Tag: Land grabbing Kenya

  • Grabbers of UoN Property Loot Sh211 Billion as Kenya Watches in Silence

    Grabbers of UoN Property Loot Sh211 Billion as Kenya Watches in Silence

    Kenya’s top university is under siege — not by students, but by powerful insiders and greedy business cronies. The University of Nairobi, with assets worth a staggering Sh211.3 billion, has become a playground for land barons and corrupt officials.

    They have carved out their wealth, leased land illegally, and diverted funds while hiding behind academic respectability. As the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission steps in, damning truths are surfacing.

    The grabbers of UoN property are being unmasked, and the scale of theft is shocking. If unchecked, this scandal will cripple public education and reward impunity at the highest level.

    Grabbers of UoN Property Loot Sh211 Billion as Kenya Watches in Silence
    UoN has no records showing how much income it earns from its vast property portfolio. Land is missing from books. Leases are undocumented. And beneficiaries remain anonymous. [Photo: Courtesy]

    Grabbers of UoN Property Exposed as Billions Disappear

    The University of Nairobi is bleeding. Corruption, greed, and backdoor deals have turned it into a crime scene disguised as a learning institution.

    The EACC has launched a full-blown investigation into how UoN’s assets — estimated at Sh211.3 billion — have been looted, leased, and stolen by top officials and their partners. What they’re uncovering paints a picture of institutional betrayal and organized theft.

    Last week, the commission charged council chairman Prof. Amukowa Anangwe and three others for illegally reappointing Mr. Ouma as acting Chief Operations Officer. That move, investigators believe, was part of a strategy to protect the rot and enable more illegal dealings. But the deeper scandal is far worse than one bad appointment.

    The EACC confirmed it is investigating senior UoN staff for embezzling funds and irregularly leasing university land to private developers.

    Properties meant to support public education have quietly changed hands. Rent payments are missing. Paperwork is incomplete or entirely absent. No one can account for where the money is going. This isn’t just corruption. It’s theft in broad daylight.

    Prime Land Handed Over to Cronies in Dodgy Deals

    One of the clearest cases involves a two-acre plot on Lower Kabete Road, Spring Valley — prime real estate in Nairobi. The land once had staff houses, but UoN leased it to Maar Petroleum for Sh700,000 per month in a 20-year deal.

    What followed was pure impunity. The company demolished the university house and replaced it with a petrol station, apartment buildings, and a retail outlet.

    They did this even after residents took them to court, arguing that such a development was illegal in Zone Five under Nairobi planning laws. A judge agreed and issued a stop order. Maar Petroleum ignored it.

    The company’s directors, Yusuf Abdi Hussein and Omar Ibrahim Abdi, were found in contempt of court in November 2023 — but continued building anyway. Meanwhile, the Auditor-General flagged the lease as deeply questionable.

    No one knows how the company was selected. No competitive process was followed. The lease terms were vague and suspiciously cheap. And worse — those new buildings will last 100 years.

    What happens when the 20-year lease ends? Does UoN get them for free? Unlikely. Will the university be forced to buy back what was already theirs? Highly probable.

    Auditor-General and EACC Reveal Shocking Mismanagement

    The Auditor-General, Nancy Gathungu, confirmed the worst: UoN has no records showing how much income it earns from its vast property portfolio. Land is missing from books. Leases are undocumented. And beneficiaries remain anonymous.

    This isn’t accidental. It’s a calculated move by corrupt insiders who ensure no paper trail is left behind. That way, accountability becomes impossible, and the loot keeps flowing.

    The EACC is now going property by property, document by document, trying to build a case that will hold in court.

    But it won’t be easy. The grabbers of UoN property are well-connected and deeply entrenched. What’s at stake is more than just land. It’s the very future of higher education in Kenya.

  • Robert Alai Faces Court Over Alleged Violent Land Seizure in Runda

    Robert Alai Faces Court Over Alleged Violent Land Seizure in Runda

    Kileleshwa MCA Robert Alai, once celebrated for exposing land scams in Nairobi, is now at the center of a disturbing land-grab scandal.

    In a shocking twist, Alai stands accused of illegally seizing a multi-million shilling property in Nairobi’s upscale Runda estate.

    A lawsuit filed by Cancer Investments Ltd claims that Alai and a group of armed men violently invaded the property, assaulted the company’s director, and refused to vacate.

    The case has stunned many Kenyans who once viewed Alai as a champion against land cartels. His fall from whistleblower to alleged perpetrator marks a dark chapter in his political career.

