Transport PS Irungu Nyakera with China Road and Bridge Corporation
chairman Wen Gang at the launch of a report on the new railway in
Nairobi on March 24, 2016. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
The government is mulling offering alternative land
to those whose property is being acquired compulsorily instead of cash
compensation.
Transport PS Irungu Nyakera said Thursday that given the
number of large public projects in the pipeline, the current model where
land owners are compensated at market rates is unsustainable.
His sentiments come in the wake of revelations that
the State will pay out Sh30 billion to land owners paving the way for
the standard gauge railway (SGR).
“Government has a lot of land. If I take away your
half acre, I should be able to give you another half-acre or an acre or
two acres somewhere else,” said Mr Nyakera.
“You’ll find that a lot of people on these routes
are not living there (on the land). That you have half an acre here does
not mean that you cannot move it just a kilometre away. We should be
able to give you land and not money.”
National Land Commission (NLC) chairman Muhammad
Swazuri said they had paid out Sh12 billion to land owners along the
472km SGR corridor but expect to pay out another Sh18 billion by the
project’s end next year.
Land owners affected by the projects have demanded compensation at market rates, inflating the projects’ budgets.
The proposal by Mr Nyakera could be implemented in
rural areas where the infrastructure projects pass through undeveloped
land but might run into problems in the built up urban areas.
There are proposals to build roads, rail, oil
pipelines, water pipelines, power lines, among other projects, all of
which require land corridors.
Some of the major projects discussed include the
10,000km annuity roads, the extension of the SGR to Malaba and the Lamu
Port-South Sudan-Ethiopia- Transport (Lapsset) project which has a
corridor width of 500 metres.
“If we were to compensate for a 500-metre corridor
on Lapsset for 900km, we are talking of billions of dollars. We do not
have billions of dollars to pay for land.”
He said during the Monday talks with Uganda on crude oil pipeline, one of the issues raised was land acquisition.
Uganda reportedly pointed out that land acquisition
in Kenya is difficult and expensive and questioned if Kenya could
deliver the corridor for the pipeline in a short period.
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