Tag: Mohammed Jaffer

  • How Mohamed Jaffer Tightened His Stranglehold on Mombasa Port as Parliament Looked Away and a Dirty Fuel Scandal Engulfed His Empire

    How Mohamed Jaffer Tightened His Stranglehold on Mombasa Port as Parliament Looked Away and a Dirty Fuel Scandal Engulfed His Empire

    The vessel MT Paloma had barely cleared Mombasa port and entered South African waters when the full scale of Mohamed Jaffer’s double exposure became impossible to ignore. His fuel company stood accused of flooding Kenyan roads with contaminated petrol over Easter weekend 2026. His lawyers were fighting off a Ugandan importer demanding the release of wheat that had sat detained at berths three and four for years. And somewhere in the Ministry of Roads and Transport, a contract was being drafted that would hand him those same berths, and the grain monopoly they represent, for another twenty years.

    That contract, approved by President William Ruto’s administration and awaiting gazettement as of the date of this publication, extends Bulkstream Limited’s lease over the Port of Mombasa’s only specialized bulk grain discharge terminals seven years before the existing concession was due to expire. It is not a renewal born of competitive merit, transparent procurement, or public interest. It is the latest triumph of an empire that has outlasted four presidents, survived every parliamentary investigation thrown at it, and buried every rival who came close enough to threaten it.

    The deal cements what market analysts, parliamentary committee members, and competing operators have called for two decades the most consequential private monopoly in Kenya’s food supply chain. Bulkstream, formerly known as Grain Bulk Handlers Limited before a quiet 2024 rebranding, handles approximately 98 percent of all bulk grain imports into Kenya, including wheat, rice, and maize destined not only for Kenyan mills but for the landlocked nations of Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, Burundi, and eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. Roughly 2.2 million tonnes pass through its terminals every year. No rival has been allowed to operate at scale since the original exclusivity window expired in 2008. It did not expire because the market decided so. Parliament tried to force open the door. The door stayed shut.

    Parliament warned. Courts ruled. Rivals were crushed. And the Ruto government handed him 20 more years anyway.

    THE ARCHITECTURE OF PERMANENT ADVANTAGE

    To understand why no competitor has successfully entered the bulk grain market at Mombasa for over two decades, one must understand the pricing structure that Parliament itself identified as the foundational problem. Bulkstream pays the Kenya Ports Authority a service fee of $3.85 per metric tonne to operate its specialized terminals. Conventional operators wishing to handle bulk grain through non-specialized berths are charged $10.40 per metric tonne for the same privilege. That gap of $6.55 per tonne is not a market outcome. It is a regulatory inheritance, embedded in the KPA tariff book, that makes it structurally impossible for any competitor to undercut Jaffer’s pricing regardless of how efficient, well-capitalized, or willing they might be.

    On top of the KPA fee, Bulkstream charges millers $16 per metric tonne for its handling services. The math is unambiguous. Across 2.2 million tonnes annually, the terminal extracts over $35 million a year in miller fees alone, against a cost base that includes a KPA service charge equivalent to approximately $8.5 million. The embedded price differential flows directly into the cost of bread, ugali, and animal feed across Kenya and several neighboring countries. It is a toll paid by every East African family that consumes grain. Parliament did not merely notice this arrangement in passing. It named it explicitly.

    The 2020 report of the National Assembly Finance, Planning and Trade Committee described the differential as a technical barrier to trade and competition and recommended the transparent appointment of additional bulk grain operators and expansion of port facilities to accommodate them. The Kenya Ports Authority set a 2022 deadline to license a second handler. That deadline passed without a single approval being granted. The committee’s language was unambiguous. Its recommendations were ignored with equal clarity.

    BULKSTREAM BY THE NUMBERS

    Market share of bulk grain imports at Mombasa: ~98%

    Annual throughput: 2.2 million metric tonnes

    KPA service fee paid by Bulkstream: $3.85/tonne

    KPA fee charged to conventional operators: $10.40/tonne

    Differential (competitive moat): $6.55/tonne

    Handling fee charged to millers: $16/tonne

    Lease extension: 20 years, approved 7 years early

    Original concession signed: ~2000 (33-year term)

    MJ Group estimated valuation (Africa Report, 2025): KSh16.3 billion

    TWO DECADES OF WARNINGS, ZERO CONSEQUENCES

    The 2020 parliamentary committee report is not a standalone intervention. It is the culmination of over two decades of parliamentary scrutiny of an arrangement that legislators, regulators, and trade observers have consistently identified as anti-competitive and harmful to the public interest. As far back as 2018, MPs were issuing directives to end Jaffer’s monopoly on the grain trade, as contemporaneous media records show. The problem was never lack of awareness. The problem was the persistent gap between parliamentary resolve and executive action.

    The original concession between Grain Bulk Handlers Limited and the Kenya Ports Authority was signed around the year 2000. It included an initial eight-year exclusivity window, explicitly granted to allow the company to recover its investment costs. That exclusivity expired in February 2008. The KPA board resolved at that point to liberalize grain handling and introduce competition. What followed was a series of cancelled tenders, aborted licensing processes, and unending delays that preserved the monopoly in practice while abandoning it in theory. Each successive government found a reason not to finish the process.

    When in 2022 interests linked to Mining Cabinet Secretary Hassan Joho appeared to have finally broken through, winning a Sh5.9 billion contract for Portside Freight Terminals to construct a competing facility, the Supreme Court quashed the procurement. The ruling found that KPA had failed to meet constitutional thresholds of fairness, transparency, and competitiveness. The irony was corrosive. The very procurement standards cited to cancel Jaffer’s competitor were standards that the original concession to Jaffer had never been compelled to meet. The playing field was cleared again. Jaffer remained the only player on it.