    Robert Alai Faces Court Over Alleged Violent Land Seizure in Runda
    Robert Alai built a public image as a defender of the people, a man who exposed land theft and corruption. But the ongoing legal battle suggests that he may now be on the other side of the law. [Photo: Courtesy]

    Robert Alai Sued Over Prime Runda Land Grab in Shocking U-turn

    Cancer Investments Ltd has taken Robert Alai to court, accusing him of forcefully and illegally taking over their land in Runda on March 31. The firm, through lawyer Harrison Kinyanjui, filed a petition at the Environment and Land Court, calling for Alai’s immediate removal from the property.

    According to court documents, individuals linked to Alai broke into the property using crude weapons, demolished a concrete pillar at the gate, and physically attacked the company’s director, Mukhtar Ahmed Parkar.

    Mr. Parkar told the court that his calls for police assistance went unanswered because Alai allegedly used his political connections to block any action.

    The judge, Mohamed Kullow, certified the case as urgent and ordered that Alai, the Attorney General, and the Officer Commanding Gigiri Police Station be served ahead of the hearing set for May 19.

    Cancer Investments insists that they legally bought the land from Trans National Bank in 1992 and have maintained all legal dues, including payments to Runda Water Ltd and power utility firms.

    The land was recently leased to a neighboring school, and preparations for renovations were underway when Alai’s team allegedly stormed in.

    The company says it has never entered any transaction with Alai regarding the property. Its original title remains intact and is currently still under a charge from a bank, a fact that the company plans to prove in court.

    From Land Activist to Alleged Land Grabber

    Robert Alai’s reputation was built on publicly exposing rogue developers, land fraud, and political corruption. He rose to prominence as a fearless blogger who took on the Nairobi land mafia and gave voice to communities suffering from evictions and shady deals.

    But his entry into politics seems to have flipped the script. Once on the side of victims, Alai is now accused of using violence and political influence to benefit from the very crimes he once condemned.

    The alleged invasion of Runda raises serious concerns about abuse of office. Mukhtar Ahmed Parkar claims Alai’s name intimidated law enforcement, who refused to act even after the violent assault and property damage.

    In a country where land conflicts have long fueled injustice and impunity, this case underscores how political muscle can silence justice.

    Observers are now questioning whether Alai’s anti-land fraud campaigns were genuine or part of a calculated path to gain political capital. Many feel betrayed by what they see as a classic case of power corrupting a former activist.

    Political Protection and a Pattern of Impunity

    This case against Robert Alai shines a light on a wider problem—how elected officials often use their positions to bypass the law. According to Parkar, despite presenting proof of ownership and a history of utility payments, he was unable to stop the takeover. That alone shows how deep the rot runs.

    Court proceedings will now have to determine whether Alai acted illegally and if the property will be returned to Cancer Investments Ltd. But the larger question remains: how many other properties have been quietly taken over by those with power and influence?

    This scandal also reopens conversations about the failure of zoning laws and the growing number of illegal developments across Nairobi.

    Experts have often blamed political interference for shielding land grabbers. If proven guilty, Alai’s case will join a growing list of politicians-turned-developers exploiting their offices for personal gain.

    With the May 19 court date approaching, all eyes are on the judiciary to determine whether justice will finally catch up with Robert Alai.

    Conclusion

    Robert Alai built a public image as a defender of the people, a man who exposed land theft and corruption. But the ongoing legal battle suggests that he may now be on the other side of the law.

    As Cancer Investments Ltd fights to reclaim its land in Runda, the public must reckon with the uncomfortable reality that those who speak loudest against corruption can sometimes fall prey to it themselves. The case is a test not only for the courts but for Kenyan democracy and accountability.

  • Who owns Swing Investment Limited, a Local Real Estate, Property Developers company Trying to Grab Again Embattled Kenya Meteorological Dpt’s 21.04ha Land.

    Who owns Swing Investment Limited, a Local Real Estate, Property Developers company Trying to Grab Again Embattled Kenya Meteorological Dpt’s 21.04ha Land.

    Puzzles behind grabbed KMD land

    The 21.04 hectares located in Nairobi’s Industrial Area on Road B, off Enterprise Road, belong to the Kenya Meteorological Department (KMD). The land houses a meteorological station with a transmitter, generator rooms and staff quarters.

    The irregular allocation is the subject of an audit query by Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu on the accounts of the ministry for the 2019/20 financial year.

    The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) revoked titles for the 21.04 hectares prime land block/209/24794/81, located in the city’s industrial area on road B off Enterprise Road.

    Despite High Court revoking the land in 2020, another company, Swing Investment Company sued the Meteorological Department seeking a portion of the 21.04-hectare land.

    PAC recently summoned five companies that had earlier grabbed the land but lost it through the EACC court action.

