President Uhuru Kenyatta (pointing), Deputy President William Ruto (2nd
right) and Coast leaders at the launch of the standard gauge railway
line at Changamwe on November 28 last year. FILE
By Victor Juma
In Summary
- Vicious dog fights for multi-billion shilling contracts leave Beijing and Nairobi with a public relations crisis.
- It was hoped that Chinese domination of Kenya’s infrastructure landscape would produce an easy ride for bureaucrats handling the mega deals but that has not happened.
- Instead, vicious tendering wars have erupted among the Asian firms that are now threatening to implode.
Kenya’s big-ticket infrastructure spending has
sparked a bidding war among Chinese contractors that is slowing down
execution of key projects in East Africa’s largest economy and soiling
the hands of senior public officials.
The race for multi-billion-shilling contracts in
the water, railway, road, ports and real estate sectors has in recent
months produced some of Kenya’s most vicious corporate battles that have
shaken key government departments to the core.
The tendering wars have been so intense that not
even the fact that most of the Chinese companies are government-owned
has helped.
It was hoped that Chinese domination of Kenya’s infrastructure landscape would produce an easy ride for bureaucrats handling the mega deals but that has not happened. Instead, vicious tendering wars have erupted among the Asian firms that are now threatening to implode.
It was hoped that Chinese domination of Kenya’s infrastructure landscape would produce an easy ride for bureaucrats handling the mega deals but that has not happened. Instead, vicious tendering wars have erupted among the Asian firms that are now threatening to implode.
The rivalry among Chinese firms has exposed the
soft under belly of the Asian giant’s State-controlled capitalism that
has left Beijing featuring prominently in a number of controversial
big-ticket contracts in Kenya.
The list of contested projects includes the
planned construction of the Sh447 billion standard gauge railway line
between Mombasa and Nairobi, whose pricing critics say has been inflated
by more than Sh100 billion.
China Roads and Bridges Corporation (CRBC) beat a
field of competing Chinese rivals such as China Railways Construction
Company whose proxies are believed to be behind the controversy
surrounding the deal.
China’s Exim Bank — the force behind Beijing’s
global expansion — has agreed to finance nearly half the project cost,
offering an attractive window for a cash-strapped Kenya government.
The fact that CRBC did the feasibility study,
designed the railway, determined its cost all by itself has handed
critics the most lethal ammunition in the matter that is now subject to
parliamentary investigation.
Opponents of the railway project have also accused
the government of failing to properly assess the integrity of the
Chinese contractor.
It has emerged that the World Bank has recently
barred CRBC from participating in any works it is financing because of
fraudulent activities in a road project in the Philippines.
CRBC, together with its designated successor China
Communications Construction Company (CCCC) Limited, is barred from
participating in World Bank-funded projects worldwide starting January
2009 until January 2017.
No World Bank funds from the National Roads
Improvement and Management Project in the Philippines were disbursed to
CRBC and five other contractors.
China has since amended its criminal law to make
it an offence for Chinese companies and nationals to bribe foreign
government officials.
The law applies to companies organised under
Chinese law and includes Chinese companies operating overseas as well as
foreign-owned enterprises based in China.
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