Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi has called for stronger collaboration between government and community-based organisations to drive inclusive development, during the launch of the International Memon Organisation’s Vision 100 agenda.
Speaking at the engagement, Mudavadi said Vision 100 is a bold framework aimed at delivering tangible outcomes and long-term transformation for communities, noting that its focus closely aligns with the government’s Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BETA).
According to the Prime Cabinet Secretary, Vision 100 is anchored on eight key pillars designed to accelerate inclusive growth.
These include access to housing, universal literacy, independence and self-reliance, affordable healthcare, preservation of culture, language and heritage, sustainability and responsibility, community outreach, as well as mental and emotional wellness.
Mudavadi said the alignment of the Vision 100 pillars with the BETA plan creates strong momentum for joint action between the government and development partners.
“As we push this agenda forward, we must deliberately harness cross-cutting forces such as technology and artificial intelligence,” Mudavadi said, noting that digital tools are now central to service delivery, expanding opportunities and scaling impact across development programmes.
He emphasised that peace and security remain fundamental to the success of any development initiative, describing them as the foundation upon which investments thrive and long-term progress is achieved.
“Peace and security are non-negotiable. They provide the stable foundation upon which development takes root and initiatives like Vision 100 translate into real, measurable progress on the ground,” he said.
The Prime Cabinet Secretary reaffirmed the government’s commitment to working with faith-based and community organisations to advance sustainable development and improve the quality of life for all Kenyans.