Tag: bribery

  • How A Fake Power Broker Scammed Ex-KRA Manager Sh63M For KURA Chair Job

    How A Fake Power Broker Scammed Ex-KRA Manager Sh63M For KURA Chair Job

    When George Musembi Muia retired from the Kenya Revenue Authority in 2022, he had spent decades in government service and imagined the next chapter of his life would be a comfortable one. Perhaps a board chairmanship at one of the country’s better-paying parastatals. A prestigious exit. The kind of post that rewards a man for years of institutional loyalty. What he got instead was the most expensive lesson of his life, and a High Court case he cannot escape.

    Musembi, a former senior manager at KRA, is now before the Nairobi High Court fighting to recover Sh63 million he claims was swindled from him by a man he describes as a consummate fraud.

    The man in question is one Cosmas Mutati Nzoka, whom Musembi says presented himself as a well-oiled insider with direct access to the innermost rings of the Kenya Kwanza administration.

    Names like that of Farouk Kibet, President William Ruto’s powerful personal assistant, Head of Public Service Felix Koskei, then-Transport Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen and the feared Kapsaret MP Oscar Sudi were allegedly dropped into conversation with the casual ease of someone who actually knew them.

    Musembi did not know any of those men personally. He had never moved in those circles. But he wanted to, badly enough that he would wire millions in cash, hand over dollar-stuffed brown envelopes inside a grey Mercedes-Benz at Muthaiga Square, and keep paying even as the promised appointment failed to materialise. His account before the court reads, as one observer put it, less like a civil case and more like the plot of a financial thriller.

    The Introduction

    The saga began, according to court documents, in late 2023, seeded by a seemingly ordinary connection. While still working at KRA before his retirement, Musembi had come to know a man called David Muema, a clearing agent who operated at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. It was Muema who served as the critical bridge, the man who introduced the retired revenue official to Mutati and gave the introduction the kind of credibility only a trusted mutual contact can provide.

    Muema, Musembi told the court, vouched for Mutati as a well-connected businessman who moved freely through the corridors of government big offices. More specifically, Muema allegedly told him that Mutati could deliver a board chairmanship position at one of the parastatals falling under the then Ministry of Transport and Roads. The position Musembi had his sights set on was the chairmanship of the Kenya Urban Roads Authority, KURA, a body responsible for the development, maintenance and management of urban road networks across the country. The seat, according to Musembi, was vacant at the time.

    The Meeting at a Thika Road Hotel

    The first meeting between Musembi and Mutati was arranged for December 2023, at a hotel on Thika Road at 7pm. It was the kind of hour and venue where deals are discussed without too many witnesses. By Musembi’s account, Mutati arrived brimming with names. He spoke of then-Transport CS Kipchumba Murkomen, whom he claimed to have access to, and through Murkomen he allegedly said he could reach Felix Koskei, the Head of Public Service and President Ruto’s Chief of Staff, the most powerful civil servant in the country. He also invoked Farouk Kibet, the personal assistant to the President whose influence within State House has become the stuff of political legend.

    The name-dropping did not stop there. Mutati allegedly threw Oscar Sudi’s name into the mix as well. Sudi, the Kapsaret MP, is widely regarded as one of President Ruto’s most politically connected and feared allies, a man whose proximity to the presidency was, by his own design and public perception, near absolute.

    Politicians and commentators had long described the Sudi-Farouk axis as the informal gateway to the head of state. For a retiree hunting a parastatal chair with no obvious political connections, Mutati’s name-dropping must have felt like striking gold.

    Musembi told the court exactly what he felt in that moment. “When the defendant dropped those big names I felt like I was dealing with the right team to assist me secure the appointment as board chair of KURA since the defendant kept promising me it was easy as long as I was ready to comply with their demands,” he stated in his testimony.

    Cash in Dollars, Delivered in Envelopes

    The cash demands began almost immediately. On December 21, 2023, just weeks after the first meeting, Mutati allegedly asked for Sh3 million, which he said needed to be handed to Koskei personally as a facilitation fee for the appointment.

    Musembi, by his own admission, complied without hesitation. He withdrew the funds, converted them into US dollars in denominations of 100, counting out 191 notes in total, packaged them into a brown envelope and drove to Muthaiga Square to make the delivery.

