By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- William Ruto admitted to having an interest in the hotel, contrary to claims by his ally Patrick Osero at the beginning of this year.
Deputy President William Ruto has admitted to owning
Weston Hotel, months after a close ally and its lawyer denied that he
holds any stake.
In an interview on Citizen TV, Mr Ruto admitted to having an
interest in the hotel, contrary to claims by his ally Patrick Osero at
the beginning of this year.
Mr Osero in January insisted he owns the hotel with
two others, but denied that his friend, Mr Ruto, is one of them. “Mr
Ruto is not one of the shareholders,” he said in a phone interview with
the Business Daily then.
Mr Ruto has been severally associated to the hotel,
which has been linked to a controversial piece of land suspected to
have been hived off Lang’ata Road Primary School; an assertion he
denied.
“I have interests in Weston Hotel. Weston Hotel is
completely different from Lang’ata Road Primary School. Each one has its
own title. The title for Lang’ata Road Primary school is in court,” Mr
Ruto said in the Tuesday night interview.
Mr Osero had in January said that the deputy
president only visits the 120-room hotel which was opened in 2014 as his
friend and customer. He denied being a proxy saying, “You think I
cannot own such a property? Why are Kenyans doubting?”
The hotel’s lawyer, Ahmednasir Abdullahi had also
dismissed Mr Ruto’s ownership claims, adding that he is not even a
director of the hotel next to Wilson Airport. Mr Ruto on Tuesday
dismissed the link between Weston and the adjoining 1.5-acre piece of
land whose ownership status is in court.
“There is a person who owns the land on Lang’ata
Road. He has not denied ownership,” he said. “He is not a ghost. He is
not a foreigner. He is a Kenyan. He is in court. He is the owner of
Airport View Limited, which owns an entire estate near Wilson Airport.”
At the height of the controversy in January, Lands
secretary Charity Ngilu named four individuals whom she claimed own the
piece of land that is also claimed to be the school’s playground.
Mr Ruto’s admission of ownership of the hotel is
likely to put the spotlight back on the hotel with the land it sits on
itself also said to have originally belonged to the Kenya Civil Aviation
Authority (KCAA) and was grabbed in 2002.
The deputy president said that they did not buy the land from KCAA, but from people who had been allocated the land.
Mr Osero had said that he acquired the 1.7 acres of
land where the hotel sits in 1998 from a company called Priority
Limited and built the hotel last year.
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