    They had also secured title deeds. Hillbrow Properties Limited allocated itself 3.998 hectares, Brentwood Traders Limited 3.656 hectares and Pamba Properties Limited 2.968 hectares. Varun Industrial Credit Limited had 6.259 hectares while Beacon Towers Limited got 4.731 hectares.

    Hillbrow was incorporated on November 13,1995, Varun on May 11, 1995 and Pamba on January 15, 1996. Brentwood was incorporated on September 1, 1997 and Beacon on September 10, 1997.

    PAC also established that, at the incorporation of the five companies, there were two shareholders, Kantibhai Maganbhai and Harish Ashabhai Patel.

    EACC went to court in 2009 and on August 3, 2020, Environment and Land Court Judge E.O Obaga revoked the five title deeds after it established that they were fraudulently obtained. There was no appeal.

    Who could be the owner of the backing dog?

    PAC said its preliminary investigations reveal that the five companies are owned by one individual. Hillbrow Properties limited, Brentwood Traders limited, Pamba Properties limited, Varun Industrial Credit limited and Beacon Towers limited. The five private companies subdivided the 21.04-hectare land into equal portions and allocated it to themselves.

    Documents tabled before Parliament show that the five companies are owned by two individuals, Kantibhai Maganbhai and Harish Ashabhai Patel who owned 99 shares and one share respectively.

    At the incorporation of the five companies in the late 1990s, Mr Maganbhai owned majority shareholding before his death in December 2007. A third director in all the five companies Pritibala Shah, the daughter of Maganbhai, was appointed on June 15, 2007, but without any share according to the judgment.

    Despite grabbing a government land. No civil lawsuit has been taken against the musketeers. Either Untouchable or the same Government officials in the relevant institutions are cahoots. 

    Director of Meteorological Department Stella Aura and the Environment ministry legal officer Annie Syombua confirmed there have not been any criminal proceedings against Mr Maganbhai and Harish Ashabhai after they lost a bid to fraudulently claim ownership of the 21.04 hectares.

    MPs claimed there might be a wider plot by some ministry officials to collude with the owners of the companies to grab the land.

    Kenya insights can’t acertain but believe that the aforementioned campany swing ltd might be a shell of the busted landgrabbers to again grab the land. Perhaps, army barracks should be camped at the site of dispute if that’s what it takes to tame these landgrabbers. If you know you know.

    President Kenyatta had issued an executive order that the land be handed over to the housing department for the Mukuru slum upgrading project but some few moles in government agencies in cahoot with the Patels are still battling for a portion of the land.

     

  • Tricks Used By Modern Day Land Grabbers

    Tricks Used By Modern Day Land Grabbers

    Grabbers have devised new tricks to fleece land owners as disputes continue to pile up in court.

    From faking land registration titles, invading public and idle land, faking court orders, selling one piece of land to several buyers and forging death certificates, the list of tricks appears endless.

    In one of the instances, a businessman of British origin was allegedly “killed” by a cartel of land grabbers while he was away attending to his sick wife in London. His titles were changed and by the time he returned to Kenya, the land had new owners and he was landless.

    Paul Curzon accused Martin Muthama and Stephen Kirianki of faking his deathfaking his death, preparing a death certificate and using the document to obtain a new title to his parcels of land situated in upmarket Kileleshwa area.

    Faked death

    “It is amazing how they forged documents to claim that I had died and to register the property in their names.

    Then while I was away, they invaded my home, chased away the domestic workers, stole my properties and put up the land for sale,” swore Curzon in his court papers.

    Curzon said he had lived in the properties from 1993 to 2004, when the landlord agreed to sell him the land.

    He stayed peacefully in the premises until June last year when the grabbers struck, claiming he had sold the land in 2005 before his “death” in 2006.

    Interestingly, Kirianiki in his response to the suit maintained that he bought the property from Curzon in 2005 before his death in 2006, and that the person now claiming to be Curzon was a ghost.

    “I have reliable information that Paul Curzon died in August 2006 and he does not exist. We have been the legal owners of the property after we had the change of registration done at the Ministry of Lands,” Kirianki swore.

    His allegations were however, dismissed and High Court Judge Isaac Lenaola ordered the chief lands registrar to reconstitute records of the missing original land title, and also stopped further dealings, sale or transfer of the land.

    Within Nairobi County, a task force appointed by Governor Evans Kidero in 2014 to investigate grabbing of public lands established there was a group of land cartels enjoying high-level protection who went about grabbing public land with impunity.

    According to the report, grabbing of public land is carefully planned and executed through non-confrontational approaches where grabbers secure court orders through forged documents to claim ownership.