    The scene at Muthaiga Square was, by Musembi’s account, almost cinematic in its understated audacity. “I found the defendant waiting alone in a car, a Mercedes-Benz grey in colour. The defendant took the money in form of dollars and promised me that he was to deliver the money to Felix Koskei the same day,” Musembi told the court. The following day, December 23, 2023, Mutati allegedly returned with an update. The delivery had been made, he said. Koskei had received the funds.

    But a new complication had apparently emerged. Koskei, Mutati allegedly told Musembi, did not work alone.

    The appointment required sign-off from Murkomen, Sudi and Farouk as well. Each of them, Mutati allegedly said, wanted a cut.

    The figure he named was Sh5 million for the trio.

    Musembi’s testimony lays bare just how completely the fraud had trapped him by this point. “Because I had legitimate expectations to become the board chair of KURA, I did not want to delay because the defendant was pushing me so much to give out the money so that I do not miss the chance. I mobilised the money as soon as the defendant wanted and handed over the money to the defendant in cash,” he told the court.

    The Borrowing Spree and the DCI

    With the initial instalments paid and the appointment still not forthcoming, the demands continued to multiply. Mutati allegedly pivoted to a new story entirely, telling Musembi that he was also chasing a Sh3 billion contract with the Kenya National Highways Authority for road construction.

    He needed another Sh3 million for facilitation costs, Mutati said, promising it would all be repaid. The pattern, which courts elsewhere have seen in confidence fraud cases, was classic: each payment was justified by a plausible new development, and each new development required another payment.

    By the time the total losses crystallised at Sh63 million, Musembi had finally turned to the Directorate of Criminal Investigations.

    The DCI, according to court documents, managed to trace Mutati, and he was subsequently arraigned at Kibera Law Courts on criminal charges arising from the matter. But even that development did not close the saga. The civil suit in the High Court runs parallel to the criminal proceedings, and Musembi has had to navigate both simultaneously.

    In a twist that has added a remarkable layer to the proceedings, Mutati has not simply denied the allegations. He has gone on the offensive. According to documents before the court, Mutati turned the tables entirely, claiming that it was in fact Musembi who owed him money.

    Specifically, Mutati allegedly sent a counter-demand through his lawyers claiming that Musembi had borrowed Sh47 million from him and had yet to repay it in full. The demand was sent to Musembi’s lawyers, instructing them to ensure their client settled the debt.

    The Architecture of the Scam

    What the Musembi case lays bare is not just the audacity of the accused but a structural vulnerability in how Kenyans seeking state appointments perceive the route to power.

    Farouk Kibet has for years been publicly described, even by senior Kenya Kwanza politicians, as the de facto gatekeeper to President Ruto.

    Murkomen himself, before his elevation to cabinet, publicly praised Farouk as an indispensable figure, noting that accessing the President required clearing with his personal assistant first.

    Oscar Sudi has cultivated a similar reputation as a political fixer whose endorsement carries real weight. Felix Koskei, as Head of Public Service, holds formal authority over the apparatus through which state appointments flow.

    None of those named have been accused of any wrongdoing in this matter. There is no suggestion in the case that any of them received a single shilling of the money Musembi paid.

    What Mutati allegedly did was exploit the public mythology that surrounds these figures, their proximity to power, their informal influence, the general belief that appointments in Kenya do not happen through merit alone.

    He weaponised reputation, not relationship.

    The Musembi case is not an isolated phenomenon. Kenya has in recent years seen a proliferation of what investigators call appointment brokers, individuals who market their alleged connections to the presidency or key government offices and collect fees from desperate job-seekers willing to pay almost any amount for a foothold in the state.

    The Directorate of Criminal Investigations has handled multiple such cases, though few have involved sums as large as what Musembi claims to have lost.

    A Retiree’s Expensive Dream

    There is a painful human story beneath the legal arguments. Musembi is a man who spent his working life in public service, retiring from the KRA, one of the country’s more technically demanding revenue agencies.

    He was not an obvious mark. He was not naive. He simply wanted something that many retired public servants want, a recognition of his years of service in the form of a prestigious board appointment, and he believed, as many do, that such appointments require navigating informal channels rather than official ones.

    That belief, it appears, cost him Sh63 million and his peace of mind. He is now crisscrossing Nairobi’s courts, pursuing a man who has flipped the narrative and is demanding money back.

