Summary
- Kenya has committed to pay Sh538 million to Ugandan and Rwandan firms for losses they suffered in the 2007-2008 post-election violence.
- The 13 Ugandan and Rwandan firms sued the government in 2009 for negligence, demanding Sh4.7 billion compensation for special damages.
- The traders from the two landlocked states, which rely on Mombasa port for imports and exports, initially estimated their losses in the 2007/08 skirmishes at Sh20 billion.
Kenya will not pay the Sh4.7 billion
Ugandan and Rwandan firms are demanding for losses they suffered in the
2007-2008 post-election violence and has instead committed to pay them
Sh538 million.
Attorney General Githu Muigai
and the Treasury director-general for budget and economic affairs
Geoffrey Mwau said a Cabinet memorandum has been prepared to guide the
compensation.
The 13 Ugandan and Rwandan firms sued the
government in 2009 for negligence, demanding Sh4.7 billion compensation
for special damages.
Prof Muigai said an
inter-ministerial committee investigated the claims and returned a
verdict that only Sh538 million is genuine and should be settled.
“It
is several years since 2008, we have claims of several billions and the
position of the inter-ministerial committee says the bulk of the claims
are baseless. Only Sh538m is legal claims,” he told the National
Assembly’s Administration and National Security committee.
The
committee is inquiring into a petition presented to Parliament by the
foreign traders following delays by Interior ministry to settle the
claims as directed by the Kenyan courts.
The traders
from the two landlocked states, which rely on Mombasa port for imports
and exports, initially estimated their losses in the 2007/08 skirmishes
at Sh20 billion. About 1,200 people were killed in ethnic fuelled
violence
Only 13 traders, 12 from Uganda and one from Rwanda,
managed to present evidence of losses incurred on the Kenyan soil,
leading to the Sh4.75 billion compensation bill.
The 13
firms and three businessmen claim that the government, through the
police, failed to accord their trucks adequate security during the
bloody post-election violence, which led to the loss of their property
in the chaos.
They have also faulted the government for opening the highway for use in clash-prone areas.
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