Tag: Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA)

  • KAA Announces Plans to Upgrade JKIA and Wilson Airport

    KAA Announces Plans to Upgrade JKIA and Wilson Airport

    Authority launches public consultation process for master plans to enhance Kenya’s key aviation hubs

    The Kenya Airports Authority has unveiled ambitious plans to transform the country’s two most critical aviation facilities through comprehensive master planning initiatives that will reshape Jomo Kenyatta International Airport and Wilson Airport for decades to come.

    The authority announced the launch of an extensive public engagement process this week, inviting communities and stakeholders across Nairobi to contribute their views on proposed development plans that will fundamentally shape the future of Kenya’s aviation sector.

    This marks a significant milestone in the country’s infrastructure development strategy, emphasizing community participation in major national projects.

    As part of the comprehensive planning process, KAA is conducting a Strategic Environmental and Social Assessment in partnership with international consultants Dar Al Handasah, working alongside Shair and Partners and local firm Geodev Kenya Limited.

    The assessment adheres strictly to Kenya’s Environmental Management and Coordination Act of 1999, ensuring that all environmental and social considerations are thoroughly evaluated before implementation begins.

    “Your participation will help shape the future of these airports and ensure that community issues are well understood and taken into account,” KAA emphasized in their announcement, underscoring the critical importance they place on incorporating public input throughout the planning process.

    This approach reflects a broader commitment to inclusive development that considers both national infrastructure needs and local community concerns.

    The master plans being developed are designed to establish a comprehensive long-term vision that encompasses infrastructure development, operational efficiency, environmental sustainability, and social inclusion for both airport facilities.

    These documents will serve as the blueprint for all future developments at Kenya’s most important aviation hubs, guiding investment decisions and development priorities for years to come.

    KAA has organized an extensive series of community meetings across various locations in Nairobi to ensure broad stakeholder participation.

    For Wilson Airport consultations, residents can attend sessions on July 21st at the Lang’ata DCC Boardroom in Nairobi West, followed by a meeting on July 23rd at South C CDF Hall, and concluding on July 28th at the Chief’s Grounds in Lang’ata Mugumoini. All Wilson Airport sessions will run from nine in the morning until noon.

    The JKIA consultation schedule begins on July 22nd at Syokimau’s Chief’s Camp, continues on July 24th at Embakasi Social Hall, and concludes on July 25th at Mihang’o Chief’s Office in Utawala.

    These sessions will also operate from nine in the morning until noon, providing ample time for comprehensive community input and discussion.

    The announcement comes at a critical juncture when both airports face mounting pressure from increasing passenger traffic and evolving international aviation standards.

    JKIA, serving as Kenya’s primary international gateway, processes the vast majority of the country’s international air traffic and serves as a crucial connection point for travelers throughout East Africa.

    Meanwhile, Wilson Airport has established itself as East Africa’s busiest general aviation facility, handling domestic flights, charter services, and private aviation operations.

    The master planning initiative represents a pivotal step toward modernizing Kenya’s aviation infrastructure to meet anticipated future demands while maintaining the country’s strategic position as the region’s primary aviation hub.

    These upgrades are essential not only for improving passenger experience but also for ensuring Kenya remains competitive in the increasingly dynamic global aviation market.

    KAA’s comprehensive approach to stakeholder engagement demonstrates a commitment to inclusive participation, specifically targeting neighboring communities, local organizations, and individuals who may be directly or indirectly affected by the airports’ development and ongoing operations.

    The consultation sessions are designed to thoroughly inform the public about the scope, intentions, and potential implications of the proposed master plans while actively soliciting meaningful contributions that will directly influence final planning outcomes and implementation strategies.

    This extensive planning process reflects Kenya’s broader commitment to sustainable development practices and community-centered infrastructure projects, ensuring that airport modernization efforts carefully balance operational requirements with local community needs and environmental considerations.

    The initiative also underscores the government’s recognition that successful infrastructure development requires genuine partnership between authorities and the communities they serve.

  • MPs Put KAA MD On The Spot Over Sh4.3B Payment To Firm Linked To Wanjigi For Doing Nothing

    MPs Put KAA MD On The Spot Over Sh4.3B Payment To Firm Linked To Wanjigi For Doing Nothing

    Investigation Reveals Decade-Long Saga of Mismanagement at JKIA’s Greenfield Terminal Project

    The Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) found itself under intense parliamentary scrutiny this week as lawmakers demanded answers over a controversial Sh4.3 billion payment to a Chinese contractor linked to prominent businessman Jimmy Wanjigi—despite no visible work being done on the ambitious Greenfield Terminal project at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

    In a heated session before the National Assembly’s Public Investments Committee (PIC), chaired by Pokot South MP David Pkosing, KAA’s Acting Managing Director Nicholas Bodo struggled to justify the massive expenditure on a project that has remained stalled for over a decade, raising serious questions about accountability and stewardship of public funds.

    The Sh75 Million Groundbreaking Ceremony Scandal

    Among the most contentious revelations was the discovery that KAA spent Sh75 million on a groundbreaking ceremony in May 2014, presided over by then-President Uhuru Kenyatta. This ceremonial expense was classified as a “contract variation”—a designation that has left MPs incredulous.

    “How can there be such a huge variation in the cost of a project that hasn’t even started?” demanded Kaloleni MP Katana Paul Kahindi, calling for those responsible to be held accountable to deter future misuse of public funds.

    Bodo defended the expenditure, claiming the presidential event required logistical preparations not initially budgeted for and were covered using contingency funds within the contract. However, the explanation failed to convince committee members, with Chairman Pkosing questioning why such a significant amount was spent on an event for a project that remains incomplete more than a decade later.

    The Wanjigi Connection Unraveled

    The controversy deepens with the emergence of businessman Jimmy Wanjigi’s alleged connection to the project through the contracting consortium ACEG-CATIC JV—a joint venture between China’s Anhui Construction Engineering Group Co Ltd (ACEG) and China Aero-Technology International Engineering Corporation (CATIC).

    Parliamentary investigations conducted between 2021 and 2022 revealed that Wanjigi was listed as one of the directors of the joint venture, alongside Chinese nationals. The revelation came to light when MPs, led by Ruaraka’s Tom Kajwang, Embakasi East’s Babu Owino, and Mvita’s Abdulswamad Nassir, demanded that Transport Ministry officials be put under oath to confirm they were conducting business with Wanjigi.

    “It is important that the Ministry officials and the Kenya Airports Authority Board is put under oath so they can confirm that they were in business with Wanjigi,” Kajwang stated during parliamentary proceedings.

    MP Babu Owino went further, alleging that “Wanjigi is indeed using taxpayers’ money to contest, he should be made to refund our money,” referring to Wanjigi’s presidential ambitions at the time.