    The KURA chairmanship, meanwhile, has long since been filled through other channels. The seat that was supposed to be his remains, for him, permanently out of reach.

    The case continues before the High Court in Nairobi.

  • Businessman Accuses Justice Ombwayo of Soliciting Bribes in Land Case, Provides M-Pesa Records as Evidence

    Businessman Accuses Justice Ombwayo of Soliciting Bribes in Land Case, Provides M-Pesa Records as Evidence

    A Nakuru businessman has filed a formal petition with the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) alleging that a High Court judge solicited bribes in connection with an ongoing land dispute case, providing mobile money transaction records as evidence.

    According to documents received by the JSC on April 7, 2025, Juma Okumu has filed petition number JSC 49/2025 seeking the recusal of Justice Anthony O. Ombwayo from an Environment and Land Court case in Nakuru.

    In his sworn affidavit, Okumu claims that on June 21, 2023, Justice Ombwayo made phone calls using a mobile number (0762458130) to a litigant or their representative, requesting Ksh. 300,000.

    The affidavit alleges the judge instructed the litigant through an intermediary, identified as Mr. Kariuki, to transfer funds to two separate mobile numbers.

    Okumu states he obtained M-Pesa statements showing that Ksh. 200,000 was sent to a Safaricom number (0790234852) registered to Violet Mumia, and Ksh. 100,000 to another Safaricom till number (921088) registered to Omutanyi Esther 3.

    “I am aware that Violet Mumia is a close relative to the Judge,” Okumu declares in his affidavit reviewed by Kenya Insights.

    “I am further aware that [the] mobile number 0790234852 is registered in her name – Violet Mumia, the same has at all times material to the instant application for recusal been under use and control of another very close relative to the Judge.”

    The petition involves two related cases: Nakuru ELC Case No. E033 of 2023 (Omar Mohamed Omar & Another v. Joshua Kulei & 5 Others) and Nakuru ELC E011 of 2024 (Juma Okumu v. Agricultural Development Corporation & 7 Others).

    The Judicial Service Commission has acknowledged receipt of the petition in a letter signed by Acting Registrar Isaac J. M. Wamaasa, stating it “is being processed in accordance with the law and the progress/decision of the Commission on the Petition shall be communicated to you.”

    Okumu argues that Justice Ombwayo should have disclosed alleged dealings with parties in the case, claiming “millions of shillings have been collected by him in connection with the above dispute to subvert justice.”

    The businessman’s affidavit invokes the judicial principle that “justice must not only be done but must be seen to have been done,” as grounds for requesting the judge’s recusal.

    The petition is being handled by Keaton & Keaton Advocates, based in Nairobi.

    The JSC has assigned reference number JSC Petition No. 49/2025 to the case.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

  • Shocking Revelation: Nelson Havi Claims CJ Koome and Top Judges Took Sh4B Bribe from Uhuru

    Shocking Revelation: Nelson Havi Claims CJ Koome and Top Judges Took Sh4B Bribe from Uhuru

    Former LSK President Alleges Widespread Corruption in Kenya’s Supreme Court

    Former Law Society of Kenya (LSK) President Nelson Havi has intensified his campaign against the Supreme Court of Kenya, alleging that judges were bribed with over Sh4 billion by former President Uhuru Kenyatta.

    In a bold statement on Sunday, Havi claimed that Chief Justice Martha Koome and three other Supreme Court judges received Sh4 billion in bribes.

    “We need to go live on X to expose how the bribe was given to Koome and Njoki by a Jubilee operative, to Wanjala by a Nyanza MP, and to another judge by a governor. Let the four disgraced judges return the Sh4 billion they took from Uhuru Kenyatta. That was unjust enrichment,” Havi posted, tagging fellow lawyer Ahmednasir Abdullahi. Both lawyers have been vocal critics of the country’s top court.

    Havi’s allegations of judicial corruption did not stop there. He further claimed that Sh300 million was “disbursed” as a bribe in a case where Geo Chem Middle East Limited was awarded Sh2.3 billion on December 18, 2020, against the Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs) for breach of contract.

    According to Havi, the bribery tip came from a judge who was not part of the bench hearing the case.

