Jubilee Party Secretary-General Raphael Tuju during a media briefing at
his office in Nairobi on July 2, 2018. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION
MEDIA GROUP
The East African Development
Bank (EADB) has moved to the High Court to enforce an order by a UK
judge for the lender to recover Sh1.5 billion from Jubilee Party
secretary-general Raphael Tuju.
Appearing
before Justice Wilfrida Okwany on Monday, the bank, through lawyer
Githu Muigai, said it was apprehensive about failure to recover the
money.
Prof Muigai
noted they had learned that Mr Tuju and his company, Dari Limited, were
in the process of subdividing and constructing houses on two parcels of
land, which were used as security to secure the loan.
In
an affidavit filed by Mr Ronald Makokha, the regional lender says Mr
Tuju could be developing the 20-acre parcel in Karen with a view to
dispossessing the property, yet the titles have been charged to the
lender.
“The applicant
is therefore apprehensive that the respondent’s actions are intended to
frustrate the chances of recovery by the applicant upon the registration
and enforcement of the judgement,” Mr Makokha said in an affidavit.
BREACH
Prof Muigai told Justice Okwany
that Mr Tuju and his company lost the suit in the UK court and that in
his view, they have satisfied the requirement for the judgement by High
Court Deputy Judge, Mr Daniel Toledano, QC on June 19, 2019.
In
the matter, the bank accuses Dari of defaulting in repayment of a loan
of $9.3 million (Sh943.9 million) granted to the company in 2015,
thereby breaching the obligation under the said agreement.
Court
documents show the restaurant entered into an agreement with the bank
on April 10, 2015, under which it agreed to give Dari the loan.
The
bank says it issued a demand for the immediate repayment of the loan
after getting the judgement in UK but that the company has failed to
honour it.
DEFENCE
Mr
Tuju accuses EADB of disbursing Sh932.7 million instead of the agreed
Sh943.9 million, and added that the bank reneged on the plan to offer
Sh294 million for building the luxury homes for sale.
“EADB
is fully aware that in the absence of the development of the housing
units for sale as envisaged in the project proposal, Dari will not be
able to service the loan facility,” he added.
He
also accuses EADB of stopping KCB Group from taking over the loan and
derailing equity investments in the deal by Dubai investors.
“The
defendant is frustrating the plaintiff’s efforts to secure alternative
funding, thereby clogging the plaintiffs right to redeem the facility,”
he said.
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