had been deregistered between the month of January-June 2022.

Customers whose line will have been closed will have a window period of three-months to re-register their SIMs as long as they provide ownership proofs.

The 2015 CA’s Registration of SIM Card Regulations prohibits SIM cards hawking, slapping a six-month jail term, a Sh300,000 or both for those contravening the law.

It aims to streamline SIM card registration by agents that has been a source of constant pain for telcos and regulator amid an increase in cyber crimes as well as terrorism cases, among others.

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Safaricom Interim Chief Executive Officer Michael Joseph has revealed how the telecommunication giant landed on Peter Ndegwa as the CEO of the company.

Speaking in an exclusive interview with Citizen TV, Michael Joseph said the newly appointed CEO Peter Ndegwa was given the chance as a way of natural progression rather than giving in to demands.

Micheal Joseph was responding to questions from Citizen TV’s Yvone Okwara.

“I wouldn’t say we gave in to demands but becuase it is the right thing to do especially after 19 years of safaricom. By now a Kenyan should run the company,” he said.

Michael Joseph is a Kenyan-American businessman who was the founding CEO of Safaricom Limited, the largest telco in Kenya.

Currently, he is acting as the interim CEO after the death of former CEO Bob Collymore.

He is also the Chairman of Kenya Airways.

In the interview, Michael Joseph said it is true there has been pressure to get a Kenyan to replace Collymore.

There was pressure and it has always been there people asking why not a kenyan while others said why Kenyan and not just have the best person for the job,” he said.

He added, “This is the right time to define the right kenyan for the job”.

Micheal Joseph said Safaricom is not jus an ordinary company but has a specific DNA.

“It is not just about voice, data and SMS company but touches on financial services and impact communities in different corporate social resposbibilities. So this is a big company that touches on every facet of the Kenyan society.

Safaricom on Thursday announced that it had appointed Peter Ndegwa as the new Chief Executive Officer.

The Safaricom PLC Board of Directors in a statement Ndegwa’s appointment will take effect from April 1, 2020.

Ndegwa joins Safaricom from Diageo PLC where he is the Managing Director of Diageo Continental Europe.

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