By LILIAN OCHIENG’, laochieng@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- The deal to offer China Road and Bridge Corporation the contract was reached on Saturday at a summit of the East African Community bloc in Kampala attended by President Uhuru Kenyatta.
- Kenyan officials acknowledge that there was no public bidding, which they said was a condition of Chinese loans to help fund construction.
- CRBC was appointed to build the first phase of Kenya’s biggest ever infrastructure project.
Kenya has given China another sweetheart deal after
agreeing to have a Chinese company operate business on the standard
gauge railway without public bidding.
The deal to offer the firm the contract was reached on
Saturday at a summit of the East African Community bloc in Kampala
attended by President Uhuru Kenyatta, putting Rift Valley Railway (RVR)
business at risk.
RVR, which operates the Kenya-Uganda railway, is
expected to face competition from the new railway being built with
Chinese financing from Mombasa to the Ugandan border.
“They directed that the contractors for the
Mombasa-Kampala section undertake operations in the interim as the two
partner states build their local capacities,” said the communication
that followed the summit.
The Mombasa–Nairobi standard-gauge line is expected to be completed in June next year.
Kenya had initially talked of seeking an operator through an open competitive tender.
Kenya Railways last month started the search for
transaction advisors to help procure an operator for the Sh357 billion
Mombasa-Nairobi line.
The advisors had up to April 22 to submit their bids.
Offering Chinese firms the contract to operate the
standard-gauge line is set to rekindle talk over the award of the
contract to build the multibillion-dollar railway line to a firm from
China, which sparked widespread criticism over the transparency of the
process.
China Road and Bridge Corporation was appointed to
build the first phase of Kenya’s biggest ever infrastructure project.
Kenyan officials acknowledge that there was no public bidding, which
they said was a condition of Chinese loans to help fund construction.
Some legislators complained that the contract was overpriced. It will cost Sh447.5 billion including financing costs.
But RVR, which operates the ageing narrow-gauge track, will be the biggest loser.
RVR has recently raised billions of shillings from
banks and shareholders to buy locomotives and wagons and refurbish the
rail line in a bid to move more traffic from roads to railway.
Rail transport in Kenya accounts for only 1.5
million tonnes of the 24.8 million tonnes of cargo that passes through
the Port of Mombasa to the region every year.
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