By EDWIN MUTAI, emutai@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Tourism minister Najib Balala told Parliament on Wednesday that the Sh8.9 billion project has so far consumed Sh4.1 billion on the 35 per cent work done.
- Mr Balala revealed that the Tourism Trust Fund management rushed through the tendering process and executed it despite the existence of a Cabinet moratorium stopping the award of tenders worth more than Sh500,000.
The Cabinet did not discuss or approve any memo
sanctioning the construction of the controversial Ronald Ngala Utalii
College in Kilifi at a cost of Sh10.4 billion, Tourism minister Najib
Balala told Parliament Wednesday.
Mr Balala told the National Assembly’s Public Investments
Committee (PIC) that the Sh8.9 billion project has so far consumed Sh4.1
billion on the 35 per cent work done.
“The so called Cabinet memo, signed between
Treasury secretary Henry Rotich and then Tourism minister Phylis Kandie
in 2014 has not been approved,” Mr Balala said, adding that the Cabinet
office had confirmed that the memo that the Tourism Trust Fund relied
on to award the multi-billion shilling project had not at any time been
slotted for deliberation.
Mr Balala revealed that the Tourism Trust Fund
management rushed through the tendering process and executed it despite
the existence of a Cabinet moratorium stopping the award of tenders
worth more than Sh500,000.
MPs took Mr Balala to task as to why the project was conceived without a feasibility study and Cabinet approval.
PIC is investigating how the project costs
escalated from the original Sh1.9 billion budget to Sh8.9 billion before
it was later scaled down to Sh4.9 billion.
PIC insisted that it was the responsibility of
Parliament to decide the project’s fate and demanded to know from the
minister what action has been taken against Tourism Trust Fund managers
who authorised its execution.
Mr Balala distanced himself from procurement of
contractors for the project, insisting it was awarded after he was
sacked from the ministry in 2012.
The minister said procurement for the project was
also done in the absence of the board of trustees, which was disbanded
one month after he left office.
“After I left the ministry in March 2012 there was
no board. The tender was awarded in April 2013 and the variation of
costs done in April 2014. The Tourism Trust Fund had no board from 2013
to October last year,” Mr Balala said.
He said when he returned to the ministry in
December last year, the issue of Ronald Utalii College was not brought
to his attention until last month.
“When I realised that there were serious problems
affecting the project in April this year, I ensured that President
Uhuru Kenyatta appointed Henry Kosgey as chairman of the fund before we
sacked individuals involved in inflating the project cost,” he said.
The ministry has since instituted a forensic audit on the project to be undertaken by the Kenya National Audit Office.
“We know that money has been paid to consultants to
the tune of Sh1.3 billion or 16 per cent of the Sh8.9 billion contract
even before the project started,” he said.
Mr Balala said he could stop disbursement of funds
to the Tourism Trust Fund, but the agency’s board must henceforth
manage spending on the project
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