Civil works and infrastructure upgrades in Wajir County have reached 84 percent completion, following an intensive state assessment of the key venues selected to anchor the upcoming national celebrations.
The Principal Secretary (PS) for Internal Security and National Administration, Dr. Raymond Omollo, disclosed the assessment figures after a site evaluation of the primary development areas. Contractors are working to complete the remaining phases of construction between May 20 and May 25, which provides a brief operational window for final structural testing, logistical trials, and security coordination before the public events begin on June 1.
Construction teams are focusing heavily on the main pavilion and seating zones at Wajir Stadium, where structural fabrication is practically finished. Beyond the central stadium field, supporting engineering teams are expanding local access roads, reinforcing utility frameworks, and finalizing auxiliary state hospitality structures.
According to Dr. Omollo, the acceleration of engineering assets to Northern Kenya aligns with a broader state policy aimed at regional infrastructure distribution. The localized investments are intended to leave behind permanent civic assets that will serve the municipality long after the state function concludes.
The scope of public works includes significant modifications to the regional transport grid. The Kenya Urban Roads Authority (KURA) and the Kenya Rural Roads Authority (KeRRA) have deployed machinery to bituminize access routes leading to the sports complex and the county commissioner's official residence. The residence is being overhauled to accommodate a state luncheon hosted by President Ruto.
To manage the temporary population surge, the State Department for Water and the Wajir County government have expanded municipal water supply networks. Engineering crews have drilled new boreholes and laid distribution lines to secure water delivery to the main celebration zones.
A thematic exhibition centering on education and national skills development will commence ahead of the main holiday, utilizing temporary pavilions erected at Wagberi Primary School from May 25 to May 31. Security forces and ceremonial detachments have also established an active presence on-site, beginning their preliminary field rehearsals alongside the concluding construction activities.
Dr. Omollo was accompanied on the site inspection by the Principal Secretary for Culture and Heritage, Ummi Bashir, alongside Wajir Governor Ahmed Abdullahi. Technical teams from various ministries remain on-site to oversee the final structural handovers.
Project coordinators have structured the upcoming holiday itinerary around regional requirements, altering the typical national program timing to prevent scheduling conflicts with local midday religious prayers.
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