Politics and policy
By EDWIN MUTAI, emutai@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Two House committees endorsed the Treasury’s plan to pay First Mercantile Securities Corporation and Universal Satspace LLC the colossal amount arising from judgment that the two claimants got from Europe’s highest court of international disputes settlement.
- The National Assembly is Wednesday afternoon expected to debate the joint committees report and approve or disapprove of the payments.
Parliament on Tuesday set the taxpayers on the
path to paying two companies associated with Kenya’s biggest financial
scam, Anglo-Leasing, some Sh1.4 billion despite calls by Opposition MPs
and civil society groups that the government first unmask the faces
behind the controversial contracts.
Two House committees endorsed the Treasury’s plan
to pay First Mercantile Securities Corporation and Universal Satspace
LLC the colossal amount arising from judgment that the two claimants got
from Europe’s highest court of international disputes settlement.
The National Assembly’s Budget and Appropriation,
and Finance committees approved the payment plan after Treasury
secretary Henry Rotich told a joint sitting of the two teams that
failure to pay the debt exposed Kenya’s properties abroad to the risk of
being auctioned by the claimants.
Mr Rotich said the Treasury had received
notification for the attachment of a number of properties in Europe if
the government fails to pay the Sh1.4 billion settlement that parties to
the dispute agreed two years ago.
The National Assembly is Wednesday afternoon
expected to debate the joint committees report and approve or disapprove
of the payments.
Mr Rotich told the committees that the estimated
cost of not paying the negotiated amount could amount to Sh20 billion
annually through annual penalty payments and accumulation of domestic
interest rates.
“Including the annual penalty payments of Sh96.6
million and the high interest rates, we estimate that the cost of not
paying this debt could reach Sh20 billion,” the minister said.
Mr Rotich argued that not paying the debt comes
with an even more difficult challenge of compromising Kenya’s ability to
raise funds from the international market with dire consequences.
“It makes it difficult for us to issue the
sovereign bond without which domestic interest rates will rise for both
private and public sector borrowers,” he said.
The Treasury argues that the potential benefits of
paying Sh1.4 billion far outweighs the cost of forking out Sh20 billion
in penalties and interest payments.
“This payment will be in line with the
constitutional requirement that public funds be used in a prudent and
responsible way,” Mr Rotich told a divided committee.
First Mercantile Securities Corporation and
Universal Satspace sued the Kenyan government in Switzerland and the
United Kingdom for failure to meet its obligation in the Broad Band
Network and the Bandwidth Network contracts awarded to the two firms in
2004.
First Mercantile was contracted to supply VSAT
equipment that would connect Kenya’s post offices while Universal
Satspace inked a 10-year deal to provide bandwidth and manage the
network built by First Mercantile.
The UK court decided in favour of the two complainants and awarded them $10.6 million and $7.8 million respectively plus costs.
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