Tag: Fernandes Barasa

  • Questions As KETRACO Deletes Details of Sh24 Billion Deal To Power SGR Trains That Never Was

    Questions As KETRACO Deletes Details of Sh24 Billion Deal To Power SGR Trains That Never Was

    In what appears to be a desperate attempt to erase the evidence of yet another white elephant project, the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company Limited has quietly deleted key pages from its website detailing the Sh24.2 billion contract meant to electrify Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway.

    The vanished webpage, which once proudly announced the January 2018 signing of a $240 million deal with China Electric Power Equipment and Technology Company Limited, promised that electric trains would be running on the Mombasa-Nairobi line by 2021.

    Screenshot of the deleted page.

    It is now 2026, and the SGR still chugs along on expensive diesel, belching fumes and burning through operational costs that were supposed to have been slashed by cleaner, cheaper electricity.

    The deletion raises uncomfortable questions about transparency and accountability at KETRACO, coming at a time when Auditor General Nancy Gathungu has exposed a staggering Sh4 billion in unpaid compensation to landowners whose properties were acquired for various transmission projects across the country.

    The SGR electrification project appears to have joined a long list of ambitious infrastructure promises that evaporated into thin air, taking billions of taxpayer shillings with them.

    THE GRAND PROMISE

    When then KETRACO Managing Director Fernandes Barasa put pen to paper on that January morning in 2018, the mood was celebratory.

    Government officials and Chinese contractors posed for photographs, marking what was hailed as a major step toward modernizing Kenya’s flagship infrastructure project.

    The contract stipulated construction of 14 substations along the 472-kilometer stretch between the port city and the capital, with completion expected within 28 months.

    Barasa, writing in a local daily at the time, painted an ambitious picture of the project’s transformative potential.

    He spoke of zero carbon emissions through geothermal-powered transmission lines, of faster trains, of economic corridors blooming along the railway line, of cheaper transport costs for the common mwananchi. The article read more like a manifesto than a sober technical assessment of the project’s viability.

    But skeptics existed even then. Kenya Railways Corporation Managing Director Atanas Maina had publicly expressed doubts about the country’s capacity to sustain an electric railway, citing unreliable power supply and lack of financing. His warnings, dismissed at the time as pessimism, would prove prescient.

    THE MAN AT THE CENTRE

    Fernandes Barasa’s tenure at KETRACO has been nothing if not controversial.

    Fernandes Barasa
    Fernandes Barasa

    The current Kakamega Governor, who resigned from the transmission company in February 2022 just before appearing before Parliament’s Public Investment Committee, left behind a trail of questionable deals and unexplained losses.

    The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission has repeatedly summoned him to answer for the Sh18 billion lost to penalties in the Lake Turkana Wind Power project, where delays in completing transmission lines cost taxpayers dearly.

    He spent two marathon days at EACC headquarters in November 2022, grilled for over 12 hours each day about suspected fraudulent transactions and mismanagement during his watch.

    Then there was the Sh785 million in excess payments to Lake Turkana Wind Power that Parliament wanted explained.

    And mysterious payments to wrong accounts that nobody seemed able to trace. Barasa resigned strategically, citing constitutional requirements for public servants seeking elective office, but many saw it as a convenient escape from accountability.

    Now add to this litany the ghost of the SGR electrification project, a Sh24.2 billion contract that produced nothing except deleted web pages and unanswered questions.

    THE CURIOUS CLARIFICATION

    In what reads like an admission of deception, KETRACO issued a curious “clarification” shortly after the initial euphoria of the 2018 contract signing.

    The agency quietly revealed that what had been trumpeted as a done deal was merely a commercial contract, not a financing agreement.

    The contract would only become effective after the National Treasury signed a financing agreement with prospective lenders.

    That financing agreement, it turns out, never materialized.

    “KETRACO has not borrowed any loan for the electrification of the SGR Project,” the agency admitted in its damage control statement. This was a far cry from the triumphant tones of Barasa’s opinion piece that had celebrated the project as if trains were about to start running on electricity the next day.

    The question that nobody at KETRACO wants to answer is simple but devastating.

    Why announce a Sh24.2 billion contract with such fanfare if the money to implement it did not exist? Was this a calculated deception meant to burnish the agency’s image, or was it incompetence of breathtaking proportions?

    COMPARATIVE EMBARRASSMENT

    The failure of Kenya’s SGR electrification looks even more embarrassing when compared to regional peers. Ethiopia built a 750-kilometer electric railway line from Addis Ababa to Djibouti at a cost of $3.4 billion and completed it in 2016. Morocco’s high-speed rail, Africa’s first, connects Tangier and Casablanca at speeds of up to 320 kilometers per hour and has been operational since 2018.

    Even Tanzania, often dismissed as playing catch-up to Kenya’s economy, is planning its SGR with electrification built into the original design.

    Meanwhile, Uganda’s planned electric SGR threatens to create an operational nightmare for Kenya. As things stand, Kenya’s diesel locomotives would not be able to operate seamlessly in Ugandan territory if Kampala proceeds with its electric standard.

    The integration problems this creates could effectively lock Kenya out of the very regional connectivity that the SGR was meant to facilitate.

    Kenya spent a staggering Sh447 billion on a 472-kilometer diesel railway while Ethiopia spent Sh346 billion on a 750-kilometer electric one. The mathematics of this disparity should trouble every Kenyan taxpayer.

    WHERE DID THE MONEY GO?

    The bigger question hovering over the deleted webpage is not just about a failed electrification project.

    It is about the entire ecosystem of inflated contracts, dubious procurement processes, and vanishing funds that has characterized Kenya’s infrastructure development under Chinese financing.

