By KENNEDY SENELWA
In Summary
Civil society organisations have asked the Kenyan government
to release oil, gas and mining agreements signed with private companies
for public scrutiny.
The push for disclosure of contents of all extractive agreements
in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda has not been successful due to
confidentiality clauses in the contracts.
The Kenya civil society platform on Oil and Gas (KCSPOG) has
written to Energy Cabinet Secretary Charles Keter and his Mining
counterpart Dan Kazungu, asking for disclosure of all signed contracts
to enhance transparency and cushion the country against losses in
future.
“It is critical that the existing contracts are put in public
domain to be reviewed to ensure terms contained therein are being
followed to avoid future complications. Lack of disclosure means there
is less scrutiny,” said KCSPOG co-ordinator Charles Wanguhu.
Members of the coalition are Katiba Institute, Kenya Land
Alliance, Kwale County Natural Resources Network and Kenya Human Rights
Commission.
Kenya has developed an early oil pilot oil production scheme of 2,000 barrels per day of crude before June this year.
“We believe transparent disclosure of tax payments helps
governments, citizens and international opinion leaders to debate how
wealth from oil resources should be managed sustainably and equitably,”
reads a statement on the website of Tullow Oil Plc.
Tullow which has published agreements of contracts in Ghana said
it supports disclosure but will only publish the documents with the
express support and agreement of government partners.
“I am writing to request for copies of the mining permits,
leases, licences and contracts signed by the government with companies
operating in Kenya,” said Mr Wanguhu in the letter send to Ministry of
Mining.
KCSPOG cited article 35 of the Constitution which allows Kenyans
to seek information and requires the State to proactively publicise
information that is of interest to the public.
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