With China-linked projects showing a penchant for attracting
controversy, the Chinese way of doing business in Africa is on trial.
TEA Graphic
Nation Media Group
By WASHINGTON AKUMU The EastAfrican
In Summary
- With the rising number of China-linked projects in the region showing a penchant for attracting controversy and accusations of “not playing by the rules,” several questions are inevitable: Is the open partiality governments have shown for Chinese contractors wise?
- For China, these projects are seen not just as providing a market for Chinese labour but materials such as steel and cement. Increasingly, they are also paid for with the region’s natural resources like oil, gas and coal.
- A key feature of the Chinese approach is the practice of offering a “full solution,” something almost akin to a one-stop-shop.
With a sensational claims being made against a
key Chinese-funded project in a parliamentary probe in Kenya, the former
country’s dominance in the battle for regional infrastructure contracts
now faces a severe integrity test.
While the probe has centred on the propriety and
legality of the procurement process for the standard gauge railway line
from Mombasa to Nairobi, its cost and whether Kenyan taxpayers will be
getting value for their money if the project goes ahead, what is really
on trial is the Chinese way of doing business in Africa.
And with the rising number of China-linked
projects in the region showing a penchant for attracting controversy and
accusations of “not playing by the rules,” several questions are
inevitable: Is the open partiality governments have shown for Chinese
contractors wise?
Are citizens getting value for money in these mega
infrastructure projects, or are the projects merely creating new
frontiers for Chinese labour, capital and construction materials, in the
process opening avenues to exploit the region’s natural resources? What
is the level of complicity of the ruling elite and other rent-seekers
in all this?
In the case of Kenya’s biggest ever infrastructure
job, the government handed the SGR contract to China Road and Bridge
Corporation in what the bureaucrats describe as a “government to
government” deal, awarded without competitive bidding.
Even then, Attorney-General Githu Muigai has
differed with his colleagues, Transport and Infrastructure Cabinet
Secretary Michael Kamau and Principal Secretary Nduva Muli, echoing
critics’ views that even in the case of government-to-government
transactions, the Public Procurement and Disposal Act, which calls for
open tendering, still applies.
Firm blacklisted
It will be interesting to see what direction the
project takes at the end of the probe by the Public Investment
Committee, considering that some preliminary works have already started.
However, the deals signed between Kenya Railways
and CRBC — which is a subsidiary of CCCC (China Communications
Construction Company), a firm blacklisted by the World Bank in 2009 over
fraud in a project in the Philippines — are subject to the AG’s
approval.
The other major point of contention in the Kenyan
SGR project is the cost, which critics say has been inflated without
justification, ostensibly due to variations to the original design.
It does not help the government’s case that its
officials have erected a virtual Tower of Babel over the issue before
the PIC, quoting different figures.
While Mr Kamau and Mr Muli have stuck to Ksh327
billion ($3.27 billion) as the total cost of the project, Treasury
Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich has introduced a new figure into the
discussion, Ksh447 billion ($5.13 billion), after factoring in elements
such as interest, compensation for land, insurance, management and
commitment fees.
Uganda must be watching the events in Kenya
keenly. Its own recent dalliance with Chinese contractors, who seem to
be snapping up all the big infrastructure jobs in Kampala, has not been
without controversy.
The high-stakes battle for the SGR project in
Uganda saw at least three different Chinese companies sign separate
memoranda with different arms of government
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