    A Project Doomed from the Start

    The Greenfield Terminal project, launched in 2013 as part of Kenya’s Vision 2030 flagship initiatives, was intended to transform JKIA into a regional aviation hub capable of handling 20 million passengers annually. The original contract was valued at Sh64 billion, but investigations later revealed the cost had been inflated by up to Sh9 billion.

    The project was marred by illegalities from its inception. KAA entered into the agreement with the Chinese consortium on November 13, 2013, and granted site possession on December 6, 2013, before the contractor had secured project financing—a clear breach of Clause 5 of the contract agreement.

    “The management of the KAA was in breach of Clause 5 of the contract agreement that made it a condition precedent for the contractor to secure a financier before signing the deal,” states a parliamentary report. “It was not clear why KAA was in a hurry to sign a contract whose condition precedent of securing a financier had not been met.”

    The contractors had identified two potential financiers—China Development Bank Corporation and China Exim Bank—but no valid financing contract had been crystallized by the time of signing.

    The Sh4.3 Billion Question

    According to the Auditor General’s report covering KAA’s accounts from 2018/2019 to 2021/2022, irregular payments totaling Sh4.5 billion were flagged. Of this amount, Sh4.31 billion was advanced to ACEG-CATIC JV as “advance payments” despite no evidence of evaluated work being completed.

    The Public Investments Committee found no basis for these payments. “Throughout our investigations, we did not receive any submission on why the amount was paid to the contractor. It should be recovered,” said committee chairman Abdulswamad Nassir in 2022.

    The design for the stalled Jomo Kenyatta International Airport Greenfield Terminal creates the largest single-terminal aviation hub in East Africa.
    The design for the stalled Jomo Kenyatta International Airport Greenfield Terminal creates the largest single-terminal aviation hub in East Africa.

    KAA management claimed the money was paid as advance payment as provided for in the contract agreement and was to be recovered from subsequent progress payments. However, since the contract was terminated without any work being done, it remained unclear why KAA had not instituted measures to have the advanced monies refunded.

    Additional Financial Irregularities

    Beyond the main contractor payment, the financial web of irregularities extends further:

    • Sh216 million was paid to consulting firm Louis Berger Group and Runji Partners (LBG) for supervision services, with no evidence of work completed by June 30, 2019
    • Sh7.4 million was disbursed to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) after its contract for technical advisory services was terminated under unclear circumstances
    • The supervision contract with Louis Berger Group was valued at US$8.83 million

    Legal Battle and Mounting Costs

    The project’s cancellation in March 2016 triggered a complex legal battle. ACEG-CATIC JV is now demanding Sh17.6 billion from KAA for breach of contract, broken down as follows:

    • Sh2 billion for preparation of bill of quantities
    • Sh2.4 billion in additional costs
    • Sh708.2 million in Value Added Tax charged by Kenya Revenue Authority
    • Sh5.6 billion in additional claims including contract balance, VAT, interest, and penalties

    The case remains pending at the International Court of Arbitration, and if the contractor prevails, Kenyan taxpayers could face a total liability of up to Sh20 billion.

    The Mediation Settlement

    Recent revelations show that a mediation agreement was reached between the parties, with KAA agreeing to pay a gross compensation amount of Sh4.79 billion to settle the contractor’s claims. After deducting the advance payment already received by the contractor (Sh4.18 billion), a final settlement of Sh604 million was paid to pave the way for KAA to enter into new contracts.

    This settlement appears to have been orchestrated to clear the path for the controversial Adani Group’s JKIA concession deal, which has since been cancelled following public outcry and concerns over the Indian conglomerate’s financial stability.

    Systemic Failures in Oversight

    The Greenfield Terminal saga exposes systematic failures in Kenya’s public procurement landscape. The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) investigation in 2015 revealed a Sh9 billion variance in the project’s contract, leading to the suspension of four senior KAA managers on corruption allegations.

    Committee members expressed frustration at the lack of accountability for the financial discrepancies. Most of the officials involved in the project’s initial stages have since left KAA, making it difficult to pursue individual accountability.

    “Without urgent action, such issues could recur,” warned Nyeri Town MP Duncan Mathenge, while Laikipia East MP Mwangi Kiunjuri suggested that many of the audit queries may have originated from KAA’s board oversight failures.

    The Wanjigi Business Empire

    The Greenfield Terminal controversy is part of a broader pattern involving Jimmi Wanjigi’s business empire, the Kwacha Group of Companies. The conglomerate, founded in the late 1990s, built its success on lucrative government contracts and political connections spanning multiple administrations from Daniel arap Moi to Uhuru Kenyatta.

    Wanjigi’s business dealings have been linked to several major scandals, including the Anglo Leasing affair and the Standard Gauge Railway project. His political connections have enabled his companies to secure high-value government contracts, raising questions about the intersection of business and politics in Kenya’s procurement processes.

    Current Status and Future Implications

    The Greenfield Terminal project remains a symbol of Kenya’s infrastructure challenges, with JKIA struggling to handle growing passenger volumes while billions of shillings lie waste in abandoned projects. The government is currently targeting 25 million passengers annually through JKIA, making the resolution of these issues critical for the airport’s expansion plans.

    The parliamentary committee has recommended that KAA immediately commence recovery proceedings for the advanced monies paid to both the contractor and consultants. However, the complex web of legal battles and mediation agreements makes recovery uncertain.

    Conclusion

    The Sh4.3 billion payment to a Wanjigi-linked firm for zero work represents more than just financial mismanagement—it symbolizes the systemic corruption and lack of accountability that has plagued Kenya’s public procurement system. As lawmakers continue to demand answers, the case serves as a stark reminder of the urgent need for reform in how the country manages taxpayer funds and implements major infrastructure projects.

    The Greenfield Terminal saga underscores the critical importance of parliamentary oversight in protecting public resources and ensuring that those entrusted with taxpayer money are held accountable for their actions. Whether justice will be served in this case remains to be seen, but the public outcry and parliamentary pressure suggest that the days of unchecked spending and questionable deals may be numbered.

  • Cabinet Approves New JKIA Upgrade Plan

    Cabinet Approves New JKIA Upgrade Plan

    The Cabinet Tuesday endorsed a comprehensive plan to enhance passenger experience at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) by streamlining operations and bolstering security.

    Key changes include exempting all African citizens from Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) requirements and easing intra-African travel.

    Kenyan citizens will benefit from an increased duty-free threshold of goods brought into the country, which has now been increased from Sh50,000 to Sh250,000.

    Security screening at JKIA will be enhanced through risk-based profiling, ensuring only flagged bags undergo manual inspection in a dedicated screening room, reducing delays and improving efficiency.

    To further expedite travel, the number of immigration booths and staff will be doubled, while E-Gates will be introduced to eliminate long queues and speed up clearance.

