The Star Late Edition

Railway, land agency heads face fraud rap

- Humphrey Malalo

A KENYAN court yesterday charged the heads of the agency that manages public land and of the state railway with fraud over land allocation for a new $3 billion (R43bn) train line linking the capital with East Africa’s biggest port.

The line between Nairobi and Mombasa, funded by China, is one of the biggest infrastruc­ture projects of President Uhuru Kenyatta, whose government this year embarked on an anti-graft drive.

Mohammed Abdalla Swazuri, the chairperso­n of the National Land Commission; Atanas Kariuki Maina, managing director of the Kenya Railways Corporatio­n; and 16 other businesspe­ople and companies pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Court documents said fraud had led to loss of public funds amounting to 221.4 million shillings (R30 million).

Public prosecutor Noordin Haji ordered the arrests after investigat­ions suggested that officials had siphoned taxpayers’ money through phoney compensati­on claims for land used for the railway.

The land and rail bosses appeared before Anti-Corruption Court chief magistrate Lawrence Mugambi.

Kenya has been hit this year by a series of scandals related to the alleged theft of hundreds of millions of shillings by officials from government bodies.

Kenya launched the more than $3bn railway last year.

The prosecutor’s office said on Saturday no Chinese companies or individual­s were named in the case.

Opposition leaders and Kenyan economists have criticised the railway’s funding for increasing the country’s debt burden, which the IMF estimated at between 54-55 percent of economic output (GDP) in the 2017-18 fiscal year. – Reuters

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