Leaders from Western Kenya have been accused of frustrating efforts to have farmers participate in privatisation of sugar mills.
A
former Minister for Co-operatives Joseph Nyagah in a book about his
tenure, says politicians around Sony, Awendo, Chemelil and Muhoroni were
reluctant to mobilise local people to benefit from the planned sale.
In the book — An African Minister’s Lessons For Co-operatives
— Mr Nyagah says his efforts to organise residents through elected
leaders to buy into the companies through investment saccos were
frustrated.
“I was terribly disappointed that despite
my efforts, only some MPs from these two regions showed support. Very
few turned up for meetings that we would hold with farmers.
“It
angered me that some of these leaders benefited in keeping their
electorates perpetually poor and exploited their vulnerability to remain
in power, being re-elected again and again,” he says.
SALE TO INVESTORS
The
revelation comes against the background of intended sale of 51 per cent
stake in five sugar mills to strategic investors announced in April by
Agriculture Principal Secretary Sicily Kariuki.
This is intended to enable the firms to be competitive before opening up of imports from Comesa in February.
Kenya
was granted a one-year extension of safeguards that limit imports from
the trading bloc in February this year to allow the country improve
fortunes of the sugar industry.
According to Ms Kariuki, the stake would go to strategic investors while 30 per cent is reserved for farmers.
The
remaining 19 per cent in Sony, Chemelil, Nzoia, Muhoroni and Miwani
companies would be floated at NSE through an initial public offering
once the factories are profitable.
Mr Nyagah says he
was organising farmers to buy 35 per cent stake in these companies to
avoid political problems similar to those that followed privatisation of
Mumias Sugar Company.
Growers bought shares through
Nairobi Securities Exchange and sold them immediately the prices rose
leaving ownership of the firm in the hands of other investors
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