    Accountability measures will also be strengthened with new monitoring technology deployed to oversee airport staff, and mandatory uniforms with visible name tags required for all agency employees and retail concessionaires.

    JKIA infrastructure will also undergo major upgrades, including modernized baggage handling systems, improved stormwater drainage and access roads, installation of covered walkways, enhanced air conditioning, and clearer signage.

    Meet-and-greet services will be strictly regulated, ensuring only licensed facilitators operate within the airport to enhance security and order.

    These measures take immediate effect, reinforcing JKIA’s position as a leading aviation hub by improving efficiency, security, and overall passenger experience.

    President William Ruto chaired the Special Cabinet meeting at State House, Nairobi, on Tuesday, where the Cabinet approved the 2025 Budget Policy Statement (BPS).

    On other matters, Cabinet approved several host country agreements, reinforcing Kenya’s role as a regional hub for international organisations.

    These include agreements with the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, Save the Children International, Shelter Afrique Development Bank, Oxfam International, Norwegian Refugee Council, and Population Services International, among others.

    Additionally, Cabinet approved the ratification of an agreement with Singapore to eliminate double taxation and prevent fiscal evasion, further strengthening Kenya’s global trade and investment ties. Cabinet also endorsed Kenya’s hosting of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), underscoring the country’s commitment to enhancing international cooperation and economic
    diplomacy.

  • David Ndii At The Center Of Controversial JKIA-Adani Deal, Court Documents Reveal

    David Ndii At The Center Of Controversial JKIA-Adani Deal, Court Documents Reveal

    The government could have been quietly engaging Adani Group to lease Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) for over a year, fresh details have emerged in court.

    In a case where President William Ruto’s principal economic advisor David Ndii is named as a person who had been aware of the deal, it is alleged that the Indian conglomerate through Adani Airports Holding Ltd – had on April 25, 2023, submitted to Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) a privately initiated proposal (PIP) for development of JKIA under public-private partnership arrangement.

    According to Tony Gachoka, Jubilee Party, Wiper Party, Democratic Action Party Kenya (DAP-K) and Mount Kenya, Adani PIP was copied to Ndii, the National Treasury and the Ministry of Roads and Transport.

    However, Gachoka’s lawyer Ndegwa Njiru claims that they remained tight-lipped about the deal until this year when Adani allegedly floated its PIP.

    Adani in its case claimed that it floated the idea to refurbish JKIA on March 1, 2024, after seeing the deteriorating state of the international airport in the media.

    However, the Njiru alleged that the deal was being worked backwards in order to favour the firm. He argued that the idea to directly procure the construction of a new passenger terminal at JKIA was done with the Adani Group in mind.

    The lawyer alleged that through a contract dated December 13, 2023, KAA  procured advisory services for the construction of a new passenger terminal building at JKIA.

    He told the court the team recommended an Airport PPP as opposed to a terminals PIP as the most beneficial to Kenya.

    President William Ruto’s adviser David Ndii.

    “Unsurprisingly, on March 1, 2024, the second respondent submitted to the KAA its PIP for the development of JKIA under PPP arrangements. On the same day, the JKIA submitted the said proposal to the 9th respondent PS Mohammed Daghar who on the same day submitted the proposal to the PS National Treasury Chris Kiptoo. The petitioners earnestly believe these activities did not take place on 1 March 2024 as demonstrated,” argued Ndegwa.

    The court heard that contrary to the government’s claim that Adani was the only firm interested in developing JKIA, other firms had floated their proposals. The lawyer claimed that Abu Dhabi, China Road and Bridge Corporation and Motar Etgil Africa/Corporation America JV had proposed to develop JKIA through PPP. He said that despite the documents being before KAA), the government never disclosed them same to the public.

    “By a further letter dated June 12, 2023, referencing “Proposed Construction of a Second Runway at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) the 9th respondent  PS Mohamed Daghar stated that the KAA had not formally submitted the PIP submitted by Adani Airport Holdings Ltd and their preliminary appraisal of the same,” claimed Ndegwa..
    He further claimed that PIP for JKIA submitted by Adani is lopsided and subversive of Kenya’s public interest.

    Ndegwa said that despite the government drumming up for the firm to take over JKIA for 30 years, no one can put a finger on how much Adani had invested or will pump to the project.

    The lawyer alleged that the Indian firm is being gifted JKIA without paying a penny.

    “Adani Group PIP does not specify the exact amount to be invested despite the fact that investment is the principal criterion for PPP under the 2011 Policy on PPPs and subsequent legislations. For all practical purposes, the existing and potential revenue of JKIA are simply being transferred to the 2nd Respondent and its undisclosed Kenyan partners to invest for their private gain. This is a clear case of sovereign robbery,” claimed Ndegwa.

    The court heard that the government is going against a 2019 Parliament report that shielded JKIA from privatization or control by foreigners.

  • Kenya Inks Sh95.7B Deal With Adani Group To Run Power Transmission Line For 30 Years

    Kenya Inks Sh95.7B Deal With Adani Group To Run Power Transmission Line For 30 Years

    Adani Energy Solutions will revamp and expand Kenya’s energy transmission network in a 30-year deal valued at Ksh 95.7 billion.

    Energy cabinet secretary Opiyo Wandayi says the pact was signed on Wednesday this week, marking the end of a four-month marathon negotiations.

    The company is part of the Adani Group of India which has initiated a private tender to expand and run the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) under a 30-year build-own transfer model.

    In a statement issued by the Ministry of Energy on Friday afternoon, Adani Energy Solutions will raise all the funding in the form of debt and equity that will be repaid over the 30 years of the project agreement, as part of this infrastructure development.

    The statement signed by Energy Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi further says the agreement marks the beginning of a transformative initiative to develop, finance, construct, operate, and maintain key transmission lines and substations across Kenya.

    Under the pact, Adani will fund, develop and manage the 400kV Gilgil-Thika-Malaa-Konza Line:Spanning 208.73 km.

    The project will include the construction of new substations at Gilgil, Thika, and Malaa, as well as substantial extensions at Konza. Adani Energy Solution will further develop the 220kV Rongai-Keringet-Chemosit Line with coverage of 100 km among other projects.

    The Kenya Energy Transmission Company will be the project manager. The government says negotiation for the deal has been ongoing for the last four months.

    The company is part of the Adani Group of India, which has also proposed to fund, construct and manage the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport through a 30-year concession. The deal has sparked a major legal and political storm due to the nature of the agreement.

  • MPs Stop Adani-JKIA Deal, Order Forensic Audit

    MPs Stop Adani-JKIA Deal, Order Forensic Audit

    MPs have ordered a forensic audit on the deal between Kenya Airports Authority and India’s conglomerate Adani Holdings on the proposed upgrade of Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.

    The Public Investments Committee on Commercial Affairs and Energy wants the auditor general to establish how Adani became part of the deal.