    “A Supreme Court judge who did not sit on this bench has confirmed to us that Sh300 million was disbursed for the assignment on Kenya Bureau of Standards. That is why the judges who went to court do not want the other judge to spill the beans on them,” he posted.

    The award was reinstated by Justices Philomena Mwilu, Mohamed Ibrahim, Smokin Wanjala, Njoki Ndung’u, and Isaac Lenaola on December 18, 2020.

    Ahmednasir’s Claims of Bribery in the Supreme Court

    Ahmednasir Abdullahi has also made explosive claims of corruption in the Supreme Court. In a suit filed before the East African Court of Justice, where he is challenging a ban imposed on him by the Kenyan Supreme Court, Abdullahi has lifted the lid on alleged widespread corruption in the apex court.

    In his suit, Abdullahi argues that the Supreme Court unlawfully denied him an audience based on a “judge-made offense” intended to silence his public criticism of corruption in the judiciary. He also claims that the ban was imposed following an exchange of WhatsApp messages among members of the Supreme Court bench.

    Abdullahi is seeking Sh200 million in legal fees from taxpayers, which he claims he would have earned from cases he was hired to handle but were stalled due to the ban.

    How Supreme Court Judges Were Allegedly Bribed

    Supreme Court judges (from left) Isaac Lenaola, Dr Smokin Wanjala, Philomena Mwilu, Chief Justice Martha Koome, Mohamed Ibrahim, Njoki Ndung’u and William Ouko.

    The most striking part of Abdullahi’s petition is his detailed account of how judges were allegedly bribed to influence the outcome of the 2022 presidential petition.

    In the court documents seen by Kenya Insights, Abdullahi claims that four out of the seven Supreme Court judges were paid between $1.5 million and $2 million (Sh200 million to Sh266 million) each to overturn William Ruto’s election victory, which had been challenged by Raila Odinga. However, the judges were unable to influence the verdict, which upheld Ruto’s win on September 5, 2022.

    Abdullahi provides a blow-by-blow account of how the bribes were allegedly delivered:
    Judge A accepted a bribe delivered at their Nairobi home by a powerful politician.
    Judge B accepted bribes from three individuals: the son of a deceased leader, a retired governor, and an influential businesswoman.
    Judge C took a bribe from a member of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) who later left the service.
    Judge D accepted a bribe from a member of Parliament. Initially, Judge D wanted the bribe to be given to their wife but later changed their mind.

    Historical Corruption Allegations

    Lawyer Ahmednasir’s Abdulahi.

    Abdullahi also referenced past corruption scandals involving Supreme Court judges as part of his evidence. He cited the case of Justice Phillip Tunoi, who was accused of taking a $2 million bribe to influence an election petition. Tunoi was found guilty and dismissed by former President Uhuru Kenyatta.

    He also mentioned the Panama Papers, which alleged that Justice Kalpana Rawal, Kenya’s second Deputy Chief Justice, and her husband operated offshore companies in the Caribbean, a notorious tax haven. The offshore companies were reportedly used to sell properties in the UK worth millions of shillings.

    Abdullahi further highlighted an incident where the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) recommended an investigation into Justice Jackton Ojwang over allegations that he received favors from then-Migori Governor Okoth Obado in exchange for influencing a case. However, a tribunal led by Justice Visram cleared Ojwang of misconduct.

    Additionally, Abdullahi referenced a petition filed at the JSC by Jared Ongeri, seeking the removal of Justices Mohammed Ibrahim, Jackton Ojwang, Smokin Wanjala, and Njoki Ndung’u for allegedly taking bribes to influence the outcome of the Wajir Governor election petition.

    He also mentioned the case of Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu, who was arrested and charged with corruption and economic crimes, including tax evasion and abuse of office. Although the charges were upheld in a constitutional reference, her prosecution was quashed after a court ruled that her privacy was violated during the evidence-gathering process.

    Supreme Court Judges Fight to Keep Their Jobs

    Amid the bribery accusations, Supreme Court judges are fighting to retain their positions as the JSC considers petitions for their removal. The JSC is set to reconvene on Tuesday, with the proposed removal of seven Supreme Court judges, including Chief Justice Martha Koome, topping the agenda.

    The meeting will be chaired by the Commission’s vice-chairperson, Isaac Rutto, and attended by nine members. However, CJ Koome and Justice Mohammed Ibrahim, who are among the defendants in the ouster petitions, will not attend.

