The Teachers Service Commission (TSC) now says educators who
proceed with the illicit strike won't get any pay regardless of calls by the
Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT) and the Kenya Union of Post Primary
Education Teachers (KUPPET) for the Teachers to stay put.
TSC reported that all Teachers who won't have continued obligation by Friday
will be considered as having left obligation and will in this way be struck off
the TSC finance.
TSC supervisor Lydia Nzomo decided that finance will be shut by September
eighteenth and the individuals who won't have done a reversal to class by then
will be evacuated totally.
The claim comes a day after KNUT and KUPPET precluded any potential outcomes of
continuing obligation without pay.
Talking in a press instructions on Sunday, KNUT Chairman Mudzo Nzili and
Secretary General Wilson Sossion said the two week strike has just been a warm
up to the primary challenge that speaks the truth to begin.
The union boss said it is inside of their established right, Under Article 41
of the Constitution, to go on strike saying these rights are non-debatable.
"The Judiciary's power is gotten from the general population and everybody
should in this way stick to court decisions," said Nzili.
"The strike speaks the truth guarding the Constitution. Teachers won't be
threatened by notice letters from the Teachers Service Commission," said
Sossion.
In his discourse in Mumias on Sunday, Deputy President William Ruto upheld
President Uhuru Kenyatta's prior comment that the administration has no cash to
pay Teachers.
Ruto approached Teachers to come back to work saying the suggestions by
Teachers Service Commission (TSC) and Salaries and Remunerations Commissions
(SRC) that expanding their pay rates will be inconvenient to the nation's
economy ought to be stuck to.