    The committee, at the same time, directed that KAA stops any further engagements on the Adani proposal. There are active court orders on the same.

    “It is the advice of the committee that you don’t do anything with Adani until this committee reports this matter to Parliament,” said PIC chairman David Pkosing (Pokot South MP).

    MPs warned KAA acting CEO Henry Ogoye of serious ramifications in the event of any breach of the directive.

    “You will carry personal responsibility. The House with the power to do these things is the National Assembly. We will do our work as a committee,” Pkosing said.

    He directed that a special audit report be tabled by the end of October.

    MPs want the auditor to ascertain the estimated figure of upgrading the airport and how the $1.83 billion (Sh230 billion) was arrived at as the cost of improvements.

    Auditors will also ascertain the scope of the package in terms of building a new terminal and a second runway.

    MPs want auditors to find out the best way to identify a private sector player and whether a privately initiated investment proposal was the best route.

    “The question we seek information on is whether there is an alternative way to save people money instead of the PIIP route,” Pkosing said.

    How the arrangement affects other airports and aerodromes which depend on JKIA for survival will also be established.

    The auditor will also assess how the private manager will work with the national airline and what happens with KAA staff.

    The call for an audit came after KAA acting managing director Henry Ogoye was hard-pressed to give the committee answers.

    Among the issues PIC raised was the speed at which Adani came in; being two weeks after a Spanish consultant ALG issued a feasibility report.

    “How did you procure the consultant that did the feasibility study? How did Adani know there was a proposal on the table? Did you tailor-make this deal for them? Is it the only one in the whole world?” the members asked.

    “We cannot avoid a special audit on the Adani deal. There is a high trust deficit in the country because of corruption. People think of deals being made when it comes to such projects,” Pkosing said.

    “How can a Kenyan understand how an investor knocked on doors two weeks later after the feasibility report was published? It implies that Adani participated in the research.”

    The committee pointed to an inside job. “There was a mischief and an inside job in bringing Adani on board.”

    It said the call for audit does not mean that KAA should “kill the good dream of upgrading JKIA.”

    “Greenfield was killed by unscrupulous people…if we don’t do anything, JKIA is going to die. All we are saying is that we should involve Kenyans,” Pkosing said.

     Ogoye, in his submissions, said the authority did a study and found that equipment used at JKIA was obsolete.

    But MPs questioned how KAA allowed the deterioration yet it makes profits every year.

    “You collect revenue and report profits, why not plough it back to improve technology and equipment?” Rangwe MP Lilian Gogo, PIC vice chair, said.

    The committee further wants answers on how Adani paid $50,000 (Sh6.4 million) before an agreement is signed.

    “Was the public involved? Were elected representatives involved? Was the power of intent exercised?” MPs asked.

    Ogoye said the money paid by Adani follows a law which requires that once a proposal is evaluated, the bidder pays the amount.

    “If there is any contract to be signed, it has to be done by me and I have not done anything,” the MD said.

    He said the upgrade was necessary as JKIA facilities are already overstretched.

    “We are behind in terms of infrastructure. Our capacity is for 7.5 million passengers. Last fiscal year, we handled 8.6 million. The terminal capacity is below the demand,” Ogoye said.

    JKIA should handle 35 flights per hour but currently does only 32 and has no space for parking cargo aircraft.

    “We should park 68 aircraft but we can only park nine cargo aircraft at ago now, forcing cargo aircraft to use passenger parking,” the MD explained.

    KAA did two feasibility studies as the initial one did not cover JKIA-specific issues.

    “We could not make an investment decision with the December 2022 report. We did a detailed report on JKIA,” Ogoye said.

    It emerged that the consultant did a feasibility study which was released in February 16, 2024 and Adani submitted its proposal a week later.

    The same consultant handled the feasibility study of the viability of the KAA facilities and issued a report in December 2022.

  • Mbadi On The Spot As He Defends Adani-JKIA Deal

    Mbadi On The Spot As He Defends Adani-JKIA Deal

    Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi was yesterday at pains to defend the government’s decision to accept the Privately Initiated Proposal (PIP) by Adani Holdings Limited to develop and expand the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

    Mbadi who appeared before the Senate Roads, Transportation and Housing Committee was taken to task to shed light on whether due diligence was carried on the company to determine whether it is debarred by any country or any international organisation from participating in Public Private Partnerships, whether the company is corrupt, is insolvent and is tax compliant in all jurisdiction.

    The questions came after documents presented to the committee showed that Adani Holdings provided its own sworn affidavit to prove that it was tax compliant as well as Mbadi’s own admission that although most of the background information they checked on the World Bank website, they only visited the mother company in India to check on compliance.

    It is after his admission that the session took a new twist as heated exchanges ensued between him and the senators who accused him of trying to conceal information on the controversial deal..

    The committee chairperson and Kiambu senator Karungo Thang’wa, Edwin Sifuna (Nairobi) and Richard Onyonka (Kisii), said the mess in the whole deal regards the manner in which the Public Private Partnership (PPP) committee domiciled at the National Treasury approved the entire deal.

    Sifuna took Mbadi to task over the decisions made by the PPP committee seeking to know whether he was aware that they are subject to appeal.

    To keep jobs

    He also sought to know whether all employees of JKIA would keep their jobs if Adani took over the management of JKIA.

    Said Sifuna: “The approval by the PPP committee is the crux of the matter. Mr CS, you were supposed to confirm whether this company has been suspended from doing business in the world and is not subject to any legal proceedings. Did you do this because the documents you have submitted here show that they swore their own affidavits? Also please confirm what Adani said to the employees.”

    And before he could answer, Onyonka intervened, accusing Mbadi of being a gatekeeper to some unknown individuals.

    Said Onyonka: “Mr CS what happened to you, why are you being a gatekeeper? This is a matter you cannot keep at all.”

    Onyonka also sought to know whether other companies expressed interest in taking part in the deal and whether the Treasury officials had visited India on a fact-finding mission. Sifuna on his part accused Mbadi of heckling after he raised his voice while responding to some of the questions.

    Said Sifuna: “Hon CS you are actually heckling now (instead of) answering the questions. Mr. Chair if the CS is tired of answering questions let him tell us. We are not here to be friends with him, we want the truth.”

    Mother country

    Thang’wa separately sought to know whether the government only checked compliance with the mother country India yet the law required them to check due diligence to confirm whether the company is debarred in any country in the world.

    He also sought to know whether Mbadi saw any problem as it is clear the issue of Adani was only dispensed within ten days in March this year, yet the proposal for expansion of JKIA was done a year ago.

    But in his defence of the government’s decision, Mbadi, although admitted that there are gaps that they are currently addressing, said that thorough due diligence was yet to be completed following the high court case stopping further dealings on the matter.

