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Reasons Why a D+ Will Get You Into KDF Faster Than B Grade In KCSE
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students in secondary schools who dream of joining the Kenya Defence
Forces (KDF) as privates will have to shelve their desires after a
senior military officer said they won’t be accepted.
The
national chief recruitment officer Brigadier Peter Magut said KDF will
not bend the rules to favour those who secured a grade B and above in
the Kenya Certificate Secondary Education.
“Anybody with a
grade B and above cannot make a good soldier because once they are
recruited they will still pursue higher education. So instead of
enlisting candidates who will start seeking time off to go to university
we opt to recruit those with minimum grades,” he said.
The brigadier, who is also Garrison Commander at Kahawa Barracks, spoke
to the Sunday Nation at Afraha Stadium, Nakuru, on Friday during a
recruitment exercise. More than 500 young men and women turned up.
Candidates who attained grade B but failed join university have had
their hopes dashed at the recruitment centres countrywide owing to the
strict recruitment procedure.
Only those with grades between B-
and the minimum requirement of D+ are being considered for recruitment
as privates, the lowest rank, in the ongoing exercise. But those with
higher grades still have the possibility to join as cadets.
CON MEN
The brigadier also urged parents whose children have been recruited to
join the armed forces to be wary of con men soliciting Sh150,000 to fast
track the issuance of admission letters to the training college.
“Ours is a transparent legal process, and those who are lucky will get a
one-page calling letter to join the training college and not the fake
three-page letter,” said Brigadier Magut.
“These con men have
changed their tactics such that in their invitation letter they have
included wisdom as part of the testing in the recruitment exercise which
is not correct because those wishing to join the forces don’t go
through any knowledge test,” he said.
In Nakuru, hundreds of
youths were disqualified for not having the right documents while others
had documents that bore names that didn’t match the names on their
national identification cards.
Others failed the physical fitness test while still others collapsed after running six kilometres.
“I was socked that some youth had between five and six teeth missing;
such a person is a liability to the armed forces whom we can’t enlist,”
he said.
The officer also said few women turned up for the
exercise and added that the same trend was witnessed in central Kenya,
mainly in Kiambu, Limuru, Embu, Thika and Nairobi and some parts of
Eastern.
He said there was a big turnout in Rift Valley, mainly
in Nandi, Kitale, Sotik, and Bomet while in Nyanza a high attendance
was recorded in Kisii, Nyamira and Homa Bay. Many hopefuls also turned
out in the Eastern region, especially Machakos and Kitui.
- Nation