Politics and policy
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO and SIMON CIURI
Posted Wednesday, July 30 2014 at 21:54
Posted Wednesday, July 30 2014 at 21:54
In Summary
- Mount Kenya University (MKU) has offered to pay Sh280 million for the building that sits on a 0.09 hectare parcel of land in Nairobi’s Parklands area.
- But a distressed International University of Professional Studies is seeking Sh380 million.
- MKU officials confirmed that they had placed a bid for the campus property, saying the acquisition would support the institution’s ongoing expansion strategy.
Mount Kenya University (MKU) has placed a fire-sale
bid to buy rival Inoorero University’s eight-storey campus building,
which a creditor put up for auction on Monday.
People familiar with the matter said MKU has offered to pay
Sh280 million for the building that sits on a 0.09 hectare parcel of
land in Nairobi’s Parklands area against a price of Sh380 million set by
its present owners.
The creditor said in a public notice that it would
auction the property belonging to Inoorero, now known as International
University of Professional Studies (IUPS), on August 15 citing IUPS’
failure to service a multi-million-shilling loan it took from a bank
about five years ago.
Owners of IUPS on Wednesday confirmed that MKU had
offered to buy the building but maintained that the matter was in the
early stages of discussion.
“There is an offer for a purchase but let’s not get
into that because it’s too early to do so. Matters are still fluid and I
may not have something concrete to say at this stage,” Francis Nyammo,
the proprietor and chancellor of the college, said.
MKU officials confirmed that they had placed a
fire-sale bid for the campus property, saying the acquisition would
support the institution’s ongoing expansion strategy.
“We have made a formal bid for a possible purchase
of the building and hope to close the transaction soon,” said Simon
Gicharu, the MKU founder and chairman,
The two institutions are hoping to seal the deal ahead of the auction date to avoid disruption of learning programmes.
Mr Nyammo also revealed that the sale deal would
include a clause allowing current students to continue their studies to
completion.
“No student will be sent away despite the sale
plan. They will be allowed to go the full stretch in their studies and
graduate,” Mr Nyammo said but declined to provide details on how that
will be done.
Mr Gicharu also declined to discuss the fate of students currently enrolled with IUPS.
“We have not reached a point of discussing whether
we will absorb the students. Our present engagement is mainly on the
intended acquisition of the building and it is our hope that other
matters will come up for discussion once the takeover is complete,” he
said.
The Commission for University Education (CUE)
Wednesday said it had not been formally briefed on the intended sale of
the IUPS campus building but promised to safeguard the interests of
students.
“We have not received any formal communication from
International University of Professional Studies but when it comes we
shall demand clarification on the fate of continuing students because
that would be within our mandate as a commission. The rest of the issues
such as the sale plans are personal to them,” Henry Thairu, the CUE
chairman, said.
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