Politics and policy
President Uhuru Kenyatta inspects a recruits parade during a pass-out at
the GSU Training School in Embakasi, Nairobi. PHOTO | FILE
By BRIAN WASUNA, bwasuna@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Former President’s son to pocket Sh100 million for ‘offering services’ to owners of Ruaraka plot.
Former President Mwai Kibaki’s son Jimmy is among
beneficiaries of a Sh2.4 billion payout that the government made for the
controversial 37.4-acre General Service Unit (GSU) land in Nairobi’s
Ruaraka.
City tycoon Francis Mburu, who won the payout in a
protracted court battle with the government, has now revealed that Jimmy
was entitled to Sh100 million of the total amount “for services
rendered” to his company, Afrison Export Import Limited.
Mr Mburu was to split some Sh400 million the
government had paid him as instalment among Mr Kibaki (Sh100 million),
Almasi Limited (Sh165 million), and a Mr F M Mulwa (Sh70 million).
The payment was to be made through two law firms —
Harit Sheth Advocates and Mahmoud & Gitau Advocates — he hired in
2013 to oversee the settlements.
Harit Seth was to receive the Sh400 million from
the government then hand it over to Mahmoud & Gitau for onward
transmission to Mr Kibaki, Mr Mulwa and Almasi Limited.
A fight, however, ensued among the three parties,
scuttling the planned disbursement of the funds and seeing the matter
back to court.
Mr Mburu accuses Mahmoud & Gitau Advocates of
fraud for attempting to pay people not included in his instructions. The
Treasury was to release the funds to Mr Mburu in July.
Details of the payments have emerged in suit papers
that Mr Mburu filed in court in July seeking to stop Harit Sheth
Advocates from paying out any money to Mahmoud & Gitau Advocates.
Mr Mburu has sued the two law firms through Afrison Export & Import Limited — a company he wholly owns.
The businessman, however, holds that his biggest
discontent is with Mahmoud & Gitau Advocates, which he claims wanted
to sneak unauthorised individuals into the list of beneficiaries. Mr
Mburu has not, however, named the said persons in court.
“In terms of the said undertaking, Mahmoud &
Gitau Advocates were supposed to pay Mr Kibaki Sh100 million, Mr Mulwa
Sh70 million and Almasi Limited Sh165 million,” Mr Mburu says, adding
that he had within the month of June 2015 made numerous attempts to
prevail upon the defendants to stick to his earlier instructions when
executing the assignment but none of them had responded.
Mr Mburu did not disclose in the proceedings what
services Mr Kibaki and the other beneficiaries offered his firm or
whether the services were related to the land battle.
The High Court has quashed the instructions Mr
Mburu gave to the lawyers after finding that the letter with the
instructions was vague and could not be said to be legally binding.
Justice Francis Gikonyo ruled that the instructions
issued to Harit Sheth in June 2013 were too vague and ordered the
payout stopped until a more descriptive set of instructions are issued.
The judge maintained that Mahmoud & Gitau did not provide a
letter confirming its acceptance of Mr Mburu’s instructions, leaving the
entire process vague and not legally binding.
“Based on the material before court, I agree with Afrison
that the undertaking was vague and needed further and specific
instructions to be effective,” said the judge.
Lawyer Harit Sheth said his firm was caught in the
crossfire between Mr Mburu and Mahmoud & Gitau Advocates over the
funds, adding that his firm had decided to file a suit to determine what
action to take before Mr Mburu sued him and Mahmoud & Gitau
Advocates.
Mr Mburu had asked him to cancel the June 2013
instructions while Mahmoud & Gitau had sent him a demand letter
seeking release of the Sh400 million as soon as the government paid.
Harit Sheth Advocates in its response to Mr Mburu’s
suit held that the Sh400 million was intended for Mahmoud & Gitau
as legal fees the firm had offered Afrison. The firm denied knowing that
Mr Kibaki or any other individual was to benefit from the Sh400 million
payout.
Mr Kibaki is said to have initially demanded Sh150
million, but he agreed to a lower amount following negotiations at his
Riverside Drive offices.
“Harit Sheth did not know the purpose of the
payment. The firm only learnt later in November 2014 that part of the
money was to be paid to Jimmy Kibaki who agreed to a reduction of the
amount from Sh150 million to Sh100 million.”
Mr Mburu sued former President Kibaki in 2012
alleging that his firm owned the 37.4 acre piece of land and that the
GSU had grabbed it to construct its headquarters.
Justice Alfred Mabeya found that the tycoon indeed
owned the land and awarded him Sh4.2 billion, which the government later
negotiated down to Sh2.4 billion.
The GSU officers occupy 380 houses that were
initially built for employees of the defunct Kenya Posts and
Telecommunications Corporation (KPTC), now Telkom Kenya.
The government claimed it bought the land from the
KPTC, but the judge ruled that Mr Mburu had provided sufficient proof of
ownership.
The Auditor-General Edward Ouko has since called
for the arrest of Moi-era Internal Security ministry officials, arguing
that numerous anomalies had occurred during the KPTC’s acquisition of
the land and its subsequent transfer to the GSU.
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