The sale of five State-owned sugar millers has stalled, the
Privatisation Commission has said, citing political interference with
the process.
The commission in March said it was
scouting for a transaction adviser to evaluate the loss-making entities
and dispose of them by this month.
Chief executive Joseph Koskey Monday blamed unnamed politicians for inciting sugar farmers against the process.
He
further said the delay in the release of the sugar task force reform
had also tied the hands of the commission. The findings of the task
force appointed by President Uhuru Kenyatta, he said could inform the
future of the millers.
“The challenge that we face is
that the entire process is not entirely within our control,” Mr Koskey
told the Business Daily. “When politicians make pronouncements saying
‘we cannot allow our sugar companies to be sold’ and they go inciting
people, when you want to send transaction advisers to the ground to work
it becomes a problem.”
Mr Koskey is expected to appear
before Senate Committee before the Agriculture Committee accompanied by
the Treasury officials and CS Mwangi Kiunjuri to present an update on
the troubled sale process of the State-owned millers.
Mr Koskey had said in March the selected transaction adviser
would assess the assets and liabilities of Sony, Chemelil, Nzoia,
Muhoroni and Miwani companies and give the current position of their
financial status to guide the sale to strategic investors.
Mr
Koskey had stated then the process to sell 51 percent stake to private
investors was “well on course,” expressing optimism that it would be
concluded in “four months.”
“We have a transaction
adviser in place. They’ve already done initial stages. They are on the
ground doing due diligence,” he said yesterday without divulging the
identity of the transaction adviser. “We are also awaiting the task
force report … Others have said that we needed to wait for the President
to release the report before we progress with anything.”
The
commission was earlier banking on political goodwill arising out of a
recent deal brokered between former Prime Minister Raila Odinga and the
governors from sugar cane growing zones, who had initially opposed the
process of selling the factories to private investors.
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