Preparations for the inaugural Global Trust Summit gained momentum as the State Department for Foreign Affairs convened more than 20 regulatory institutions for a high-level consultative breakfast meeting ahead of the October 2026 event.
Among the present regulatory bodies included Communications Authority of Kenya, Kenya Civil Aviation Authority, Kenya Bureau of Standards, National Transport and Safety Authority and Capital Markets Authority.
The meeting set the tone for the Global Trust Summit, a flagship initiative to be convened jointly by the State Department for Foreign Affairs, Strathmore University and Open Government Partnership with Konrad Adenauer Stiftung and other partners.
Speaking during the meeting, the Principal Secretary for the State Department for Foreign Affairs, Dr Korir Sing’Oei, said the President’s commitment to building trust has positioned Kenya to host the summit.
He described it as a recognition of the Country’s efforts to promote good governance and public confidence.
The Summit will seek to achieve several key objectives, including the adoption of the Nairobi Declaration on Global Trust.
The declaration, to be formally read and adopted by acclamation, will outline the Summit’s key principles, areas of consensus, and voluntary commitments by participating governments and institutions.
By anchoring public administration in the constitutional values of openness and accountability, Kenya is positioning Nairobi as the launchpad for a renewed global consensus on institutional integrity ahead of the October Summit-KBC.
