The Kenya National Union of Teachers has demanded a pay rise of up to 200 per cent to cushion its members from inflation and Covid-19 effects.
In a move likely to jolt the Teachers Service Commission, Knut secretary-general Wilson Sossion said the lowest raise in the next Collective Bargaining Agreement should be 120 per cent, “considering that the government had in 2017 agreed to offer tutors between 50-60 per cent increment”.
“There should be an annual increment of 5.0 per cent of basic salary; house allowance should be increased by 50 per cent and…
