A farmer prunes his coffee bushes at Kangocho in Mathira on April 5. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Farmers in Mt Kenya can now sleep easy as major theft of coffee beans that rocked the region in 2016 has been contained.
The last biggest case took place two years ago when farmers lost about 800 bags of coffee worth more than Sh157 million.
Nyeri
County was the worst hit by the thefts that left a trail of losses and
despair among farmers who got frustrated to the point of uprooting their
plantation.
However, last year, no single coffee theft
case was reported. Farmers and cooperatives have attributed this to
combined efforts by the county governments and the national security
personnel. The Coffee Directorate also came up with a raft of measures
to stem the menace, key of which was ensuring that beans delivered for
processing must have proper documents of origin.
The
discovery of tonnes of stolen beans at a warehouse in Nyeri in 2016 was
the beginning of the end to the racket that was robbing farmers of their
hard earned income.
Although farmers are happy that
the menace has been almost completely dealt with, they are concerned
that most of the culprits have not been brought to book. What if they
regroup and begin to terrorise farmers again? They ask.
“We
thought the discovery of the stolen coffee would provide a crucial clue
to the police officers. It was expected that this would take them to
the larger gang stealing coffee in the region, but this did not happen”
said Mr John Kamau, a coffee farmer supplying Rumukia cooperative.
Coffee
experts in the region told the Sunday Nation that most of culprits end
up buying their way out of the case through police officers.
For
example, investigations into the theft of 10 tonnes of coffee worth Sh5
million that was later found in a house under construction in Tetu was
thrown into limbo due to lack of a complainant.
The
case has remained unsettled with police insisting they do not have
enough evidence to arrest anyone, let alone sustain the case in court.
According
to a former agriculture executive and member of the presidential task
force, Robert Thuo, efforts by the Nyeri County government to curb
coffee thefts helped in sealing loopholes that led to the prevalent
coffee thefts in the county.
Currently, eight people
have been barred from being part of coffee society management for
apparent disregard of Chapter Six of the constitution.
Mr
Thuo said although stealing of coffee has been largely addressed, no
stones should be left unturned until the thieves face the law. This, he
added, is the only way to ensure the problem does not recur.
“The
Coffee Directorate should be in a position to track stolen coffee
because it ends up somewhere... it just can’t disappear. Let them do
their work and cancel the licences whether it is the movement permits,
marketing or even roasting,” Mr Thuo said.
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