    Other tricks used by land grabbers include hiving off a portion of land whose total acreage is unclear. They then hurriedly register it before the public land is marked.

    Interestingly, religious institutions are also in the mix of land grabbers. These institutions get public land under the guise of putting up a worship centre only to turn around and claim ownership of the land.

    “There are instances where religious institutions come under the guise of assisting a community put up facilities like toilets but later ask to be allowed to use part of the public land, to which they eventually lay illegal claim,” said the report.

    Some church leaders have also used the trust placed on them by their congregations to grab their land.

    One such cleric, Bishop Joel Mwangi of Revival Gospel Church, was found guilty of fraudulently obtaining two acres of land from a widow under the guise that he could help her and her son relocate to Britain.

    The widow, Grace Ndung’u, testified that she was approached by the bishop to surrender the land soon after her husband’s death and she did not object.

    “I believed once my son secured employment in the UK, he would buy me a bigger plot. The bishop used a photo of Queen Elizabeth to convince me, saying he had had discussions with the queen who agreed to host my son once he immigrates to the UK,” she said.

    Land owners’ absence and failure to develop their land is another motivation for land grabbers to take advantage of other people’s property.

    At times, the forged title is used to secure a bank loan and the real owner only gets to know about it when auctioneers knock at his door ready to sell the land in order to recover the defaulted amount.

    Bank loan

    Such fate befell one Alice Awalo when land grabbers took advantage of her absence to forge her title and secure a loan from Sidian Bank.

    Appearing before the court, Awalo said she bought the 100-acre land in Kajiado valued at Sh550 million in 2007 while she was an employee of the United Nations stationed in Uganda and had never sold or transferred it to anyone.

    She said she was surprised when Sidian Bank sent auctioneers to her land, claiming the title had been used to secure a Sh50 million loan.

    The bank’s case was that directors of Zenith Pharmaceuticals Ltd approached it for a loan facility and when they asked for security, they provided the land title, which they believed was genuine as it originated from the land’s registrar.

    The bank was alarmed when the company defaulted in repaying the loan and sought to auction the land to recover their money.

    However, according to Awala, the company directors forged her signature while she was away in Uganda purporting that she agreed to the change of title documents.

    “I am a total stranger to dealings between the bank and the company. I was not in the country on the date they indicated that I signed the authorisation letter. It therefore surprises me when the bank says they have title documents, which I have never shared with anyone,” she said.

    These new tricks have led to an increase in court cases, which also take a long time to resolve.

    A State of the Judiciary report established that 66 per cent of land disputes filed at the Environment and Lands Court are pending determination in all court stations spread across the country.

    Pending cases

    “The high number of pending cases shows the case clearing rate is very low. This is worrying as it shows that the lands court is adding more cases onto existing pending cases, thereby increasing the backlog,” says the report.

    Politicians too, have fallen victim to land grabbers in scams involving millions of shillings.

    Kitui South MP Rachael Nyamai forked out Sh10 million hoping to get a piece of the controversial 134-acre Karen land. Only for her to later realise that she had been dealing with a person who was facing forgery charges.

    She sued James Mbaluka for duping her, saying she met Mr Mbaluka in 2014 and he promised that he could help her get land in Karen.

    Mbaluka is among suspects accused of conspiracy to transfer the Karen land between 2005 and 2014. He was charged alongside former National Social Security Funder managing trustee Jos Konzolo, Sara Mwenda, Pauline Wanjiku, Mark Muigai and Macmilan Mutinda.

    Taveta MP Naomi Shaban and former nominated MP Amina Abdalla have also been victims of land grabbers’ tricks. They paid Sh2 million for a fake land title in Karen.

    The two paid Nancy Kioko the money only to later realise that the pieces of land they were shown belonged to another person and that Kioko had forged the title registrations. The lady was later charged with defrauding the two politicians.

    In other instances, land grabbers pose as agents of the real land owners who get surprised when they find out their land has been sold without their knowledge.

    Tobias Otieno fell for this trap when he was approached by lawyer Denis Mabeya and other people to buy prime land in Mombasa valued at Sh58 million.

    According to Otieno, Mr Mabeya told him he had been instructed by the land owner, Daisy Wairimu, to act for her, after which they agreed he should pay Sh29 million as deposit with the balance to be completed after delivery of the title.

    Ms Wairimu was surprised when she learned her land was being sold without her knowledge, and swore before the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) disciplinary tribunal that she never dealt with Mabeya and had never instructed him to do any transaction on her behalf.

    The LSK tribunal later found Mabeya guilty of misconduct and struck him off the roll of advocates for falsely presenting himself as a representative of the land owner.