A truck leaves the Bamburi Cement factory. Lafarge has a majority ownership in Bamburi Cement. PHOTO | FILE
By KIARIE NJOROGE, gkiarie@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
French multinational Lafarge has once again been
reported to the Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) for restrictive
trade practices at the East African Portland Cement Company (EAPCC).
A group of Kajiado politicians want the competition
regulator to probe Lafarge’s dominance of the EAPCC board, sale of
clinker — a key raw material — at high prices to the cement firm and
conflict of interest where the company’s chief operation officer is also
an employee of the Paris-based conglomerate.
The government in 2013 also asked the competition
watchdog to investigate Lafarge’s alleged uncompetitive behaviour,
accusing the multinational of seeking to damage in order to protect its
interests in Bamburi Cement.
Lafarge has a 41.7 per cent interest in Portland cement and owns 58.9 per cent of Bamburi Cement.
“By having three directors sit on the board of
directors of EAPCC, Lafarge is mischievously attempting to acquire a
dominant position in order to control the affairs of EAPCC and
inevitably push EAPCC to a position of unfair disadvantage prejudicial
to the business interest of EAPCC,” Wilfred Nchoki of Kajiado Youth
Alliance wrote in a letter to CAK.
He mentions Didier Tresarrieu, a former managing
director at Bamburi, as participating in EAPCC board affairs in a role
dubbed advisor. Directors representing Lafarge in EAPCC are former
Capital Markets Authority chair Kung’u Gatabaki and Prof Serone Ole
Sena.
Mr Tresarrieu is backed by the technical support
deal EAPCC inked with Lafarge last year to help turnaround the
loss-making cement firm.
The turnaround plan also saw the appointment of
Lafarge executive Albert Sigei as Portland’s chief operating officer in
charge production operations, supply chain management, sales and
marketing.
Mr Sigei has been accused of earning two salaries
because he remains an employee of Lafarge while still serving as COO at
Portland. This, the petition says, has seen him serve the interest of
the French multinational to the detriment of EAPCC.
“Since Mr Sigei’s appointment, EAPCC’s performance has deteriorated,” says the CAK petition.
EAPCC announced a profit warning in February for
the year ending June after its pre-tax loss widened to Sh745.02 million
in the first half on higher finance costs and foreign exchange losses.
Lafarge told the Business Daily in an e-mail response that Mr Sigei had taken a leave of absence from the Paris-based firm where he has worked for 14 years.
“While he remains entitled to some benefits from
Lafarge, he is working full time for EAPCC and is not in any executive
capacity within Lafarge,” said Lafarge. Kajiado East MP Peris Tobiko has
also petitioned President Uhuru Kenyatta to act on Lafarge’s dominance
concerns in EAPCC.
“Lafarge cannot be trusted in managing the EAPCC
profitably as that places it in direct conflict with its majority
ownership in Bamburi Cement,” Ms Tobiko told Mr Kenyatta
No comments :
Post a Comment