    KETRACO’s own contradictory statements raise red flags. If the contract signed in 2018 was merely commercial and not backed by actual financing, what were the Sh24.2 billion meant to cover? Who conducted the due diligence before the signing ceremony? Who approved the public announcement of a deal that hinged on financing that had not been secured?

    The then transport Cabinet Secretary James Macharia effectively killed the project in 2018 when he told Parliament that Kenya lacked both the guaranteed power supply and the financial capacity to support such expensive infrastructure. “We need at least 80 percent guaranteed supply to even think of upgrading SGR to an electric rail,” he said, adding that KETRACO itself lacked the equipment and expertise for the job.

    These realities were known in January 2018 when Barasa was signing contracts and writing opinion pieces.

    Yet the charade continued, with taxpayers none the wiser about the technical and financial impossibilities standing in the way of implementation.

    THE PATTERN OF DECEIT

    The deleted KETRACO webpage is not an isolated incident.

    It fits a troubling pattern of government agencies announcing grand projects, holding expensive launch ceremonies, and then quietly shelving the initiatives when public attention wanes.

    The evidence of the initial promises is scrubbed from official records, leaving citizens with no paper trail to hold anyone accountable.

    This approach thrives on short public memory and bureaucratic opacity. By the time questions start being asked, the officials responsible have moved on to other positions, or like Barasa, have ascended to elected office where they enjoy political protection from prosecution.

    The SGR itself continues to hemorrhage money. Recent reports indicate the railway made billions in losses as it struggles to attract sufficient cargo and passenger traffic to justify its existence.

    Adding the cost of diesel fuel to already bloated operational expenses only compounds the financial disaster.

    An electric railway, powered by Kenya’s abundant geothermal energy, would have addressed at least part of this problem.

    UNANSWERED QUESTIONS

    As KETRACO’s website administrators quietly hit the delete button, hoping the embarrassing history would disappear into the digital ether, several questions cry out for answers.

    Who authorized the deletion of the webpage? Was this done with the knowledge and approval of current management, or was it a rogue decision by lower-level staff trying to cover tracks? Why delete the page now, eight years after the contract was signed, unless there are new pressures or investigations that make the existence of that evidence problematic?

    What happened to the 14 substations that were supposed to be constructed? Was any preliminary work done? Were any funds disbursed to the Chinese contractor? If so, how much, and where did that money go if no substations were built?

    Where is China Electric Power Equipment and Technology Company Limited in all this? Did they attempt to hold the Kenyan government to the terms of the contract? Did they demand compensation for a contract that was signed but never implemented? Or was the entire thing understood from the beginning to be a paper exercise, a smoke-and-mirrors show to create the illusion of progress?

    THE SILENCE IS DEAFENING

    Citizen Weekly sought comment from KETRACO’s current Acting Managing Director Kipkemoi Kibias about the deleted webpage and the fate of the electrification contract.

    Eng. Kipkemoi Kibias, Acting Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer
    Eng. Kipkemoi Kibias, Acting Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer

    Our calls and emails went unanswered.

    The agency’s head of communications, Winnie Osika, who has been defending KETRACO’s record on the delayed landowner compensation, did not respond to specific questions about the SGR project.

    Fernandes Barasa, now serving as Kakamega Governor and recently confirmed as ODM county chairman, was equally unreachable for comment. His office referred us to KETRACO, saying he no longer had responsibilities for the agency’s operations.

    China Electric Power Equipment and Technology Company Limited has no public presence in Kenya beyond that 2018 signing ceremony. Their local representatives could not be traced, and the company has not issued any statement about the failed project.

    This wall of silence is its own answer. When questioned about regular operational matters, government agencies are quick to issue statements and clarifications. When the questions touch on potential scandals involving missing billions, suddenly nobody is available to speak.

    The deleted KETRACO webpage is a small detail in a much larger story about governance failure and the waste of public resources.

    It represents the gap between what government tells citizens and what actually happens. It shows how easily promises can be made, contracts signed, and money allocated, all without any intention or capacity to deliver.

    For ordinary Kenyans, the message is clear and disheartening. The SGR they were told would revolutionize transport will continue running on expensive diesel.

    The cleaner, faster, cheaper electric trains will remain a pipe dream. The Sh24.2 billion that could have gone to schools, hospitals, or roads has vanished into the black hole of abandoned projects and dubious contracts.

    Meanwhile, Barasa has moved on to bigger things, wielding political power in Kakamega while dodging corruption investigators.

    The Chinese contractors have presumably found other countries with more reliable governments to do business with. KETRACO continues announcing new projects, hoping nobody notices the graveyard of previous promises.

    The deleted webpage is gone, but the questions it raises will not disappear so easily. Kenyans deserve to know what happened to their Sh24.2 billion. They deserve accountability for the grand promises that turned out to be lies.

    They deserve an honest explanation of why, eight years later, they are still watching diesel trains crawl along tracks that were supposed to be powered by clean electricity.

    Until those answers come, the digital ghost of that deleted webpage will continue to haunt KETRACO and everyone involved in this shabby affair. You can delete the evidence, but you cannot delete the truth.

    This investigation is ongoing. Kenya Insights continues to seek responses from KETRACO, the National Treasury, and other relevant parties. Updates will be published as new information becomes available.

    SIDEBAR: THE COST OF BROKEN PROMISES

    The SGR electrification debacle is estimated to have cost Kenya:

    – Sh24.2 billion in the announced contract value

    – Undisclosed amounts in preliminary studies and consultations

    – Lost savings from continued diesel operations vs. projected electric costs

    – Environmental costs from continued carbon emissions

    – Reputational damage affecting other infrastructure projects

    – The opportunity cost of Sh24.2 billion that could have been invested elsewhere

    The human cost includes:

    – Landowners still waiting for compensation from KETRACO’s various projects

    – Citizens facing higher transport costs than projected

    – Communities along the SGR corridor denied promised development opportunities

    – Loss of public trust in government infrastructure promises

    Total damage: Incalculable, but devastating to Kenya’s development aspirations

  • Oparanya Faces Leaders’ Wrath For Claiming Raila Has Lost Western Grip

    Oparanya Faces Leaders’ Wrath For Claiming Raila Has Lost Western Grip

    KAKAMEGA – Political temperatures in Western Kenya have flared after former Kakamega Governor and current Cabinet Secretary for SMEs, Wycliffe Oparanya, declared that ODM leader Raila Odinga has lost his political sway in the region.

