Labour Cabinet Secretary Kazungu Kambi. Labour secretary Kazungu Kambi
has invited anti-corruption authorities to investigate whether the
controversial Tassia project being implemented by the NSSF was procured
irregularly. Photo/GEORGE KIKAMI
Labour secretary Kazungu Kambi has invited
anti-corruption authorities to investigate whether the controversial
Tassia project being implemented by the NSSF was procured irregularly.
(READ: Anti-graft agency to grill NSSF big shots)
He has
missed the point completely. What is needed is a comprehensive audit to
determine the project’s feasibility and show whether it represents
value for money for the pensioner.
I was surprised to
read a statement by the CEO of the Federation of Kenya Employers, Ms
Jacquline Mugo, a long-term serving director of the NSSF, that no
feasibility study had been conducted on the Tassia project. How on earth
would anyone go into such a huge project without conducting a
feasibility study?
Billions of shillings of pensioners’
money was spent on purchasing the land. Hundreds of millions of
shillings were spent on paying consultants, and on costly litigation.
Now
the NSSF wants to spend another Sh5 billion in civil works, pretending
that this is a requirement imposed on them by the county government.
Why
don’t they sell the land as undeveloped plots? And where is the
evidence that the tenants, who incidentally, are in possession of the
houses already, are capable of paying for the expensive civil works
propose for the estate?
The Tassia project should be cancelled – fast. (READ: Tassia row headed for a messy ending)
Who
will protect the interests of the ordinary pensioner who contributes
his meagre savings to the NSSF every month but is destined to get only a
paltry one-off lump-sum payment when he retires?
In
the private sector, members of private pension schemes get yearly
statements which make it possible for them to track how their savings
are growing, and to hold trustees to account on how their money has been
invested.
The NSSF is a dark hole. On retirement, you get what you are offered without questioning.
I
had hoped the new regime of President Uhuru Kenyatta would herald the
beginning of real change in the running of the pensioners’ body.
I
was wrong. The NSSF remains firmly in the clutches of a tiny elite that
has lined up several multi-billion-shilling property development
projects from where they hope to reap hundreds of millions in economic
rent.
It is a very powerful network. Last year, they
easily lobbied MPs to pass a new law to allow the NSSF to increase
contribution rates. The real intention was to boost NSSF’s cash flow and
thus make it possible for the Fund to finance the billion-shilling
projects in the pipeline.
Such is the influence of this
tiny elite that, last year, they influenced the Cabinet to approve a
plan to build 3,000 houses in Mavoko. Since when did NSSF’s investment
plans become a matter for the Cabinet?
The NSSF plans to build a multi-billion-shilling shopping mall on Kenyatta Avenue. How will that help the pensioner?
Indeed,
the fight over Tassia was not about protecting the interest of the
ordinary pensioner. It was about politics of big projects and
competition between influential local groups fighting to secure
lucrative contracts on behalf of Chinese contractors.
The NSSF has never effected a single major property development project without reports of corrupt dealings.
Successive
reports of the Kenya National Audit Office have catalogued several
cases where the Fund paid hundreds of millions of shillings to
contractors for projects without any value to the pensioner,
President
Kenyatta should cancel all those kickback-motivated projects that have
been put in the pipeline by rent-seekers and their Chinese allies.
The
Mohammed Abdikadir-led task force on parastatals made some very good
suggestions. The government must admit that it does not own a cent in
the NSSF and that its responsibility does not go beyond the fiduciary
responsibility of protecting the interest of the public.
All those permanent secretaries who sit on the board of the NSSF to represent the government should go.
The recently introduced NSSF Act must be repealed and the Fund allowed to run under the Retirement Benefits Authority.
jkisero@ke.nationmedia.com
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