Deputy President William Ruto has waded into the swamp of
corruption allegations, admitting that he owns a stake in the hotel
alleged to have been built on airport land.
However, he
denied involvement in the attempt to acquire a section of Lang’ata Road
Primary School, which culminated in protesting pupils being teargassed
by police.
Appearing on Citizen TV on Tuesday night, Mr
Ruto said he was a shareholder of Weston Hotel near Wilson Airport
which is build on land that the Kenya Civil Aviation Authority has
always insisted belongs to the airport.
Mr Ruto, no
stranger to land controversies, declared himself a clean man and
defended the Jubilee administration against claims of runaway
corruption.
He said the opposition was trying to
distract the government from delivering on its election promises. Two
months ago, President Uhuru Kenyatta presented to Parliament names of
176 public officials, including five Cabinet Secretaries, suspected of
involvement in corruption.
Such is the crisis that the
board of the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission resigned to avoid
investigation, while parliamentary watchdog committee, PAC, was
disbanded.
Weston was in January dragged into the
controversial grabbing of the playground for Lang’ata Road Primary
School, apparently in an attempt to convert into a parking lot. However,
Mr Ruto distanced the hotel from the saga, saying the owners of school
land were in court.
At the time, Mr Ahmednasir
Abdullahi, acting for the hotel, said it was owned by businessman
Patrick Osero who has since been suspended as the chairman of the
Agricultural Finance Corporation (AFC).
“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,” he said.
ROUGHED UP BY POLICE
The
school’s pupils made headlines in January after they were roughed up by
police as they protested at the taking over of their playground by a
private developer during the December holidays.
The case has since moved to court with Airport View Hotel claiming it owns the part initially hived from the school.
“There
is a person who owns the land of Lang’ata Road. He has not denied
ownership. 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,” he said.
Mr Ruto
denied claims that the land on which the hotel stands was grabbed from
KCAA, saying that they bought it from an individual — who he did not
name — to whom it had been allocated. He challenged his detractors to
find out the truth from the records at the Lands registry.
“We
bought the land and the transfers are there. We didn’t buy from KCAA.
We bought the land from people who had been allocated the land and the
documentation is there. Why is it so difficult for people to go and get
the truth?” he asked.
Mr Ruto also used the opportunity
to tackle another corruption controversy — the Sh17 billion renovation
of the Eldoret-based Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital, where it was
claimed that people alleging to act for him demanded bribes from those
awarded the rehabilitation tender.
The case emerged
last month after Mr Herbert Ojwang, a former personal assistant of Cord
leader Raila Odinga, submitted recordings before a National Assembly
committee implicating Mr Ruto’s associates in the deal.
Mr
Ruto said he cancelled the renovation tender and ordered a new hospital
be built, arguing that the repairs were a plot to fleece the public. He
argued that no one was prosecuted because the plot was allegedly foiled
before any public money was spent.
“The good side of it really is that nothing bad had happened. These were just fishermen trying to look for deals,” he said.
President Kenyatta and his deputy have been under pressure to tackle corruption with the Opposition, clergy and civil society accusing them of paying lip service to the fight against sleaze.
President Kenyatta and his deputy have been under pressure to tackle corruption with the Opposition, clergy and civil society accusing them of paying lip service to the fight against sleaze.
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