Moses Nyamori
Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) meets with Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta, who is here to attend the Second Belt and Road
Forum for International Cooperation, at the Great Hall of the People in
Beijing, China, April 25, 2019. [Xinhua]
Assets of at least eight State corporations risk seizure by lenders over Sh147.7 billion loan, Parliament warned yesterday.
The warning came even as President Uhuru Kenyatta pitched for more
loans in China, where he is on a three-day visit to seek Sh368 billion
to finance the extension of the
Standard Gauge Railway (SGR).
It has emerged the Government used Kenya Airways (KQ), Kenya Airports
Authority (KAA), Kenya Railway, Kenya Electricity Generating Company
(KenGen) and Kenya Power as collateral.
Other corporations at risk of losing their assets should the Government
default the multi-billion-shilling loans are East African Portland
Cement, Tana and Athi Rivers Development Authority and Kenya
Broadcasting Corporation (KBC).
The struggling KQ was used to secure Sh76.4 billion while KAA guaranteed
Sh33.7 billion loan. Others are KenGen (Sh10.8 billion), Kenya Power
(Sh14 billion) and KBC (Sh6.9 billion).
The details of the loans are contained in a document by Parliamentary
Budget Office on the country’s worrying debt level and increasing
pressure to refinance the loans.
It states that a total of Sh147.7 billion worth of guarantees had been
provided to the eight institutions at the end of December 2018, which
was an increase from Sh133.79 as at December previous year.
The document also shows that China and World Bank’s International
Development Assistance are the main lenders, making up 64 per cent and
71 per cent multilateral and bilateral debt, respectively.
The disclosure came against the backdrop of a fresh push by Emgwen MP
Alex Kosgey to control the Government’s appetite for loans.
The Public Finance Management (Amendment) Bill, 2018, which was
yesterday presented before the National Assembly’s Budget and
Appropriation Committee chaired by Kimani Ichungwa (Kikuyu), further
seeks to cap the amount of public debt at Sh6 trillion.
Should Parliament pass this bill, the Government will be forced to look for alternative source of money to fund its projects.
The country’s nominal debt level hit Sh5.28 trillion in December last
year and is projected to hit Sh6.3 trillion by 2019/20 financial year.
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