By BRIAN WASUNA, bwasuna@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Juba says in court documents that the funds in CFC Stanbic had been earmarked for easing the economic and political challenges currently facing South Sudan.
- Khartoum firm Active Partners Group attached the account to recover $41.9 million (Sh4.2 billion) Kenyan courts awarded the Khartoum firm as compensation for a botched power project South Sudan had contracted it to undertake.
Troubled South Sudanese government wants the Kenyan
High Court to reverse an order it issued attaching a bank account it has
with CFC Stanbic Bank, arguing that the $18 million (Sh1.8 billion) in the account is part of the country’s emergency operation fund.
The Juba-based government says in court documents that the
funds in CFC Stanbic had been earmarked for easing the economic and
political challenges currently facing the country, and that Khartoum
firm Active Partners Group’s (APG) decision to attach the account has
stalled its operations.
APG attached the account to recover $41.9 million
(Sh4.2 billion) Kenyan courts awarded the Khartoum firm as compensation
for a botched power project South Sudan had contracted it to undertake.
An arbitration panel awarded the Khartoum firm the
huge amount in January last year, paving the way for APG move to the
commercial division of the High Court in Nairobi to enforce the award.
APG filed the enforcement suit in Nairobi’s
Milimani Court because the arbitration was done in Nairobi, giving the
Kenyan courts jurisdiction over the matter.
“To date, South Sudan continues to experience
severe economic hardship as it also seeks to restore peace and stability
within its borders. It is in the interest of justice that South Sudan
be allowed to settle the outstanding decretal sum in monthly instalments
in order to alleviate its current foreign exchange cash flow crisis,”
says Jeremiah Swaka Moses, the undersecretary of South Sudan’s Ministry
of Justice.
The Juba government says it should be given nine
months and then allowed to pay APG’s debts in instalments of $500,000
(Sh50.5 million) per month.
CfC Stanbic transferred the funds to APG’s lawyers after the firm secured orders to attach South Sudan’s account.
Justice Fred Ochieng has stopped APG’s advocates from transferring the money until he has heard South Sudan’s application.
APG’s lawyer Gilbert Mungu, however, says that
South Sudan has previously duped them into accepting instalment
payments, and that the Juba government used the same argument it is now
making to the Nairobi court.
Mr Mungu says in his affidavit that the CfC account
may have had nothing to do with emergency relief as shortly after it
was frozen, he was approached by South Sudanese businessmen who tried to
bribe him to have the orders lifted.
The lawyer claims that the businessmen told him
that the freeze orders had interfered with the Juba government’s plan to
pay them from the CfC account.
“My office was invaded by South Sudanese-looking
persons who offered me inducement to have the orders lifted and told me
they were expecting payments from the account for business they had done
with South Sudan. I listened to them but declined their offers,” Mr
Mungu says.
Arbitrators Philippe Pinsole, Karel Daele and
Richard Omwela in January last year ruled that South Sudan had
unlawfully cancelled the $197 million (Sh18.7 billion) tender awarded to
APG for the electrification project
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