    He said that a team comprising Kenya Airports Authority, the State Department of Transport, the State Law Office and the Public Private Partnership Directorate of the National Treasury is in the process of undertaking a comprehensive due diligence exercise to establish the requisite capacity of Adani Airport Holdings Limited to undertake the project.

    He however clarified that in the preliminary due diligence that they carried out on the company they checked the World Bank website to confirm that the company is compliant.

    Mbadi who was accompanied by PPP director General Christopher Kirigua while confirming that the PPP committee had approved the deal, clarified that it made it clear that they would not proceed to the development stage if the 22 issues it raised including ensuring that all employees onboarded are not met.

  • Adani Group Link In Kenya’s Sh104B Healthcare Plan

    Adani Group Link In Kenya’s Sh104B Healthcare Plan

    Apeiro Limited, the largest shareholder in the Safaricom consortium that has been awarded the contract for the technology-based system for the Universal Health Coverage (UHC), has business links to the Adani Group.

    The government has awarded the consortium a contract to provide an Integrated Healthcare Technology System (IHTS) for the UHC programme. Each of the three firms will contribute to the Sh104.8 billion needed to implement, maintain and support the IHTS system over the next ten years based on their shareholding.

    The Abu Dhabi firm owns 59.55 percent of the stake in the consortium, Safaricom has a 22.56 per cent stake, while Konvergenz Network Solutions Limited has a shareholding of 17.89 per cent.

    The firms will recoup their investment through monthly instalments that will be paid starting February next year, upon hitting the set performance milestones.

    Apeiro is a subsidiary of Abu Dhabi-based investment firm, Sirius International Holding.

    Sirius itself is a subsidiary of International Holding Limited (IHL), creating a web of companies that make it hard to track the beneficial owners.

    Sirius is currently in a joint venture with Adani in which they run a company known as Sirius Digitech Limited.

    In July this year, this joint venture announced the acquisition of Coredge.io Private Limited which they called a “cutting edge sovereign AI and cloud platform company”.

    The Adani Group has recently gained notoriety in Kenya after it emerged that the Indian conglomerate is in negotiations to operate the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport for a period of 30 years.

    The group is also in negotiations for a multibillion dollar long-term lease contract in Kenya’s energy sector.

    The business partnerships have for the first time created a link between Adani and the President William Ruto-championed UHC.

    Far less known, however, is the third member of the consortium, Konvergenz Network Solutions. Its website claims to operate in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, with its address listed as 4th Avenue Towers in Upperhill.

    “It is noteworthy that the Safaricom Consortium will invest the full project cost and recover their investment over 10 years by payment of monthly instalments (the instalment payments will commence from February 2025) based on the successful implementation of the project,” said Medical Services Principal Secretary Harry Kimtai in a press statement on Friday.

    The Safaricom consortium is said to have been picked to implement the big-money project through a Specially Permitted Procurement Procedure under the Public Procurement and Assets Disposal Act.

    The Adani link in the UHC project comes at a time the company is trying to put out fires that have been lit under its feet by civil society groups that are opposed to its $2 billion (Sh258 billion) takeover of the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

    Last week, Adani argued in court that its JKIA takeover on a 30-year concession would be of “tremendous benefit to the Kenyan public”.

    “If the contract is signed as proposed in the PIP (privately-initiated proposal) the project will elevate the status of JKIA and also offer an increase in job opportunities to the people of Kenya,” said Adani.

    In Kenya, Adani is being represented by well-known law firm Dentons, Hamilton Harrison & Mathews, where lawyer Adil Khawaja is a senior partner. President William Ruto’s son, Nick Ruto, also works at the law firm.

    Mr Khawaja also currently serves as the chairman of Safaricom, which is the local face of the UHC contract.

    But it has also emerged that the events that led to Adani’s proposed takeover of JKIA kicked more than two years ago, when President Ruto took office.

    A study – whose findings are yet to be publicly released – that was undertaken by a Spanish firm in 2022 purportedly revealed a significant gap in the necessary infrastructure at JKIA to handle increased passenger traffic opened the door for the entry of Adani Group into Kenya.

    Spanish logistics and transport consultancy firm ALG Global was picked by the National Treasury’s Public Private Partnerships (PPP) Directorate to create a national aviation policy as well as the investments that the country needed to make in its aviation infrastructure in the medium-term to establish itself as a major aviation hub.

    ALG Global is a subsidiary of Indra Group, a Madrid-based holding company with interests in global defence, air traffic and space companies.

    The firm, which has 57,000 workers worldwide, made €4.343 billion (Sh624.5 billion) revenues in 2023.

    “ALG was engaged by Kenya’s Ministry of National Treasury and Planning to provide consultancy services for the development of an aviation policy for Kenya, and to review the proposed medium-term investment requirements for enhancing its aviation infrastructure and related services, particularly at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi,” says the Spanish firm on its official website.

    When he appeared before the Senate Committee on Roads, Transport and Housing last week, Roads and Transport Cabinet Secretary Davis Chirchir revealed that ALG’s study set the stage for the pivot towards public private partnerships (PPPs) for development of airports due to financial constraints at the exchequer.

    “The infrastructure deficit was an output of the National Aviation Policy study and Medium-Term Investment Plan of December 2022 done by ALG of Spain,” said Mr Chirchir.

    “The government is pursuing the PPP model on account of fiscal constraints in the face of acute infrastructure constraints,” he said.

    Once ALG finished the National Treasury assignment, it was also handpicked by the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) to undertake a feasibility study on JKIA, which would later be used in the Adani deal.

    KAA revealed that ALG was not competitively recruited to undertake the feasibility study on JKIA and that it was singularly sourced.

    “We rode on their institutional memory and the fact that they had data so we recruited them directly to do for us the feasibility study,” said KAA acting Managing Director Henry Ogoye when he appeared before the Senate alongside Mr Chirchir.

    Additionally, ALG was also involved in the drafting of the Heads of Terms between KAA and Adani. Heads of Terms are preliminary agreements that precede substantive contract negotiations.

    Mr Chirchir also named Kenyan law firm Ashitiva Advocates as one of the firms that were involved in the drafting of the document, even as Senators threatened to amend the law to force State officials to promptly reveal any privately-initiated proposals submitted by investors.

    “I think the committee will be making a recommendation that we make an amendment to the law on PPP (that) immediately somebody arrives at your office with a so-called privately-initiated proposal, within 48 hours you must disclose,” said Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna.

    According to its website, Ashitiva Advocates describes itself as a specialist law firm in energy, natural resources and infrastructure, financial services and construction, telecommunications, media and technology.

    “I do not have this information with me at the moment. Please let me consult Nelson Ashitiva (a senior partner at the firm) and we will respond on Monday,” said a representative of the law firm when contacted by Nation Africa for further information on its role in the Adani-JKIA deal.