    Oparanya, speaking on Friday at an empowerment event hosted by Lurambi MP Titus Khamala, said Odinga’s influence in Western politics had waned and would be of little help to Governor Fernandes Barasa in his 2027 re-election bid.

    “What makes you think Raila Odinga will come and help you get votes here in Kakamega? I know Raila more than you think you know him, and he will not help you,” Oparanya said, in remarks made before National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetang’ula and several MPs.

    The statement drew immediate backlash from Governor Barasa, who accused Oparanya of undermining Odinga’s legacy despite having benefited immensely from his support.

    “With all due respect, you are the last person who should question Odinga’s influence in Western Kenya. Raila has held your hand for a very long time in your political career,” Barasa said on Saturday while addressing mourners at the burial of Mama Grace Nyona in Likuyani Constituency.

    Barasa went further, suggesting Oparanya’s cabinet appointment was secured through Odinga’s backing. “If you think he is not influential enough, then resign from the position he helped you get. If not for him, then you would not be serving in the cabinet right now,” he added.

    The Kakamega governor also defended his own political standing, warning Oparanya against belittling his chances. “I want to tell our elder Oparanya that you underestimate Barasa at your own risk. I was elected by the people, and we are focused on service delivery. When politics come, we will hit the road,” he said.

    Likuyani MP Innocent Mugabe also joined the fray, cautioning leaders against dismissing Raila’s role in the country’s politics. “Raila has been a very respectable leader in this country for decades. Baba, wherever you are, know that we support you and respect you as our party leader,” Mugabe said.

    The row between Oparanya and Barasa is the latest episode in an escalating power struggle within ODM in Kakamega, which widened after the hotly contested county chairmanship elections where Barasa defeated Lugari MP Nabii Nabwera—an ally of Oparanya.

    The fallout has since split the party into rival camps, with Barasa’s allies rallying behind him, while Oparanya leads a faction grouped under the so-called “G-8” umbrella.

    Analysts say the feud reflects a deeper battle over Western Kenya’s political future as Odinga eyes retirement from frontline politics, leaving room for new power brokers to emerge.

  • Kakamega: Bereaved Family Hit With Sh1.5M Bill For Damages After Echesa-Barasa Chaos

    Kakamega: Bereaved Family Hit With Sh1.5M Bill For Damages After Echesa-Barasa Chaos

    The family of a retired Mumias chief, Augustino Odongo, whose burial in Matungu constituency was disrupted last Saturday by chaos allegedly sponsored by politicians, is now staring at a Sh1.8 million bill slapped on them for damage caused.

    Shan Events, the company that had been engaged to organise the event now wants the family to compensate it for the equipment and other items damaged during the chaos.

    The company says the family, as the host was responsible for providing a secure environment conducive to their service provision and thus is responsible for the losses incurred.

    Safety measures

    “As you are aware, chaos erupted during the event, leading to the loss and damage of equipment that was vital to our service delivery. The losses incurred have been assessed, and the total value of the damaged and lost equipment stands at Ksh.1.8 million,” a letter by the Shan Events Operations Manager Abraham Odhiambo Otieno to the family reads in part.

    The firm pointed out that failure to ensure adequate safety measures resulted in the losses, therefore demanding compensation in the sum of Sh1,561,850. The demand gives a fourteen-day timeline, from the date of the notice.

    Others damaged property that the firm wants compensated are 161 broken plastic chairs valued at Sh136,850, 20 VIP Red Banquet Chairs worth Sh160,000 and one VIP wooden chair, which costs Sh40,000.

    The late Odongo’s family spokesman Patrick Lutta said they still don’t know where they would get the money to compensate Shan Events.

    “We have found ourselves in a very unfortunate situation where we are being asked to pay for things damaged by goons brought in by some politicians. As a family, we don’t know where we are going to get the money,” Lutta said.

    Meanwhile, Kakamega Governor Fernandes Barasa and Matungu MP Peter Oscar Nabulindo are yet to honour police summons to record statements over the chaos, which broke out last Saturday.

    The two had not reported to the DCI Western regional headquarters in Kakamega town by yesterday afternoon.

    The Western Regional Police Commander Kiprono Lang’at had directed the duo alongside a former Cabinet Secretary Rashid Echesa to appear before the DCI headquarters to shed light on the fracas.

    Several police officers and over 100 mourners were injured during the funeral when supporters of the trio clashed.

    Echesa presented himself to the police for grilling on Wednesday and distanced himself from the chaos.

    “I am a law-abiding citizen and I have no interest in Matungu because I hail from Mumias West Constituency. I had gone to attend the funeral due to my closeness to the deceased and his family,” the former Sports CS said, adding that he was equally surprised when a section of the mourners started heckling and booing before fighting broke out.

    “I did not incite anyone to cause the chaos and even personally intervened to calm the situation,” he added.

    Embarrassment

    In the letter signed by Patrick Lutta, Evans Odongo, Shadrack Odongo and Chrisanthus Odongo, the late chief’s family had termed the fracas as an embarrassment to the Bashitsetse clan of the Wanga sub-tribe.

