Politics and policy
Lands secretary Charity Ngilu during a recent Press conference. PHOTO | FILE
By KIARIE NJOROGE, knjoroge@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Lands secretary Charity Ngilu gazetted the modified lease forms on Friday, allowing the Chief Lands Registrar to assume powers that the Constitution has vested in NLC.
Lands secretary Charity Ngilu has cleared the legal
hurdle to allow ministry bureaucrats to grant leases in the latest round
of turf wars with the National Land Commission (NLC).
Mrs Ngilu gazetted the modified lease forms on Friday,
allowing the Chief Lands Registrar to assume powers that the
Constitution has vested in NLC.
The minister’s move came just one week after she
went to Parliament seeking authority to grant leases until the current
impasse with the commission is resolved.
“This lease is issued pursuant to the transitional
provision in sections 160 and 161 of the Land Act and Section 108 of the
Land Registration Act,” reads a section of the altered lease form.
The temporary arrangement is set to allow the Chief Lands Registrar to clear a backlog of 1,700 pending lease applications.
“These were leases and grants that were left behind
by the former commissioner of lands, Zablon Mabea. Many more requests
have come since February. On a daily basis, we receive an average of 130
requests,” she had told the National Assembly’s Lands committee.
Committee chairman Tharaka MP Alex Mwiru had said
that the form ought to be part of the regulations to be brought to
Parliament. Work on the regulations has been stalled by wrangling
between Ms Ngilu and the Mohamed Swazuri-led NLC over who has power to
sign land titles and grants.
The Land Registration Act 2013 empowers the
Registrar of Titles to sign leases, while the repealed Government Land
Registration Act recognises the NLC boss as the signatory to the leases
and land titles.
Sections of the repealed Act are still in force
until the minister and the National Assembly approve rules and
regulations to fully operationalise the Land Registration Act, the Land
Act and the National Land Commission Act.
The commission’s draft regulations have been
submitted to the House Committee on Delegated Legislation for scrutiny,
while the ministry committee formed to draft regulations is yet to
submit any report.
The wrangles between the two bodies are before the
Supreme Court where NLC is seeking interpretation of the law and the
Constitution regarding mandates of the NLC and the ministry and an
advisory on land administration and management.
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