    Last Friday, CJ Koome led the judges in suing the JSC, rejecting the disciplinary proceedings and warning of a looming constitutional crisis if the judges are suspended. She argued that only the Supreme Court has the jurisdiction to determine the validity of presidential elections, state emergencies, and the removal of judges.

    “No other person or authority is authorized to carry out the constitutional functions specifically designated to the Supreme Court. Suspending the judges would deprive Kenyans of their fundamental rights,” Koome stated in court filings.

    The complaints against the judges were filed by former Cabinet Minister Raphael Tuju’s Dari Limited and lawyers Nelson Havi and Christopher Rosana, alleging misconduct, misbehavior, and incompetence.

    Lawyer Nelson Havi.

    While Tuju’s complaint involves a commercial dispute with the East African Development Bank, Havi and Rosana’s complaints stem from the Supreme Court’s decision to ban lawyer Ahmednasir Abdullahi over his social media posts criticizing the judiciary.

    The judges were expected to respond to the complaints by February 24, 2025, but instead sought conservatory orders to halt the proceedings. Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu also filed a preliminary objection, contesting the JSC’s authority to entertain the petitions.

    Interestingly, Havi previously represented Mwilu in a separate case where she faced allegations of misconduct related to dealings with a bank. She was later cleared by the court.

    As the battle between the judiciary and its critics intensifies, Kenya faces a potential constitutional crisis, with the integrity of its highest court hanging in the balance.

  • Trump Signs Order To Pause Enforcement Of Foreign Bribery Law

    Trump Signs Order To Pause Enforcement Of Foreign Bribery Law

    US President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Monday, instructing the Justice Department to pause the enforcement of a law that bans US companies and foreign businesses from bribing foreign officials to secure business deals.

    The order directs Attorney General Pam Bondi to suspend prosecutions under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) until new guidelines are prepared.

    According to a White House factsheet, US companies are “harmed by FCPA over-enforcement because they are prohibited from engaging in practices common among international competitors, creating an uneven playing field.”

    The FCPA, passed in 1977, bans Americans and certain foreign companies from bribing foreign officials. In 1998, it was expanded to include foreign entities involved in bribery in the US.

    “It sounds good, but it hurts the country,” Trump said of the FCPA, as he signed the executive order at the White House.

    Trump stated that US anti-corruption laws are blocking deals because businesses “don’t want to feel like every time they pick up the phone, they’re going to jail.”

  • Revealed: Sakaja And His People Demanded For Sh845M Bribe To Approve Lawyer’s Payment

    Revealed: Sakaja And His People Demanded For Sh845M Bribe To Approve Lawyer’s Payment

    City lawyer Donald Kipkorir (DBK) has come out to reveal that Nairobi County Assembly Committee members and Governor Johnson Sakaja had demanded a huge chunk of bribe to approve his pending debts.

    DBK says he was approached to cut a deal to have his payments first tracked. Nairobi County owes the lawyer over Sh1.69 billion in legal fees pending since 2022.

    He recently won a case and had instructed auctioneers last month to seize assets belonging to the Nairobi County government to cover his debts.

    However, there has been a strategic delay in settling the debt and now it appears it was aimed at boxing him into cutting a deal.

    DBK claims that last month, Nairobi County Assembly Budget Committee together with Governor Sakaja Johnson were in Naivasha preparing the County’s Supplementary Budget and that it was here that they coined a deal to extort him.

    He goes further to say they had demanded for a Sh845 million bribe from the Sh1.69 B that the county owes him.

    “They called me that they want to approve all my payments if I give them 50% of the sums I am owed.” He says.

    He turned out the deal, he says, “I told them, my fees are in accordance with The Advocates (Remuneration) Order & decreed by Court & I won’t pay a bribe. Nairobi City under the Governor pay Bills, Invoices & Court Decrees to those that pay a bribe of 50%.”

    His latest revelation doesn’t come as a surprise, earlier this month, he had hinted on the schemes before finally laying it all bare, “I have been advised that City Hall top officials have vowed they will frustrate my judgments against them through all subterfuge methods. That doesn’t bother me. What bothers me is that Public Officials have weaponized their offices.” DBK had posted on X earlier.