    “The conduct witnessed on that day, attributed to individuals associated with you, was not only a gross disrespect to our family and the Wanga community at large, and particularly to the Abashitsetse clan (to which you both belong) but also a violation of the solemnity of a funeral ceremony,” they added.

    They said the goons had strategically been positioned at the funeral with the sole intention of heckling selected individuals including Governor Barasa.

    The family appeared to exonerate the county chief from blame and addressed the letter to Nabulindo and Echesa while reminding them of refund of their contributions of money and a bull towards the funeral.

    But Lang’at insisted yesterday that they still needed to question Barasa and Nabulindo over the melee.

  • ODM Warns Kakamega Governor Fernandes Barasa Over Leadership Dispute

    ODM Warns Kakamega Governor Fernandes Barasa Over Leadership Dispute

    The Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party has warned Kakamega Governor Fernandes Barasa about his public criticisms of the party’s decisions on assembly leadership disputes.

    Following a Central Committee meeting, ODM expressed concern over Barasa’s actions, viewing them as disrespectful to party leader Raila Odinga.

    The party emphasized the need for all members to respect its decisions and urged Barasa to refrain from disparaging the committee as he awaits an opportunity to present his case.

    Tensions within Kakamega’s leadership continue to escalate.

    ODM warns Barasa

    Tensions Escalate As ODM Warns Fernandes Barasa

    The Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party has warned Kakamega Governor Fernandes Barasa to stop publicly criticizing the party’s decisions regarding leadership issues in the County Assembly.

    In a statement dated September 16, 2024, ODM’s Deputy Party Leader, Godfrey Osotsi, expressed concern over Barasa’s actions after a Central Committee meeting on September 11, 2024.

    The committee met to discuss problems within Kakamega County, particularly the leadership conflicts at the assembly.

    ODM stated, “The Central Committee of ODM met on September 11, 2024, to discuss various issues, including the situation in Kakamega County. We resolved that the County Governor, Speaker of the Assembly, and former majority leader Hon. Maina must stop frustrating assembly members and implement the party’s recommendations on leadership.”

    Following this resolution, ODM observed unwarranted attacks from Governor Barasa and his supporters.

    They criticized the Central Committee and senior party officials at funerals, in the media, and at public gatherings.

    Respect for Party Decisions

    ODM emphasized the importance of respecting party decisions. They stated that Barasa’s actions disrespected ODM leader Raila Odinga, who chairs the Central Committee.

    The party urged Barasa to refrain from disparaging ODM while he awaits his opportunity to present his case to the committee. ODM stated, “All party members must respect party organs and abide by their decisions.

    They should avoid disparaging important committees, especially the Central Committee chaired by Rt. Hon Raila Odinga.”

    Governor Barasa has been invited to address the committee he is currently criticizing. ODM cautioned that this behavior could hinder the proper resolution of the ongoing issues.

    Summons Issued to Key Officials

    The ODM Central Committee has summoned Governor Barasa, County Assembly Speaker James Namatsi, and former Majority Leader Philip Maina to discuss the assembly leadership disputes.

    On September 11, 2024, ODM Secretary General Edwin Sifuna stated that the three officials have frustrated the party’s decision to replace Maina with Geoffrey Ondiro as the majority leader.

    This summons followed a petition from ODM MCAs to the Central Management Committee about the reorganization of assembly committees.

    The ward representatives argued that proper procedures were not followed during the reshuffle, which aimed to remove those seen as unfriendly to the governor from leadership positions.

    Sifuna concluded, “The party insists that the speaker must implement our directives immediately. All changes to committee membership and leadership are hereby revoked.”

  • Kakamega County’s Governor Fernandes Barasa Faces Scrutiny Over Financial Mismanagement

    Kakamega County’s Governor Fernandes Barasa Faces Scrutiny Over Financial Mismanagement

    Under Governor Fernandes Barasa’s leadership, Kakamega County has come under intense scrutiny following revelations of severe financial mismanagement and inefficiencies.

    A recent audit report highlights multiple instances of discrepancies, unsupported expenditures, and stalled projects, painting a grim picture of the county’s fiscal health.

    Governor Fernandes Barasa

    Fernandes Barasa Unable to Explain Inaccuracies in Bank Balances

    The audit revealed significant inaccuracies in the county’s bank balances. The statement of assets and liabilities showed a bank balance of Kshs 208,000,170.

    However, discrepancies in the reconciliation statements for June 2023 were glaring. Stale cheques amounting to Kshs 9,792,320 and unpresented cheques worth Kshs 9,265,335 were not properly accounted for.

    Moreover, payments totaling Kshs. 32,455,743 were recorded in the bank statements but not in the cash books.

    Additionally, receipts of Kshs 973,859,956 were documented in the cash book but missing from the bank statements.

    These inconsistencies cast serious doubt on the accuracy and completeness of the bank balances.

    Unsupported Expenditures

    The county’s statement of receipts and payments reflected a staggering Kshs 2,438,651,648 spent on goods and services.

    However, Kshs. 694,318,407 of this amount, incurred by the Department of Agriculture and Livestock, lacked the necessary payment vouchers and supporting documents.

    This lack of documentation raises questions about the legitimacy and transparency of these expenditures.

    Unrecovered Imprests and Advances

    Another troubling finding was the outstanding imprests and advances balance of Kshs 27,071,017.

    The county management failed to maintain an imprest register detailing crucial information such as payee details, amounts issued, and due dates.

    These balances were due for recovery as of June 30, 2023, but no efforts were made to recover them. The absence of a proper record-keeping system undermines the accountability of the county’s financial management.

    Fernandes Barasa Accumulated Pending Bills

    Kakamega County’s financial statements revealed pending bills amounting to Kshs. 1,505,298,681. This amount includes Kshs. 1,277,690,723 in outstanding balances from as far back as 2016.

