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Commander, Kenya Army

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Commander,
Kenya Army
Flag of Kenya Army
Incumbent
Lieutenant General David Kimaiyo Tarus
since 9 march 2024
 Kenya Army
Reports toChief of Defence Forces
Appointerthe President
Formation12 December 1963
First holderIan Freeland
DeputyDeputy Army Commander

The Commander, Kenya Army is the chief and highest-ranking officer of the Kenya Army The current commander is Lieutenant general David Kimaiyo Tarus

List of officeholders

[edit]
No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Ref.
Took office Left office Time in office
1 Major General
Ian Freeland
(1912–1979)
12 December 1963 30 April 1964 140 days [1][2]
2 Brigadier
A. J. Hardy
1 May 1964 30 November 1966 2 years, 213 days [3][2]
3 Brigadier
Joseph Musyimi Lele Ndolo
1 December 1966 31 May 1969 2 years, 181 days [4][2]
4 Major General
Jackson Mulinge
(1924–2014)
1 June 1969 22 November 1978 9 years, 144 days [5][6]
[2]
5 Major General
Joseph Kathuka Nzioka
1 December 1978 12 December 1979 1 year, 11 days [2]
6 Major General
John Malan Sawe
13 December 1979 2 January 1981 1 year, 20 days [2][7]
7 Major General
Mahamoud Mohamed
3 January 1981 14 December 1981 346 days [2]
8 Lieutenant General
John M. Sawe
15 December 1981 27 February 1986 4 years, 74 days [2]
9 Lieutenant General
James Lelasian Lengees
28 February 1986 30 November 1993 7 years, 275 days [2][8]
10 Lieutenant General
Daniel Rerimoi Chepkonga Tonje
1 December 1993 22 June 1994 203 days [2][9]
11 Lieutenant General
Augustine K. Cheruiyot
28 June 1994 7 June 1998 3 years, 344 days [2]
12 Lieutenant General
Adan Abdullahi
9 June 1998 30 November 2000 2 years, 174 days [2]
13 Lieutenant General
Lazarus K. Sumbeiywo
1 December 2000 28 February 2003 2 years, 89 days [2]
14 Lieutenant General
Jeremiah Kianga EGH, CBS, ndc (K), cgsc (USA)
1 March 2003 10 August 2005 2 years, 162 days [2]
15 Lieutenant General
Augostino Stephen Karanu Njoroge MGH, CBS, ndc (K), psc
10 August 2005 5 December 2008 3 years, 117 days [2]
16 Lieutenant General
Jackson Kiprono Tuwei
5 December 2008 30 November 2010 1 year, 360 days [2][10]
17 Lieutenant General
Njuki Mwaniki MGH, CBS, OGW, ndc (K), psc
30 November 2010 13 July 2011 225 days [10][11]
18 Lieutenant General
Joseph Kiptoo Kasaon MGH, CBS, DCO, ndc (K), psc, cgsc (USA)
(born 1958)
13 July 2011 17 April 2015 3 years, 278 days [2][11]
19 Lieutenant General
Leonard Muriuki Ngondi MGH, CBS, OGW, ndc (K), psc
(born 1959)
17 April 2015 22 September 2016 1 year, 158 days [2]
20 Lieutenant General
Robert Kariuki Kibochi EGH, CBS, ndc (K), psc
(born 1959)
22 September 2016 13 July 2018 1 year, 294 days [2][12]
21 Lieutenant General
Walter Koipaton Raria MGH, CBS, OGW, ndc (K), psc
13 July 2018 20 July 2022 4 years, 7 days [13]
22 Lieutenant General
Peter Mbogo Njiru MGH, CBS ‘rcds’ (UK) ‘psc’ (K)
20 July 2022 8 march 2024 2 years, 104 days [14]
23 Lieutenant General

David Kimaiyo Chemwaina Tarus CBS ‘ndc’ (K) ‘cgsc’ (USA) ‘psc’ (K)

9 march 2024 incumbent [15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Freeland received his knighthood in 1968. "No. 43173". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 November 1963. p. 9901."No. 43598". The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 March 1965. p. 2619.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Army.
  3. ^ Poppy Cullen (2017). "Operation Binnacle: British plans for military intervention against a 1965 coup in Kenya". The International History Review. 39 (5).
  4. ^ Hornsby, Charles (2012). Kenya: A History Since Independence. London/New York: I. B. Tauris. p. 180. ISBN 978-1-84885-886-2.
  5. ^ Opande 2019, p. 67.
  6. ^ Kenya Yearbook 2010
  7. ^ Daniel Opande (2019). In Pursuit of Peace in Africa. East African Educational Publishers. p. 77. ISBN 978-9966564313.
  8. ^ Also serving as Commander 4th Brigade (Kenya) during the 1982 Kenyan coup d'état attempt. "Why former Army boss is on the horns of dilemma - Daily Nation". www.nation.co.ke. Archived from the original on 2017-12-19.
  9. ^ Kenya Yearbook 2010, pp432.
  10. ^ a b Ombati 2010.
  11. ^ a b Momanyi 2011.
  12. ^ PSCU 2016.
  13. ^ Munda 2018.
  14. ^ Okubasu, Derrick (20 July 2022). "Uhuru Picks His Former ADC Peter Mbogo Njiru to Head Kenya Army". kenyans.co.ke. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  15. ^ Swearing-in of the Kenya Defence Forces Vice Chief and Service Commanders, State House, Nairobi., retrieved 2024-03-09