    DBK instructed Garam Investment Auctioneers on March 27, 2024 to seize valuables, office equipment, computers, furniture and cars to satisfy the debt. This followed the High Court Judge Nixon Sifuna decision that quashed section 13A and 21 of the Government Proceedings Act, opening the door for litigants to attach government properties or bank accounts to recover their debts.

    While quashing the laws, Justice Sifuna termed the sections colonial relics that have no place in modern society and were only meant to frustrate rather than facilitate the processing and expeditious disposal of cases.

    However, DBK alleged a plot by City Hall to overturn the decision, “The ruling by Sifuna allowing attachment of County Government property has unnerved City Hall & upended their nefarious schemes. Because, you can now attach, there is no excuse for City Hall to blackmail for payments to be done. Now City Hall wants to fund the ruling of Justice Sifuna to be overturned in the Court of Appeal. Nairobi City County is truly rotten at all levels. It is irredeemable.” He said on April 4, 2024.

    Blackmail and extortion

    DBK says he has been in business with the Nairobi Government since 1998 and it was until 2012 when blackmail and extortion took precedence.

    “Since devolution in 2013, payment of legal fees & bills for provision of other services like construction et al became subject to surrender of your payments to City Hall apparatchiks. I refused to pay & City Hall stopped giving me work or paying my outstanding legal fees. In the current County Government, to be paid legal fees, you must pay City Hall officials to the highest level 50% of your legitimate fees. Contractors pay upto 40%. Again, I declined to pay them.” He said.

    Law firms like Kwanga Mboya and Company Advocates have found themselves being at the center of accusations of playing to the dirty tricks of City Hall. In a complaint against them on Nyakundi blog, the firm is claimed to be getting payments instantly while others are kept in waiting.

    Most corrupt leadership

    The lawyer has described the Nairobi County’s leadership as the most corrupt and called on President William Ruto to dissolve the county assembly and expel Sakaja from UDA party.

    “Nairobi City under Sakaja Johnson will go down as the MOST CORRUPT LEADERSHIP in Kenya’s History with a County Assembly that is completely beholden to him. It is time President William Ruto dissolves both the County Assembly & expels Sakaja from UDA and EACC should arrest Nairobi County leadership of both the Executive & the County Assembly.” Said the lawyer.

    Governor Johnson Sakaja during a meeting with City MCAs where he declared his candidature for the Nairobi UDA chairmanship on April 19, 2024. Image: JOHNSON SAKAJA
    Governor Johnson Sakaja during a meeting with City MCAs where he declared his candidature for the Nairobi UDA chairmanship on April 19, 2024.
    Image: JOHNSON SAKAJA

    History of Sh1.69 billion debt owed to Kipkorir

    DBK was awarded one of the highest legal fees in the country’s litigation history for defending the county government against the Ministry of Defence over a parcel of land where Embakasi Barracks sits. The Environment and Land court in 2022 ruled that Mr Kipkorir should be paid Sh1.338 billion for representing the defunct city council in a case that was in court for close to 10 years over the 3,000-acre land valued at Sh61.5 billion. The amount has since increased to Sh1.69 on account of interest.

    DBK acted for the defunct city council when its land was forcibly taken by the Kenya Defence Forces, triggering the court case in 2012 but the matter was later withdrawn to allow for the case to be settled through inter-governmental relations.

    Most incompetent

    Elsewhere, a section of Nairobi County leaders have slammed Nairobi Governor Johnson Sakaja accusing his administration of being the “most incompetent and morally degenerate” county government.

    In a strongly-worded statement, the leaders led by Dagoretti South MP John Kiarie accused Sakaja’s administration of contributing to Nairobi County’s deteriorating state.

    They pointed out issues such as widespread sewerage problems, garbage mountains in residential areas, water shortages amidst flooding, and poorly planned high-rise constructions.

    “It is our observation that Nairobi could be facing its worst leadership crisis at City Hall in the capital’s history. The dream that was sold during the campaigns of a city of order, dignity, hope and opportunity has turned into a nightmare. Nairobi is becoming clamped in an ever-tightening chokehold of an arrogant and dangerously corrupt leadership,” said Kiarie.

    Citing a recent Auditor General report, Kiarie further accused Sakaja’s administration of gross financial mismanagement, including payments to ghost workers and selective payment of bills for kickbacks.