    The failure to settle these bills in the years they were incurred adversely affects subsequent budgets, as these pending bills become a first charge on future budget allocations.

    This cycle of debt hampers the county’s ability to implement new projects and programs effectively.

    Stalled and Delayed Projects

    The county’s mismanagement is further highlighted by numerous stalled and delayed projects.

    For instance, payments totaling Kshs. 3,018,041,182 were made for ten ongoing projects initiated between 2015 and 2022, yet these projects remain incomplete. This raises concerns about the value of these expenditures.

    Specific projects such as the Emalokha (Firatsi) Water Supply, Butwehe Intake Works, and the Inyanya Water Supply Project were all found to be incomplete, with contractors abandoning the sites.

    Similarly, the construction of the Disaster Center Phase 2 and Bukhungu Stadium Phase II has been delayed, with significant amounts already paid out but little progress to show.

    Non-Compliance and Internal Control Failures

    The audit also highlighted non-compliance with legal requirements and poor internal controls. The county’s compensation for employees amounted to Kshs. 5,652,697,106, which is 43% of total revenue, exceeding the legal limit of 35%.

    Furthermore, 91% of the county’s 6,876 employees belong to the dominant ethnic community, violating the National Cohesion and Integration Act.

    The use of a manual payroll system, through which Kshs. 105,212,238 was processed, is another area of concern.

    This practice is prone to errors and goes against the requirement for an integrated payroll system, undermining the effectiveness of internal controls.

    Wrapping Up Fernandes Barasa Poor Governance

    The audit report on Kakamega County under Governor Fernandes Barasa’s administration reveals a troubling picture of financial mismanagement and inefficiency.

    Inaccurate bank balances, unsupported expenditures, unrecovered imprests, and a host of stalled projects point to systemic failures in governance and financial oversight.

    The non-compliance with legal requirements and poor internal controls further exacerbate the situation, calling for urgent measures to restore accountability and transparency in the county’s financial management.

    Governor Barasa and his administration must address these issues promptly to restore public trust and ensure that the county’s resources are used effectively and for the intended purposes.

    The residents of Kakamega County deserve better stewardship of their public funds to achieve meaningful development and improve their quality of life.

     

  • Looting: Kakamega Governor Barasa Spent Sh11M For His Office Food

    Looting: Kakamega Governor Barasa Spent Sh11M For His Office Food

    The County Public Accounts Committee has lambasted Kakamega County’s leadership over a KES 11 million allocation for meal allowances for staff in the Governor’s office during the 2020-2021 financial year.

    Chairing the scrutiny, Senator Moses Kajwang unleashed his disappointment, deeming the sum averaging KES 1 million per month as an unacceptable and unjustifiable misuse of taxpayers’ funds.

    “This is not the reason why I’m going to fight the National Assembly to give counties KES 415 billion, so that governors can be allocating one million per month for food for their staff,” Kajwang said.

    Demanding a granular breakdown, Kajwang questioned the number of staff that could warrant such an exorbitant food budget.

    “We must resolve it, so that we dispel some notions that we are more interested in houseworks than in development,” Kajwang asserted, his remarks carrying undertones that such wasteful expenditures undermined public trust in county governments’ developmental agenda.

    The Senator’s fiery rebuke tapped into longstanding grievances of national legislators who have often cited perceived misuse of funds as justification for denying or reducing county allocations. “Small things like this are then used by our brothers in the National Assembly to say that money in counties is wasted,” he remarked scathingly.

    In an attempt to douse the raging flames, Governor Fernandes Barasa stated the county had audited the staffing inherited from the previous regime and initiated measures to rationalize the workforce.

    “In terms of working on the numbers, we have actually given staff an opportunity for voluntary early retirement, which is one way of addressing the staff numbers,” Barasa responded. “The other approach is through natural attrition – as people retire, we don’t replace all those vacancies. We believe this will get the numbers down to a level that reduces pressure on the wage bill.”

    Barasa added that the county had commenced a workload analysis to determine optimal staffing levels. “We don’t want a situation where a department that needs 5 staff has 10. We are trying to work within the numbers we have to maintain and even reduce the wage bill to manageable levels – a process that can continue until June.”

    However, Kajwang remained unsatisfied, insisting on understanding the public participation process authorizing spending on what he deemed a personal indulgence.

  • Rashid Echesa Arrested In Extortion Probe

    Rashid Echesa Arrested In Extortion Probe

    Former Sports Cabinet Secretary Rashid Echesa has been arrested in an investigation into claims of an extortion racket targeting Kakamega Governor Fernandez Barasa.

    Echesa has been locked up at the Muthaiga police station after being picked up from his house on Thursday afternoon and is set to be charged on Tuesday.

    According to his lawyer Danstan Omari, Echesa was being detained over claims of extortion and stage managed abduction.

    “We have been allowed to see him. We understand they are investigating claims of extortion and abduction which we don’t know more about,” he said.

    Echesa was on Thursday at about 4 pm picked from the cells and taken to Directorate of Criminal Investigations, Kiambu Road for grilling as Omari followed him there.

    Police said he has been evading their dragnet in efforts to grill him for possible prosecution.

    This came a week after a man police said was Echesa’s handler was Wednesday March 20 charged in a Kibera Court for extorting over Sh240 million from Barasa.

    William Simiyu Matere alias Elijah appeared before Kibera Senior Prinicipal Magistrate Ann Mwangi where he was charged with two counts of demanding property with menace and conspiracy to commit a felony.

    According to the prosecution, it is alleged that on diverse dates between December, 2023 and 18th day of March, 2024 at unknown place within the Republic of Kenya, jointly with others not before court, with menaces demanded a total sum of Sh240 million from Fernandez Odinga Barasa.

