Del Monte Kenya has beaten an about-turn and now says it is
ready for a re-survey of its contested land as Murang’a County and some
of it residents push for it to cede acreage.
This is
after the National Assembly Lands Committee three weeks ago ordered a
new survey be conducted within a month after failure by the line
ministry to confirm the total acreage under use.
The
Kandara Residents Association had petitioned the National Assembly to
have the multinational fruit processing firm surrender all the land for
use by locals, claiming it was irregularly acquired.
The company denies the accusation and says it has the relevant documents to prove ownership.
Kiambu
County has also been pushing for a share of the land, leading to the
signing of a Memorundum of Understanding and ceding of 690 acres last
September.
Managing Director Stergios Gkaliamoutsas said he has written to
the Director of Survey in the Ministry of Lands and Physical Planning,
Lands Executives in Murang’a and Kiambu counties seeking to hold a joint
survey to establish the truth of the matter.
“We
are not hiding anything. We would like representatives of the two
county governments and the Director of Survey to produce their surveyors
so that together with our surveyors, the land is resurveyed,” Mr
Gkaliamoutsas said.
The company had earlier objected
the re-survey to establish the truth after the association claimed Del
Monte controls 9,000 acres of land.
Of the 9000 acres,
the Phillip Kamau-led association claimed, 7,400 acres had been
surrendered to the national government in 1974 only for the company to
re-acquire the property “in mysterious circumstances”.
Mr
Gkaliamoutsas who spoke for the first time since the company started
facing criticism said they are opposed to the National Land Commission
recommendations to set aside a suitable amount of land to be held in
trust by the county governments for the purposes of resettlement and
public utilities.
Murang’a Governor Mwangi wa Iria has been demanding 3,000 acres to develop a city on the Thika-Kabati highway.
But the MD has objected saying this would interfere with the firm’s main operations.
“The
area where leaders want land ceded holds the pipeline for the
irrigation water and that’s where we do our main pineapple farming,” he
said.
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