By EDWIN MUTAI, emutai@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Former Transport PS Cyrus Njiru said that Mr Kimunya instructed him to write to the then KRC managing director Nduva Muli to stop the study.
Former Transport minister Amos Kimunya halted
feasibility study for the standard gauge railway by Kenya Railways
Corporation (KRC), a former top State official has said.
Former Transport PS Cyrus Njiru said that Mr
Kimunya instructed him to write to the then KRC managing director Nduva
Muli to stop the study.
“The instructions were both verbal and written.
The minister directed me to communicate to the management that the
standard gauge railway had been discussed in Cabinet and that China had
already agreed on a government-to-government agreement to finance the
project,” Dr Njiru told the Public Investment Committee.
“The government advised the implementing agency
(KRC) not to undertake a parallel study, as doing so would be a
duplication of a study that was already being undertaken without any
cost to the government.”
When he appeared before PIC two weeks ago, Mr
Kimunya said his intervention to stop a parallel study saved the country
Sh1 billion. The committee, however, declared him a hostile witness and
threw him out.
It invited Dr Njiru, an international consultant
on infrastructure development and management based in London, to shed
light on the controversial railway project that was awarded China Road
and Bridge Corporation (CRBC).
The House team is investigating how the tender for
the Sh448 billion Mombasa-Nairobi section of the railway line was
awarded without competitive bidding.
CRBC undertook the study at no cost to the
government but on condition that the findings and preliminary designs
would not be shared with any other firm.
The committee decided to investigate the contract
after Nyali MP Hezron Awiti and Nandi Hills lawmaker Alfred Keter
questioned CRBC capacity and the costs of construction. Mr Keter has
insisted the tender was single sourced and over-priced.
On Thursday, Dr Njiru defended the project saying
the development of the Mombasa-Nairobi-Malaba-Kampala-Kigali/South Sudan
“is a regional initiative with considerable positive impact on regional
integration and trade.
”
”
“I recall that I chaired a meeting in Munyonyo
Kampala comprising PSs from 26 countries in the East African Community,
Comesa and SADC where the issue of standard gauge railway was mooted,”
Dr Njiru told MPs.
“The Summit of Heads of States and Governments approved it among five other regional infrastructure projects.”
Minority Leader Francis Nyenze sought to know the cost of building the railway from Mombasa to Malaba.
Dr Njiru said the concerns raised by MPs would be addressed in the implementation section of the feasibility study
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