    The other count states that on the same date he jointly with others not before court conspired together to commit a felony namely demanding property with menaces and extorted from Barasa over Sh240 million.

    He denied the charges and was freed on a bond of Sh2 million with a surety of the same amount.

    The prosecution intends to call four witnesses.

    The matter was mentioned on 27 March for pre trial but did not proceed.

    The drama broke with videos emerging online showing Echesa in handcuffs and in a thicket with ropes around his hands and legs.

    President William Ruto appointed former Echesa to be the Chairperson of the Kenya Water Towers Agency Board.

    According to a gazette notice dated May 19, 2023, Echesa will serve for a period of three (3) years, with effect from the 19th May 2023.

    Echesa was appointed as Cabinet Minister in retired President Uhuru Kenyatta’s second term as Head of State until March 1, 2019, when he was fired in a Cabinet reshuffle.

    His removal as Cabinet Secretary came under a wave of corruption allegations that had dogged the Sports docket.

  • Corrupt Ex-Ketraco Boss Fernandes Barasa Is Not Out Of The Woods Yet

    Corrupt Ex-Ketraco Boss Fernandes Barasa Is Not Out Of The Woods Yet

    The former Kenya Electricity Transmission Company (Ketraco) boss Fernandes Barasa has been summoned by the National Assembly Energy Committee over the Lake Turkana Wind Power contract.

    The Public Investment Committee (PIC) say they will require Barasa’s presence to explain how he awarded the contract of the construction of the LTWP without being directly involved in the procurement.

    This is after the acting Chief Executive Officer Anthony Wamukota failed to explain who authorized the award of the contract to a Spanish firm Isolux Corsan that ended up delaying the construction of the project forcing Ketraco to terminate the deal.

    “There is a letter that has come up that the former Ketraco boss, Fernandes Barasa had indicated that there is the need to renegotiate the deal that generated energy. So, we need to ask the former Energy CS Charles Keter whether he was aware of the former Ketraco CEO, “Nassir, Abdullswamad Sheriff said.

    Kenyans paid a Sh5.7 billion fine after Isolux Corsan failed to build the Loiyangalani-Suswa power transmission line to evacuate power from the Lake Turkana Wind Power.

    The contract was handed over to a consortium of Chinese firms – Nari Group Corporation and Power China Guizhou Engineering Company.

    Isolux was to build the line by August 2018 but Ketraco terminated the contract after the Spanish firm went into receivership.

    The project was later completed in mid-2017 for Sh28 billion, but the line went live in September 2018.

    Wamukota was yesterday pressed by members of the National Assembly Energy Committee to explain why the agency had failed to pay some of its bills in time leading to fines and penalties that have substantially increased its obligations.

    “Some of these plots of lands that you were compensating don’t match, there are some people without names in the wayleave list but they have been listed as pending bills, some names appear up to 15 times, how do we substantiate this,” Embakasi South Member of parliament Julius Mawathe posed.

    While defending himself the CEO said in the supplementary budget they were only looking to clear bills for work done and were not in any way going to pay those on the wayleave list.

    Prior to appearing before the Gladwel Cheruiyot-chaired committee, the Auditor General’s special audit on Ketraco projects had raised red flags on major anomalies in procurement of the companies that undertook its power projects.

    The committee also wanted to know why among all the firms contracted by Ketraco three of them had accumulated a total of Sh15 billion in pending bills from the total of Sh16.06 billion reported by the Controller of Budget on July 31, 2021.

  • Inside Cartel Wars At Ketraco To Control Billions

    Inside Cartel Wars At Ketraco To Control Billions

    Transport and energy state agencies have become the most sought after dockets in the country given high scale bribery and get rich quick schemes that is embedded in the institutions. Fernades Barasa, resigned from his CEO position at the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company (Ketraco) ahead of his time something that didn’t catch many by surprise because he was not only quitting to join politics but in a rush to run away with a Sh800 million hydropower mega scandal that he’s alleged to have been heavily engaged in.

    For starters, Barasa’s tenure was blackened with scandals, with allegations of kickbacks and bribery, the now Kakamega Gubernatorial hopeful spent much of his stay in office cutting deals something that put him on the anti-corruption radar. Even as he exists, the ghosts of bribery continues to haunt Barasa who’s not only under DCI scope but EACC and ARA radar given his questionable fortunes much of which he has cleverly injected into his campaign machinery through a foundation run by his wife.

    Even as Barasa exits the building, the basement remains the same.

    Sources speaking to Kenya Insights say the company is currently under fire following the new chairman Joe Mutambu, acting managing director Anthony Wamukota and Joseph Siror who is the general manager, transmission lines.

    According to inside sources, Mutambu and Wamukota have hatched a plot to frustrate and antagonize Siror, said to be academically and professionally superior to the two.

    A Master’s degree is one of the key factors considered for one to occupy the CEO’s position but Siror was blocked from temporarily succeeding Barasa despite his Master’s and PhD in electrical engineering.

    Many were surprised by Mutambu’s move to bring in Wamukota through the backdoor to the position despite his questionable academic background, following rumours that the acting MD is not a holder of Master’s degree.

    Insiders lament that Mutambu is a direct opposite of his predecessor James Rege, described as a polished man who ensured a high level of professionalism during his tenure at the agency.

    Sources say that since Mutambu joined Ketraco in April 2021 as the new chairman, the agency has been reduced to cutting deals, some of which border on extortion.

    Mutambu’s critics at the troubled Ketraco have branded him a rogue who ensured that Wamukota was installed as the acting MD in efforts to cover up his dirty deals.

    It is feared that the controversial chairman and his blue-eyed boy Wamukota have a potential of destroying the company based on their crude style of leadership.

    Eng. Anthony Wamukota, Ag. Managing Director.

    Ketraco commands a whooping Sh200 billion asset base making it one of the most lucrative agencies in the energy sector.

