It has stakes in Java coffee chain and Brookside Dairy. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The recent arrest of collapsed Dubai-based private equity firm Abraaj executives on fraud charges has heightened uncertainty among Kenyan firms where the fund had pumped billions before collapse.
- It has stakes in Java coffee chain and Brookside Dairy.
- Abraaj chief executive and a managing partner Arif Naqvi is facing prosecution after arrest in the US on charges that he and other executives defrauded investors, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
The recent arrest of collapsed Dubai-based private equity firm
Abraaj executives on fraud charges has heightened uncertainty among
Kenyan firms where the fund had pumped billions before collapse.
It has stakes in Java coffee chain and Brookside Dairy.
Abraaj
chief executive and a managing partner Arif Naqvi is facing prosecution
after arrest in the US on charges that he and other executives
defrauded investors, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Mr
Naqvi was arrested in the UK a fortnight ago while managing partner
Mustafa Abdel-Wadood was arrested at a New York hotel, assistant US
Attorney Andrea Griswold was reported saying at a hearing in Manhattan
federal court.
Kenyan firms where Abraaj has a stake
will be following keenly to see what comes out of the arrests. A process
to acquire the assets of the insolvent firm is in limbo as potential
investors and suitors dither. The fund had in recent years invested
billions of shillings in Kenyan companies, signalling a huge bet on the
Kenya economy.
The now-defunct Abraaj was forced into
liquidation less than six months later after investors, including the
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, commissioned an audit to
investigate the alleged mismanagement of money in its healthcare fund.
It emerged that the firm’s main revenues had not covered its operating
costs for years.
Mr Naqvi and others are alleged to
have secretly diverted investments made to the healthcare and other
funds to cover cash flow problems within Abraaj.
Abraaj
Holdings Director of Communications Mitali Atal had earlier told
Business Daily the current challenges would not interfere with the
operations of Java. “The provisional liquidation for Abraaj Holdings is a
court supervised restructuring process which will ensure the company
can move forward with an orderly restructuring plan,” she said.
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