By DAVID HERBLING, hdavid@ke.nationmedia.com
IN SUMMARY
- UK authorities are currently in touch with Nairobi to help identify and seize the more than Sh145 billion looted from taxpayers.
The British government has offered to help Kenya trace and recover assets looted by Moi-era power men named in the Kroll Report even as the risk consulting firm said it has only completed a quarter of the job.
The Kroll report uncovered systematic looting of public resources that were subsequently hidden in more than 40 countries and tax havens around the world in the form of cash in banks, land, ranches, and shares in blue-chip companies.UK authorities said they are currently in touch with Nairobi to help identify and seize the more than £1 billion (Sh145 billion) looted from taxpayers and stashed in offshore bank accounts and prime real estate purchases in the UK.
“The UK continues to work closely with the Kenyan authorities, and has asked for information necessary to take this forward,” said a spokesperson at the British High Commission in Kenya.
The British High Commission said recent asset seizures and repatriation, as was the case in the so-called Chickengate scandal and confiscation of former Kenya Power boss Samuel Gichuru’s offshore account funds, show that the UK is committed to the fight against graft.
“Recent times have demonstrated we’re keen to support Kenya in this area,” the spokesperson said.
Kroll, however, said that they were yet to complete the forensic study into the systematic looting of Kenyan taxpayer funds during the 24-year reign of Daniel arap Moi.
“We were never allowed to complete the work. We had only done 25 per cent of the work,” said Kroll’s senior consultant for Africa, Mark Simmonds, in an exclusive interview with theBusiness Daily.
Mr Simmonds, however, declined to give further details, citing strict confidentiality rules.
Kroll is mulling over a plan to set up a base in Kenya as part of a wide plan to win local risk consultancy and business advisory deals, the firm announced last month.
Kroll’s rare disclosure means that the extent of Kenyan assets pillaged under Mr Moi may top £4 billion (Sh580 billion), which is a tenth of Kenya’s rebased GDP.
In 2003, then President Mwai Kibaki hired Kroll Associates to track funds stashed abroad by Kanu bigmen, but the findings have never made public even after whistleblower site WikiLeaks published the explosive report in the run-up to the 2007 General Election.
Mukurweini MP Kabando wa Kabando a fortnight ago petitioned the National Assembly to compel the government to seize assets identified in the damning Kroll report.
The assets identified in the report include multi-million pound properties in London, New York, and South Africa; as well as a 10,000-hectare ranch in Australia.
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