    Drama ensued after the acting MD attempted to embarrass Siror before junior colleagues.

    A section of the media reported a voice clip which exposed Wamukota instructing a pilot by the name Major Chirchir not to allow Siror to board the company chopper at Wilson Airport.

    According to those in the know, the ugly incident took place on January 23 at a time when there was an electricity breakdown in Garissa.

    This was quickly interpreted as sabotage of Uhuru Kenyatta’s directive. Many were dismayed by the uncouth act of blocking Siror from boarding the chopper to the scene yet he is in charge of restoring electricity.

    According to sources, Siror is now seen as the enemy of the cartels led by the chairman and acting MD after he stood his ground and refused to make some perceived punitive orders from them.

    He maintained that he would only take such orders through the blessings of the board.

    Subsequently, the acting MD has countered by not approving the usage of budget in a bit to frustrate and label him as a failure.

    Eng. Joseph Siror. General Manager, Systems Operations and Power Management.

    A highly placed source at the company narrated hoe the chairman and the acting MD have colluded to take over the agency hostage leaving other vital offices as mere spectators as the duo badly soil the image of Ketraco. They have asked President Uhuru to crack the whip and restore sanity at the agency.

    Contracts

    The petition to the head of state comes amidst allegations that Wamukota is a person of interest as far as major contracts at the agency are concerned.

    A section of the media associated the acting MD with JS Engineering and Luanda as his proxy companies. This has resulted to shoddy work as no one questions his decisions or the poor workmanship of the firms linked to him.

    It is alleged that one of his firms was awarded a tender to reconstruct the recent fallen towers at Longonot.

    The other projects he reportedly messed include 400Kv Isinya-Namanga, 200kV and Bura Garden.

    It is said that he also has interest in another contract on a 200kV project about to start from Thika to Embu.

    On the other hand, his crony, the besieged board chairman is said to be causing havoc that has left suppliers of the agency wondering how a wishy washy person was chosen to steer an organization of such magnitude within the energy sector.

    The raging war at Ketraco has triggered debate into the chairman’s academic background wuth others opining that he’s boasting around with a fake title of captain. He has in the past claimed to be the engineer which was found to be false.

    Those privy to his style style of operation say Mutambu has perfected the art of invoking the names of who is who in the country to scare and intimidate people at Ketraco and his other victims outside Ketraco.

    Insiders describe Murambu as a man on a money minting spree and has allegedly siphoned millions of shillings through dirty dealings of which Kenya Insights has extensively covered.

    His accusers state that he simply drops big names within the corridors of power and claims to be highly connected.

    Despite the fact that he’s a merely honorary chairman and not an executive one, he ensures that he reports to Ketraco almost on a daily basis from early in the morning and only leaves at dark in the night.

    It is alleged that it is a norm for the chairman to have a nocturnal operations after leaving the office where he ostensibly hops from one place to another using the company’s office vehicle.

    A highly placed source said that the recent accident with the company’s vehicle is attributed to his underworld’s deals. “That’s the time he’s rumoured to be collecting kickbacks and cutting new deals,” an insider said.

    He recently got tongues wagging after he allegedly forced officers at Ketraco to provide him with all the company’s bank account balances, procurement plan and pending procurement items.

    Shockingly, he also ordered for the details of the available budget, details of contracts and other vital details of the organization structure.

    Corruption

    Corruption at Ketraco is not shocking, recently, a senior manager at the company had Sh58 million in his bank account frozen.

    Justice Esther N. Maina froze various bank accounts belonging to Peter Maina Njehia with total amount of Sh 58,601,915.9.

    Mr. Peter M. Njehia, Senior Manager, Supply Chain Management.

    The court blocked Njehia from transferring or withdrawing money including Sh13, 557,385. 00 which is being held as share capital at stima sacco ltd, Sh11, 913,750.00 being held as deposit at Alpa, stima sacco, Sh10 million held in the shares account among others held in the name of Peter Njehia.

    Justice Maina issued the orders following an urgent application filed by the EACC which argued that the money could be proceeds of crime.

    The court orders have stopped Maina from withdrawing, or transacting in the said amounts until further orders of the court.

    Eacc said it had been investigating Peter Maina Njehia , over claims he illegally and irregularly influenced tenders, procurement and payment of goods and services while serving as a senior manager, supply chain at Ketraco.

    If a lifestyle audit is conducted on the management up including the adversely mentioned Mutambu, Barasa, Wamukota and everyone on top, the findings would be mind boggling.

    Reach out to me anonymously if you have any further information on this matter and will do a follow up and publish findings. ([email protected])

  • Scandal Ridden Ketraco Boss Fernades Barasa Runs Away With Sh800M Power Saga Hanging On His Neck

    Scandal Ridden Ketraco Boss Fernades Barasa Runs Away With Sh800M Power Saga Hanging On His Neck

    For three consecutive days last week, the National Assembly’s Public Investments Committee (PIC) was unable to extract any information from senior officials of three government entities on the State’s dealings with the Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP) company.

    By coincidence or design, officials from National Treasury, Kenya Power and the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company (Ketraco)were at a loss when they appeared before the committee, and in the end, failed to provide substantive information that the MPs were seeking.

    They all asked for more time to gather all the required documents as well as prepare coherent statements for presentation.

    This did not go down well with the MPs, who now feel that the State agencies are not taking the committee and the probe seriously. The chairman noted, separately, that each of the firms has had months to prepare for the committee sitting, having been notified last year.

    While it could be coincidence that officials from Treasury and the energy sector players were unable to offer what the committee sought, it could also have to do with the subject matter.

    The parliamentary committee has been probing the Lake Turkana Wind Power project after the Auditor General submitted to the House a special audit report that points to grave mistakes that were committed by government officials and have proved costly for the country.

