By David Herbling
In Summary
- Five managers accused of leading firm into heavy debts, condoning graft.
Operations at the Kenya Meat Commission risk
grounding to a halt following the sacking of its entire leadership over
poor management which has left the corporation in huge debts.
KMC’s nine-member board met on Wednesday and
dismissed managing commissioner Ibrahim Haji Issak, board chairman Abdi
Adan Suleiman and three other top managers following revelations that
the factory is heavily indebted and unable to pay livestock suppliers.
Halima Abdillahi Shaiya, a director at the firm, was named acting chair and will be in charge of the company’s operations.
The purge of the State-owned meat processor’s top
echelon becomes the third management shakeup at the company since its
revival in June 2006.
Despite the government pumping in billions of
shillings to jumpstart and sustain operations of the giant Athi
River-based factory, KMC has continuously posted massive losses due to
claims of cronyism and embezzling of funds.
“We are disappointed by the performance of KMC
management and we support what the board has done,” Livestock
Development PS Jacob ole Miaron told the Business Daily. “The ministry will soon lay out a strategy to turnaround the corporation.”
Management woes at KMC are likely to delay the
government’s plans to privatise the firm, billed the region’s largest
abattoir, meat processor and exporter. KMC currently owes farmers more
than Sh220 million in unpaid invoices for livestock deliveries made
since October last year.
KMC has nothing to show for the more than Sh2.1
billion the government has poured into the company since its re-opening
seven years ago. Rehabilitation of the facility was undertaken at a cost
of Sh500 million with the government injecting a further Sh250 million
annually in the firm to facilitate its operations.
It posted its first profit of Sh51 million last
year after a series of massive losses despite growing demand for Kenyan
meat products in the Middle East, Asia and Africa.
Meat from Kenya is considered a delicacy and nutritious as the animals slaughtered feed on natural forage.
Up to late last year, KMC had made inroads into
the Middle East and encouraged local entrepreneurs to embrace export
through its programmes.
The Middle East is a prime market for small stock
products — lamb, mutton and goat meat — while corned beef is more
popular in African markets as well as Saudi Arabia.
Dubai is the single largest market for KMC while
in Africa, Egypt and the Democratic Republic of Congo make up leading
destinations for the processor’s monthly output of 500 metric tonnes of
meat.
It exports a mix of meat products including
carcasses, beef cuts, offals and value added products such as beef
burgers, meat balls, sausages, canned ox tongue and corned beef.
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