    Adani is also in talks with the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company (Ketraco) for a Sh95 billion contract for the construction of three high voltage power transmission lines and two substations.

    Adani is seeking to recoup Sh634.7 billion ($4.92 billion) from the investment over a period of 30 years.

  • Whistleblower Names KNH Chairman Samier Muravvej As Part Of Local Indian Cartel Behind JKIA Takeover Deal With Adani Group

    Whistleblower Names KNH Chairman Samier Muravvej As Part Of Local Indian Cartel Behind JKIA Takeover Deal With Adani Group

    The whistleblower of the controversial Adani Group secret deal for the takeover of Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) has named Dr. Samier Muravvej, Board Chairman, Kenyatta National Hospital (KNH), as one of the key players who’s silently facilitating the hostile takeover of the airport, an issue that has dominated national conversation since the protests.

    Nelson Amenya, the whistleblower, places Dr. Samier at a key role in what he describes as an ‘Indian Syndicate’ working with the Adani Group to takeover the operations of the airport.

    Dr. Samier is not new to controversies, as portrayed by his tenure at the national healthcare facility. Recently, he was linked to a multimillion-dollar oxygen tender row that saw the key infrastructure stalled amid war with corrupt CEO Dr. Evans Kamuri, who’s under EACC investigation for looting the hospital millions.

    During an appearance in parliament, it emerged Dr. Samier had conflict of interest in the oxygen plant tender as he had his own preferred suppliers.

    Insiders also accuse him of flaunting procurement procedures and more than often brings in his own suppliers and has placed himself as a cartel boss rather than a chairman of the facility.

    Aaron Cheruiyot

    Back to the JKIA saga, Kericho Senator has also been named as the man who brokered the controversial deal and the link to Dr. Samier. During a live interview with KTN on Wednesday, Amenya revealed the unholy relationship between the two and untold details about the behind-the-scenes of the Adani deal.

    “I am the one who shared the documents with politicians. Nobody, including Senator Onyonka, knows anything about this deal except Aaron Cheruiyot, who is the broker in this deal, and he was the one who went to India, met with Adani, and brought Adani to Kenya.” Amenya said.

    “I am challenging Aaron Cheruiyot to come and say I’m lying that he didn’t go to India and that he doesn’t know the KNH chairman takes him to the airport, picks him, and all this Indian syndicate that he is working with. He should come out and say that this is false.” He went further.

    More revelations

    One of the key fears of the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) staff with the Adani deal has been loss of jobs after takeover. While the group has tried to allay fears, Amenya didn’t have kind words for them: “Basically, everything I have talked about on my X account is what they will find in these documents. They will find that Adani proposes to KAA that they (Adani) will reduce the workforce exponentially because obviously governments all over the world employ too many people and sometimes they are not working, which also happens in Kenya. What Adani is asking KAA is to allow them to trim the team. They even put in that proposal that KAA needs to look for departments to redeploy because they will let go of those people from JKIA.”

    The Adani Group Deal

    The plan for airport takeover involves leasing the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport to the Adani Group for 30 years in exchange for $1.85 billion of investment by Adani into the airport’s expansion.

    However, the deal shrouded in secrecy sparked anger among Kenyans and triggered a strike last week by the country’s aviation workers. Earlier, Gen Z protesters had dared to storm and takeover the airport following the reports of the takeover.

    The Adani Group operates seven airports in India and has often faced criticism from Indian opposition parties for winning favours from ruling governments. Indian officials and the Adani Group have denied such accusations.

    Kenya is struggling with a high debt load accumulated from years of splurging on infrastructure.

    A proposal by the government to hike taxes to generate extra money needed for debt repayments sparked deadly protests recently and forced the government to rescind the proposal.

    The plan involves leasing the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport to the Adani Group for 30 years in exchange for billions of shillings of investment by Adani into the airport’s expansion.

    According to senators, the controversial takeover of the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport by Indian tycoon Adani is a done deal, according to the Senate.

    This emerged when senators disapproved of the 30-year proposed takeover of JKIA airport operations by the Adani Group of India.

    Several organizations have filed suits against this deal.

    [pdf-embedder url=”https://cms.kenyainsights.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/Feasibility-Report-by-Adani-Airports-Holdings-Limited-for-the-development-of-JKI.pdf” title=”Feasibility Report by Adani Airports Holdings Limited for the development of JKI”]

  • Revealed: The Secrets Of 30-year India’s Adani Group Deal To Takeover JKIA In November

    Revealed: The Secrets Of 30-year India’s Adani Group Deal To Takeover JKIA In November

    The takeover of East Africa’s busiest hub, Jomo Kenyatta International Airport is poised to take effect in November.

    There’s information of meetings and secrets that point to the takeover of the airport by Indian-based Adani Group Holdings after six months behind-the-scenes planning.

    It is also emerging that should the deal between the government and Adani fall through at any given time, the parties will go for arbitration in London.

    Details emerging  from a  public participation meeting held by the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) indicate  that both KAA and Adani have been working on a six-month timeline to plan the takeover by November.

    Addressing stakeholders at a  Nairobi hotel on Friday, KAA’s  Acting Managing Director Henry Ogoye, defended the concession, explaining that KAA will help Adani manage the airport for the first two years. Thereafter Adani will fully take over JKIA for 30 years.

    Ogoye said that all leases would be transferred to Adani after two years of taking over.

    Additionally, KAA will be answerable to Parliament on behalf of Adani, as they aim to maximise returns at JKIA.

    “Adani will not be summoned by Parliament, but we will be,” Ogoye concluded.

    He added, “I have handled Adani for six months; let us not get emotional. Even if Adani might be here for 30 years, someone else might take over,” Ogoye told stakeholders at the meeting.

    The session, which began at 9 am and was abruptly adjourned at 1 pm  as KAA informed participants that their booked time had expired.

    KAA explained that it is in the process of upgrading and expanding JKIA-associated infrastructure to meet demand growth and improve service standards and decarbonisation requirements through a concession framework with Adani Airport Holdings of India.

    The stakeholders’ meeting centred around Adani’s Privately Initiated Proposal (PIP), which was submitted to KAA and outlined several controversial terms regarding the management of JKIA.

    The proposal highlights JKIA’s average operating profit of $47.5 million (Sh6.08 billion) over the past five years and a net profit of $33.8 million (Sh 4.33 billion) for FY23. Adani suggests funding improvements through a combination of debt, equity, and other methods

    During the public participation meeting, which Adani did not attend, Ogoye added that the government avoided a competitive process to save time after stakeholders raised concerns about transparency, accountability, and equity, describing the process as suspicious from its inception.

    Ogoye mentioned that a team is already in India to review Adani’s financial records and the airports they are managing as part of the due diligence ahead of the expected takeover.