    Last week, the State officials performed a dance of sorts with the committee, responding to its queries in a shallow manner and without offering the details sought, while also failing to attach key documents to the reports they presented in Parliament.

    “Allow me to look into the documentation and get back to the committee with the exact reason as to why this was the case,” said Kenya Power acting Chief Executive Rosemary Oduor in response to a number of queries that the committee posed to her on Thursday.

    On Wednesday, National Treasury Principal Secretary Julius Muia did not provide the required information either, including attachments to the statement that he presented.

    He said if allowed more time, Treasury would provide a “blow by blow account of the events” leading to the selection of LTWP to put up the plant in Marsabit County.

    The previous day, Ketraco’s acting boss Anthony Wamukota appeared before PIC but also requested for more time. In his case, he wanted to familiarise himself with the responses that he said had been prepared by his predecessor, Fernandes Barasa.

    Mr Barasa had resigned a day earlier (on Monday) reportedly to go into politics, but the MPs read mischief in his sudden exit, noting that he was the one supposed to appear before the committee.

    MPs also argued that Eng Wamukota had been a general manager at Ketraco and should be familiar with what Barasa had authored and in a position to own it.

    Wamukota responded that while he was a general manager under Baraza, he only contributed a segment of the report that the CEO had written to the committee and was not familiar with what other managers had given.

    Fernades Barasa Role

    There are credible reports that the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) is not taking the matter lightly and apparently detectives have been assigned to the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company (Ketraco) over suspected embezzlement of taxpayers money through inflated contracts and fraudulent payments days sudden resignation of immediate former Managing Director Fernandes Barasa.

    According to insiders who revealed the tense situation at Ketraco intimated that Barasa, internal auditors and senior managers from Finance and Supply chain at the Kawi House domiciled parastatal are among those cited as persons of interests.

    While at Ketraco, Fernades was ever living on the edge and never had ease more so with anti-corruption heatwave that saw him spend most of the time out of his office.

    For those familiar with his running, it was surprising that he quickly opted to resign a day before he was expected to appear before the Parliament’s Public Investments Committee (PIC) to answer questions over the Sh785 million special audit on the Lake Turkana Wind Power (LTWP) project.

    Not new to sweating and in fear of being arrested, Barasa was in the news sometime in August 2019 when the heavily built short man ran for his life a city hotel.

    DCI boss Kinoti had walked into the hotel where Barasa was in company of other friends, he fled to the kitchen of the hotel on spitting Kinoti fearing that he had come to arrest him. At the time, Ketraco was under DCI probe following complaints lodged that the agency officials had swindled Sh14B land compensation to farmers for the Mombasa-Nairobi electricity transmission line, detectives believe billions were swindled in kickbacks.

    However, Kinoti was on a different business and not to arrest the panicked CEO who fled away through the kitchen’s exit. He became a laughing stock amongst his peers.

    Scandalous Path

    Upon assuming office, for the first time in Ketraco’s history, Barasa announced multi-million controversial tender bids for provision of insurance brokerage services for all its substations countrywide three months after the exit of his predecessor Engineer Joel Kiilu.

    Ketraco is one of the key parastatals under the Energy ministry-attracting heavy financing from the government and foreign donors majorly Japan and World Bank for mega electricity transmission projects across the country.

    Currently, the firm controls an asset base of over Sh72billion.

    This comes at a time the firm is entangled in a longstanding compensation deadlock with Kajiado residents over alleged varying compensation for the same pieces of land which has the same land value and assertions that Ketraco is hiving off more land than the one agreed on the agreement by colluding with surveyors.

    Locals swore to block any undertaking to use their land as power way-leave until they are adequately reimbursed.

    Ketraco offered to pay Kajiado Maasai landowners Sh250, 000 per acre.

    Further, residents’ claim Ketraco has already confiscated title deeds and put caveats to the parcels of land in question.

    Before compensation, the National land Commission (NLC) must make approval.

    The land in question was owned by Olosho-Oibor Water Catchment Area, which Ketraco had to compensate for limiting its usage due to the construction of a transmission line from Suswa to Isinya that requires a 60-metre wayleave.

    However, locals claim they were offered compensation at a rate of 40 per cent while Makueni County residents were being given 85 per cent.

    Another scandal left on the face of Barasa is that of China CAMC Engineering Co. Ltd  that moved to court to stop Ketraco from proceeding with an award of Sh1.9 billion tender to a rival firm for the erection of underground power transmission cables.

    China CAMC Engineering Co. Ltd says in court documents that unless the court intervenes and stops the contract, Kenyans will lose in excess of Sh403 million.

    It is not by surprise that in a similar scenario of the recent pylons sabotage that caused power outage in all parts of the country was intentional by the cartels in Ketraco and Kenya power to reap big in the tender process of new pylons procurement. Why Ketraco decided to award a firm a tender that would have been Sh. 403 million less when both the firms have the same caliber and of the same origin only means that the excess 403 million is kickback pocketed by Ketraco officials and the power cartels.

    Barasa is expected to vie for Kakamega Gubernatorial seat, a position that he spent much of his time in office campaigning for. He will be going with ODM ticket. Party insiders are however hesitant to fully embrace him as he’s perceived to be a baggage given his heavily loaded corrupt trail, ODM has warned candidates with integrity issues could face axe for the party to maintain its face.

    Polls however, rank Barasa amongst the leading contenders alongside Bonnie Khalwale and Cleophas Malala to takeover Kakamega County from the incumbent Wycliffe Oparanya.

    EACC insists all candidates seeking public office must pass the integrity test and if that’s the case, it would be travesty to justice if Barasa cut above the bar given all the hanging financial hanging questions.

    Going for a public office, the past record in public service would therefore be a key benchmark.