    “In a shocking revelation last year, a junior officer wielding authority directly granted by the Governor, clandestinely approved over 600 building plans against the Physical Land Planning Act which stipulates that the County Chief Officer is responsible for approving building plans,” he said.

    “That would explain the ‘kiudutho’ development and the unplanned highrise buildings that are mushrooming and cropping up in every corner of Nairobi. Such cases of abuse of power only give a preview of the rot house that is the Nairobi City County.”

    Kiarie further condemned the acquisition of luxury assets by top Nairobi County officials, describing it as a disregard for public welfare.

    “Never before has Nairobi ever been pilfered so brazenly and with so much display of juvenile bravado, intimidation, exclusion and undermining of those who they are not able to pay with their looted billions,” he said.

    “Pitting leaders against each other and sponsoring squabbles has become the expensive hobby of the Governor and his court of loyalists.”

  • Firm Linked To Israeli Tycoon Shari Arison Entangled In A Web Of Corruption In Kenya

    Firm Linked To Israeli Tycoon Shari Arison Entangled In A Web Of Corruption In Kenya

    In the shadowy world of tendering processes, where big money is at stake, clandestine dealings often lurk beneath the surface, hidden by a web of deception.

    Such was the case in Kenya, where a web of corrupt dealings involving Israel’s largest construction firm, Shikun & Binui Ltd., and state officials was woven to win local tenders.

    According to the police, Shikun & Binui Ltd., previously owned by billionaire Shari Arison – Israel’s richest woman, engaged in a Sh15 billion bribery scheme to secure road contracts worth billions of shillings by bribing Kenyan officials.

    In May 2019, the Lahav 443 Unit, which deals with fraud investigations, stated that after a year-long investigation they had gathered sufficient evidence of wrongdoing to recommend prosecution on bribery charges against the company and Ms Arison.

    “There is substantial evidence against Shikun & Binui Company Ltd. and against a number of senior employees,” a police statement said.

    The company is said to have paid the bribes directly or through other companies, including AG SBI, a Swiss private company owned by Shikun & Binui Ltd.

    The police suspected that between 2008 and 2016, the company paid bribes to foreign public employees in Africa in an organized fashion, to increase its profits.

    Seized documents

    The investigation began in February 2018.

    Several senior employees of Shikun & Binui, including those who had left the company, were detained while the police searched offices, and seized documents and computer materials.

    The police noted that the investigation was extensive and complex and involved hundreds of investigative activities in Israel and around the world.

    A total of 50 suspects were questioned, and the testimonies of 34 witnesses were taken.

    Parallel to the investigation, Kenya’s anti-corruption authority and the Israeli police conducted two investigations, which culminated with the arrests of 19 Kenyan public workers.

    Ms Arison, who sold her controlling stake in Shikun & Binui in 2018, underwent nine hours of police questioning regarding her involvement in the scheme.

    She and one of her senior advisers were prohibited from leaving Israel or contacting anyone connected to the investigation.

    The interrogation came just two months after Ms Arison sold her stake to US-Israeli real estate investor Naty Saidoff for $307 million – a price 14% lower than the stock value, which analysts attributed to the bribery suspicions.

    The billionaire, however, stated that the sale aimed to diversify investments.

    Shares of Shikun & Binui declined 23% in the 12 months before the sale as the company contended with the bribery investigation.

    Millions of shekels

    According to the evidence collected, in Kenya alone, where the investigation focused, bribes totalling tens of millions of shekels were paid.

    After the investigation, the police found evidence implicating several workers in bribery, falsification of corporate documents, conspiracy to commit a crime, obstruction of legal proceedings, money laundering, and misleading reporting under the Securities Law.

    The investigation file was then forwarded to the State Attorney’s Office for review.

    After more than two years, in November 2021, the State Attorney decided not to indict Ms Arison in the bribery affair, stating that there was no evidence that she was aware of such bribery offences being committed by her company officials.

    Shikun & Binui and its executives were, however, found guilty of the offences.

    Subsequently, it was reported that the company was engaged in advanced talks with the State Attorney’s office to negotiate a deal regarding the offences.

    Under the deal, Shikun & Binui was to pay a huge fine on condition that the bribery charges were withdrawn. Sources indicated the fine would amount to a record $54 million.

    No further details of the case were ever disclosed.