    “We are discussing Adani because it’s the only option on the table,” Ogoye told stakeholders, adding, “We agreed that within six months, the project should start, or Adani will pull out.”

    When asked if KAA would consider setting up another airport, the Ogoye responded, “We have a facility to service, and Adani will have timelines.”

    However, Ogoye explained, “Take, for example, the car park; it was under concession and will run until 2032. The concession fee is just to ensure the continuation of other operations.”

    The MD said that all other facilities are incurring losses and that he was not aware of any scandals associated with Adani.

    The group was also told that the government had not approved the documents that would be given to the public.

    They were also told that a new agreement between KAA and Adani is expected soon and will be handed to the Attorney General, and then the Cabinet before Adani signs.

    “I already have bids from the UN and Exim bank to set up a logistic and quality centre here. I can assure you JKIA will remain competitive,” Said Ogoye, who added, “I cannot allow what is happening at Wilson to happen at JKIA.’

    According to the MD Wilson resembles was not competitive and appeared disorganised.

    “There were other companies from South Korea, North Africa, and Abu Dhabi. We now have Adani and need to make it work,” Ogoye told stakeholders.

    In his submission, John Alienya from the Shippers Council of Kenya said that the engagement with Adani was not clear and wanted the  government should explain why it is hiding documents.

    “We came to this meeting to discuss the documents that we have been not given. We are worried because our members have invested billions in airports and we don’t know who we will be dealing with,” Alienya said.

    John Mutinda, asked KAA to restart the process afresh so that Kenya can have value for their money.

    “You cannot refurbish an old building to be a new building. The slab and other features cannot be changed,” Mutinda said, adding, “We need a new airport to get the value of our taxes.”

    He said that it was sad that the Adani deal was made public by a whistleblower and that the project was being forced on  Kenyans.

    “Adani is in business and it will squeeze us businesses at the airport properly,” he added. He urged the government to learn from the Kenya Railways experience before considering the Adani deal.

    “Adani is coming and starting to refurbish. For all travellers in the world, you cannot refurbish an airport, and you can look at other airports,” Mutinda said, adding, “Why do we have someone coming to refurbish an airport, which Kenyans can do?”xxx

    He called on the MD to invest in a new facility and runway as the current one continues to serve millions of people travelling through JKIA.

    “It is very bad that we were called here for a public participation initiative to rubber stamp a flawed process by those in government to take over JKIA,” Moses Musyoka of Air-Go Consultants Limited said, adding, “We have read reports from other countries discussing money laundering, poor labor practices, and substandard services. It appears no due diligence was conducted.”

     According to Andani PIP proposal to KAA on JKIA,  significant aspect of the proposal involves transferring debt to the government, potentially placing a financial burden on taxpayers.

    Adani opposes a competitive bidding process for a Public-Private Partnership (PPP), arguing that it would cause delays and is seeking immediate government support and financial guarantees.

    Under the proposal, if Adani takes over JKIA, the government would be restricted from constructing a competing airport for 30 years. The plan also calls for changes to Kenyan laws to grant Adani exclusive operating rights at JKIA.

    It prohibits upgrades to Kenya’s 38 airports and the construction of new ones without Adani’s consent, effectively blocking improvements at key airports like Isiolo, Mombasa, Kisumu, and Eldoret.

    The government would also be responsible for covering losses, including those from terminating the JKIA deal, and would need to resolve legal disputes over JKIA land while setting up a fund for termination damages.

    The proposal seeks to reduce the government’s role in air traffic management and security while granting Adani control over fee collection, tax exemptions, and land access. Adani claims that no additional runway is needed until the concession ends in 2054. The company would manage some KAA staff, potentially leading to layoffs and the hiring of foreign workers. The government would need to borrow funds for airport improvements, with Adani financing through debt.

    Adani’s plan includes managing service fees in USD, repatriating earnings, and determining payments to Kenya, including termination fees. The proposal suggests doubling airport charges to align with regional hubs like Addis Ababa, thereby increasing revenue to secure JKIA’s future. The plan has faced criticism for bypassing standard procedures to involve a private operator. Adani proposes a Sh246 billion ($1.85 billion) investment in three phases, starting with Sh97.5 billion ($750 million) for a new terminal by 2029.

    The company argues that raising fees would yield an 18% return on investment, claiming that a 100% increase would minimally impact ticket prices while keeping JKIA competitive. The proposal includes a concession fee to KAA, starting at USD 47 million (KES 6 billion) and increasing by 10% every five years. Despite generating over 80% of KAA’s revenue, JKIA is underfunded, handling 10 million passengers annually, though it was designed for 7.5 million. Kenya’s aviation sector needs Sh260 billion for upgrades, with half required for JKIA.

    Adani has opposed competitive bidding due to potential delays and plans to complete the first phase by 2029, aligning with Vision 2030. The deal includes raising airport charges and a fixed concession fee, starting at USD 47 million (KES 6 billion) and increasing by 10% every five years. Additionally, Adani has requested the government establish a fund to cover damages in case of contract termination.

    The proposal allows Adani to hedge against financial risks, such as interest rate fluctuations and exempts the company from complying with new laws that might affect contract terms. The company demands tax exemptions and exclusive rights to set fees for all airport services, maintaining the authority to manage JKIA independently. Adani’s conditions further include preventing the development of competing airports for 30 years and seeking legal changes to ensure a monopoly over JKIA, contradicting Kenya’s Vision 2030 goals.

    Despite controversies surrounding Adani’s bid, including allegations of stock manipulation, tax evasion, and environmental damage, the company remains a powerful player. Adani has denied accusations that the proposed deal was negotiated in secrecy.

    During the public participation, stakeholders told KAA and the media that they believed Adani had been granted the project without their involvement from the beginning; they felt the process was just a rubber stamp exercise. Stakeholders, who claimed they should have been prioritized to fund the project, criticized the government for agreeing to a concession with a foreign company without involving them.

    Rachel Ndegwa, the Chief Executive Officer at Swissport, an airport ground services and air cargo handling company, criticized the PIP agreement, saying that many of its terms were unclear, and called on the MD to ensure KAA protects businesses and the value of taxpayers. She questioned how JKIA would remain competitive at a time when regional governments were directly investing in their airports, while JKIA was being handed to Adani.

  • Documents Reveal Details of Adani Group’s Controversial Bid to Run Kenya’s Largest Airport

    Documents Reveal Details of Adani Group’s Controversial Bid to Run Kenya’s Largest Airport

    By Organized Crime And Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP)

    Kenyans angered by the deal’s lack of transparency planned to occupy Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi in protest. A senator immediately requested that the government provide information about the plan, which had never been publicly mentioned before. On Tuesday, a coalition of Kenyan civil society organizations wrote to the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) demanding full disclosure.

