The second container terminal at the port of Mombasa. Power and business
brokers are vying to manage it. PHOTO | LABAN WALLOGA | NATION MEDIA
GROUP
The Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) is just about to complete
construction of a new container terminal at the port of Mombasa which is
being built and funded by the Japanese government.
This
is a critical project for Kenya because it is going to double the
capacity of the port and allow access to container vessels twice as
large as those currently calling at the port of Mombasa.
Indeed,
this new facility will allow Mombasa to reposition itself as the
reference port in the Indian Ocean coast, making it possible for the
port to out-compete Djibouti, Dar es salaam and Maputo —catapulting
Mombasa to become the pre-eminent gateway to Asia and a major trade
centre.
The government’s ambition is to have a high
performance port which will connect to the Standard Gauge Railway,
currently under construction -- to form a fully integrated
transportation chain and corridor running all the way to Kampala.
CEDE SHARES
Which
is why a decision was made that instead of having the port managed by
KPA, it will be privatised and given to an international port operator
to run it under a 30-year concession.
When the tender
for the concession was put out a few months ago, the government
introduced what is known as a local shareholding threshold —a
requirement stipulating that to win the lucrative contract, an
international investor must cede 15 per cent shares to local Kenyans.
As it has turned out, the fight to clinch the local shareholding deal has spawned major political undercurrents.
How
was the government going to insulate the process from manipulation by
the ruling elite? Had the stage been set for another Mobitelea?
Mobitelea
was the vehicle powerful individuals under the Moi regime crafted to
acquire free shares in Vodafone Kenya Ltd —the largest shareholder in
the mobile company Safaricom Ltd.
To put the whole
issue in context, here is the background against which the fight for the
concession of the Mombasa Port is happening.
All over Africa, port concessions have been plagued by rumours of corrupt dealings and allegations of high-level rent-seeking.
Last
year, Djibouti filed an arbitration case in London against the
international port operator there, alleging that the company had paid
bribes to top government officials to win the contract. In Senegal, the
Justice ministry has been investigating Karim Wade, former minister and
son of the ex-president, on corruption related to the concession at the
port of Dakar.
BATTLE ROYALE
The
authorities suspect that Wade is a sleeping partner in the port
concession there and accuse him of having connived with the port
concessionaire to sell to him shares in the company on the cheap.
Clearly,
port concessions —like in most privatisation transactions in Africa,
allow powerful elites to arm twist multinationals into giving them free
shares.
The process in Mombasa is still in the preliminary stages and it is too early to predict how events are likely to unfold.
The process in Mombasa is still in the preliminary stages and it is too early to predict how events are likely to unfold.
But
when you look at the names of the local partners in each of the
consortia fighting for the prize, it is clear that the stage has been
set for a battle royale.
This is not going to be an ordinary tender war as it involves politically-well-connected groups.
This is not going to be an ordinary tender war as it involves politically-well-connected groups.
And, there are indications that the whole thing is likely to snowball into a major diplomatic row with the Japanese government.
All
of the 12 international port operators in the bidding for the lucrative
contract have connections with politically powerful groups.
All the big names within the tiny elite in Mombasa that controls and
dominates transport and logistics business moved with alacrity to sign
up 15 per cent shareholding deals with the international port
operators.
LOCAL INTERESTS
They
include Mombasa Maize Millers Ltd which is associated with the hugely
influential Mr Mohahmed Islam, Freight Forwarders Kenya of the powerful
Somjee family, Interperl Investments, which is associated with the
influential Feisal Abbas of Paramount Bank, Siginon, associated with the
family of former President Daniel arap Moi, Multiple Hauliers --
perhaps the largest cargo hauling company in East Africa, associated
with the family of Mr Rajinder Singh and Jaffer Mohammed of Grain Bulk
Handflers..
The second category of local interests
fighting for the prize is a group of well-connected Nairobi elites. A
well-known local acquisition artist and big investor in the Nairobi
Stock Exchange but whose name does not appear in the lists is linked to
the consortium led by one of the internal bidders from Singapore..
Dalbit Petroleum Ltd , associated with influential businessman Humphrey Kariuki is also in the mix.
One
of the consortia is widely believed to enjoy the support of individuals
in a very high office in Nairobi. Which begs the questions: Will the
government deliver a transparently-procured privatisation transaction
this time around?
All indications would appear to
suggest that a big tender war is in the offing. It is instructive that
the first stage of the tender —the technical stage —has already sparked
off a barrage with appeals being lodged before the public private
partnerships tribunal.
Documents seen by the Saturday
Nation show that during evaluation of technical proposals, five
companies were knocked off, leaving seven in the running.
The
results of the evaluations were not made public with losers being sent
letters individually. But according to available documents, the
consortium led by the Chinese group PSA International and Multiple
Hauliers emerged top on the list, scoring a total of 94 marks in the
disputed evaluations.
MAJOR CONTROVERSY
They
were followed closely by Dubai World with a score of 93, Cosco
Pacific and Paramount Bank (92.98 ) Siginon Group (91.5) and Freight
Forwarders (90.10).
With the case lodged by some
bidders at the review board still outstanding, the opening of the next
stage —the financials — has been postponed.
But
indications are that the dispute is likely to drag in court for a long
time. If that happens — and considering that the contractors will be
handing over the state of the art container terminal to KPA in February,
we may end up with a new facility that is not being used.
Even
before the process reached the technical evaluation stage, a major
controversy erupted when KPA suddenly introduced new conditions whose
effect was to fundamentally alter the rules of the game.
Hardly
10 days before the closing of the tender the Kenya Ports Authority
introduced a new local shareholding rule stipulating that — over and
above the 15 per cent for locals —bidders would have the option of
offering the government of Kenya free 15 per cent shares of their
companies.
Strangely, this new requirement was dictated to KPA by the National Treasury’s Mr Stanley Kamau.
The
rules of competitive international bidding do not allow you to
arbitrarily change from one procurement method to another in the middle
of a tender.
Why was this requirement being introduced
so late in the day? And how was national interest going to be served by
direct government ownership of shares in a concession operating under
supervision of the State-owned Kenya Ports Authority?
Critics say that the National Treasury had tilted the playing field to
favour foreign government-owned entities who were in the race.
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