    Now, OCCRP can reveal that although experts advised the Kenyan government to put out a public tender to expand the airport, the government instead allowed a “privately-initiated proposal” submitted by Adani Airport Holdings Inc in March to move forward. According to documents seen by OCCRP, the Adani proposal was approved to proceed to the “project development phase,” which entails additional consultation and negotiation.

    It is unclear why or how a privately-initiated proposal even came to be considered as an option for the airport expansion project. In February, when Spanish consulting firm ALG concluded a feasibility study for the project, it recommended using a “competitive bidding procedure” to “maximize the value-for-money for the Contracting Authority.”

    “We are not aware of any privately-initiated proposal for the Project (and generally we do not advise to use such methods),” the study said. (ALG did not respond to a request for comment.)

    The following month, however, Adani submitted a privately-initiated proposal (PIP) for a long-term concession to expand and operate the airport for 30 years in what’s known as a “build, operate, transfer” deal, according to documents obtained by OCCRP.

    Adani Group, one of India’s largest and most politically influential conglomerates, has interests in energy, agribusiness and weapons as well as its airport division. But it has also been hard-hit by scandal in recent years, including accusations of fraud and insider trading. (It has denied the claims).

    In its proposal to the Kenyan government, Adani argued that a PIP “offers distinct advantages over competitive bidding.”

    “PIP allows the government to secure terms beyond purely financial considerations, ensuring the welfare of citizens,” it wrote. “Conversely, competitive bidding risks making the deal purely transactional, without room for mutual considerations. A PIP creates a win-win scenario for the people of Kenya, the GOK, and private investors.”

    Under the terms of its $2.047-billion proposal, Adani would build and refurbish airport terminals, improve its taxiways, and possibly construct a new runway. These improvements would be financed by revenue from the airport, increasing airport fees, and raising money from private investors. After 30 years, Adani would receive an 18-percent equity stake in the airport. A separate document seen by OCCRP noted that this figure was high for an airport concession.

    The Adani proposal also said the success of the airport project would be “highly dependent on favorable tax policies” and asked that the Kenyan government consider “exempting it from corporate income tax derived from the concession for certain years.”

    The Adani Group did not reply to a request for comment.

    The CEO of KAA, Henry Ogoye, wrote in a statement on X that Adani Airport Holdings Inc. had indeed submitted a proposal to build a terminal and improve the infrastructure. He said the proposal would be “subjected to technical, financial, and legal reviews along requisite due processes.”

    In his statement, which was also sent to OCCRP in response to a request for comment, Ogoye also said that investment required for the airport was “significant” and could not be executed “without recourse to private funding.”

    But Nelson Amenya, the digital entrepreneur who had originally revealed the proposal on X on July 11, said he was concerned that the terms of the potential deal had been kept completely secret from the public.

    “This deal has been done clandestinely,” Amenya told OCCRP.

    After obtaining the documents, Amenya contacted Kenyan Senator Richard Onyonka about the project. Onyonka immediately wrote to the Standing Committee on Roads and Transportation requesting information on the deal. On Wednesday he addressed parliament, asking for the KAA board to be summoned.

    “The right things were not done, there were no public hearings,” Onyonka told OCCRP. “We should table the agreement, look at it, and evaluate it.”

    A feasibility report seen by OCCRP also stipulated that KAA would be responsible for “mitigating and managing any public opposition [or] protestor actions,” related to the airport project.

    This appears to have been prescient, #OccupyJKIA started trending on social media shortly after Amenya’s post, and thousands of Kenyans planned to head to the airport to protest. The anger over the airport deal came amid a turbulent month in Nairobi, which has already been convulsed by protests over proposed tax hikes and alleged corruption in the government of President William Ruto.

    On Monday evening, the National Police Service warned protesters against accessing the airport, which is classified as a protected area in Kenya. On Tuesday after a heavy ground and surveillance presence was deployed by police, protesters flooded into Nairobi’s central business district instead and were met with heavy tear gas by police.

    Last week, a letter submitted to the KAA on behalf of “the people of Kenya” asked why the authority was “surreptitiously rushing to conclude” the privately-initiated proposal with Adani. Titus Makhanu, public advocate and author of the letter, told OCCRP his firm planned to submit a petition to a court in Nairobi by this Friday “to stop the takeover.”

    Meanwhile, following public outrage, the Kenyan government tried to make it clear that the deal did not entail selling the airport.

    “JKIA is not on sale,” said Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi. “It is a strategic asset and if it was going to be sold, it can only be done after a full public process that Parliament endorses.”

  • State In Talks To Revive Controversy-Ridden Sh56bn JKIA Terminal Project

    State In Talks To Revive Controversy-Ridden Sh56bn JKIA Terminal Project

    The Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) is holding talks with a Chinese company with a view to reviving works on the second runway at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi.

    Known as Greenfield Terminal, the Sh56 billion project was cancelled in March 2016 barely two years after a ground-breaking ceremony that was held on May 23, 2014.

    At the time of cancellation, a down payment of Sh4.3 billion had been made to ACEG-CATIC JV, which was to undertake construction of the Greenfield Terminal.

    A total of Sh75 million was spent on ground-breaking, while Sh129.9 million was paid to consultant, Louise Berger. PwC received Sh7 million for securing the financier of the project.

    Following the termination of the contract, ACEG-CATIC JV wrote to KAA demanding to be paid a total of Sh17.6 billion for breach of contract.

    The Chinese company wanted KAA to pay Sh2 billion for the preparation of bill of quantities, Sh2.4 billion in additional costs, and Sh708.2 million value added tax charged by KRA.

    The contractor demanded an additional Sh5.6 billion, which included the balance of the contract for the bill of quantities, value added tax, and interest and penalties.

    KAA on its part demanded back the Sh4.3 billion that had been paid to ACEG-CATIC JV, forcing the contractor to sue. The matter is still pending in court.

    On Wednesday, KAA managing director Alex Gitari told the National Assembly Public Investments Committee that plans were underway to revive the Greenfield Terminal project and that KAA was in talks with the contractor to resolve the matter.

    “A team has been set aside to engage the contractor in negotiations on how the matter should be settled,” he said.

    The Greenfield Terminal tender was cancelled due to Kenya’s purportedly failure to raise 15% of the project cost, which would have unlocked the remaining 85% budget that was to be provided by a consortium of local and foreign banks.

    The KAA was to meet 15% of the required cost, which is about Sh8.4 billion, while the balance of Sh48 billion was to come from other lenders, including the China Exim Bank, Africa Development Bank (AfDB), American Consortium AAE and Standard Bank Group.

    Mooted during the Kibaki government as part of Vision 2030, the 178,000 square metres terminal would have given JKIA an extra handling capacity of 20 million passengers a year.

    The facility would have included 50 international check-in counters, eight air bridges for aircraft to dock, 45 aircraft parking stands, and an additional runaway.