    A senior KPA manager’s remarks to international media in the aftermath of the Portside ruling were telling in their candor. The official stated plainly that KPA cannot run the grain facility and that the two berths are likely to remain under private entities for a longer period. That is not the language of a regulator planning to introduce competition. It is the language of a captured institution confirming that the current arrangement will endure. The 20-year lease renewal that followed merely formalized what the official had already conceded.

    A senior KPA manager told media: ‘The two berths are likely to remain under private entities for a longer period.’ The 20-year lease simply made it official.

    MT PALOMA: CARCINOGENS, COVERUPS, AND THE EASTER WEEKEND CONTAMINATION

    On March 27, 2026, the vessel MT Paloma docked at the Port of Mombasa carrying approximately 60,000 to 68,000 metric tonnes of Premium Motor Spirit. The ship had last been in Fujairah, United Arab Emirates. It had originally been destined for Angola. It arrived in Kenya under an emergency import authorisation signed on March 25, two days before it docked, for a cargo that laboratory tests would later show contained elevated levels of sulphur, benzene, and manganese, all above legally permitted Kenyan standards. Benzene is classified as a known human carcinogen. Elevated manganese destroys catalytic converters. Excess sulphur corrodes engines and elevates toxic roadside emissions.

    One Petroleum Limited, the importing company, is registered to the Jaffer family. Corporate registry documents list Mohamed Jaffer, his sons Mujtaba Jaffer and Ali Abbas Jaffer, and other family members among the directors and shareholders. The firm is headquartered in Mbaraki, Mombasa. It is not a new entrant in the fuel trade. It is a long-established company within the MJ Group ecosystem.

    The sequence of events that allowed contaminated fuel into the Kenyan market reads as a governance failure at multiple levels. Energy Principal Secretary Mohamed Liban wrote to the Kenya Bureau of Standards managing director requesting a temporary waiver on conformity certificates, citing disruption to the Strait of Hormuz following US-Iran tensions as the justification for emergency procurement outside the standard government-to-government supply framework. Trade Cabinet Secretary Lee Kinyanjui then issued a letter on March 28, by which time MT Paloma had already been docked for 24 hours, granting the waiver. The letter acknowledged in plain language that the petroleum aboard contained high levels of manganese, sulphur and benzene.

    The waiver directed that the substandard fuel be blended with existing stocks in KPC’s pipeline system to dilute the chemical concentrations. What that meant in practice was that contaminated fuel was deliberately commingled with Kenya’s strategic reserves and released to oil marketing companies serving retail stations across the country. Kenyan motorists who filled their vehicles over the Easter weekend, some of the highest-traffic days of the year, were doing so without any knowledge that the fuel entering their tanks had failed quality tests. Reports of engine damage linked to the consignment began circulating before the Directorate of Criminal Investigations had made its first arrests.

    Narok Senator Ledama Ole Kina became the most aggressive parliamentary voice on the scandal. In explosive testimony before the Senate Energy Committee, Ole Kina named three individuals at the centre of what he described as a coordinated scheme to manufacture a fuel shortage and exploit it for profit: Joel Mburu, Supply and Logistics Manager at the Kenya Pipeline Company; Joseph Wafula, Deputy Director of Petroleum at the Ministry of Energy; and Mohamed Jaffer. The senator alleged internal communications showed premeditated planning and an orchestrated crisis, with the emergency declaration being used to justify bypassing the G2G framework. His phrasing was blunt: he called it the most brazen act of energy-sector looting in Kenya’s recent history.

    The DCI opened its investigation quickly and its reach was wide. Former KPC Managing Director Joe Sang, former EPRA Director-General Daniel Kiptoo, and former Principal Secretary Mohamed Liban were arrested, questioned, and subsequently resigned from their positions. Two KPC employees, Joseph Wafula and Joel Mburu, were taken into custody and released on police cash bail of Sh100,000 each. Investigators summoned executives from One Petroleum and, separately, Swiss-owned Oryx Energies, which had imported a second controversial consignment of approximately 60,000 tonnes at prices Ole Kina alleged were set at $253.94 per metric tonne against the government’s own contracted rate of $84.00. The DCI confirmed it was working with both local and international investigative bodies.

    One Petroleum’s public statement attempted damage control. The company confirmed that four firms had responded to an emergency request from the Energy Ministry, that it was one of them, and that it had taken steps to ensure the MT Paloma consignment would not enter the market. That last assurance was contradicted within days. KPC confirmed that the fuel had in fact been mixed with existing stocks and released to oil marketing companies. Energy CS Opiyo Wandayi, who ordered the product withdrawn from the market and blocked payments to One Petroleum, stated that the importation would have pushed pump prices up by as much as Sh14 per litre. The government ultimately reversed its own waiver, but by then the fuel had traveled far beyond any pipeline.

    THE MT PALOMA TIMELINE

    March 25, 2026: Emergency import authorisation signed for One Petroleum

    March 27, 4:14 PM: MT Paloma docks at Port of Mombasa

    March 28: Trade CS Kinyanjui issues written waiver acknowledging benzene, sulphur, manganese violations

    March 30: MT Paloma departs for South Africa

    Easter Weekend: Contaminated fuel distributed via KPC to oil marketers

    April 5-6: DCI arrests Sang, Liban, Kiptoo; Wafula and Mburu held on bail

    April 7: Government orders fuel withdrawal; One Petroleum’s Sh11.8 billion exposure confirmed

    April 15: KPC confirms contaminated fuel already in market, commingled with reserves

    April 17: Senator Ole Kina names Jaffer, Mburu, and Wafula in Senate committee testimony

    THE SUCCESSION GAMBLE: PASSING THE EMPIRE TO THE SONS

    Even as the fuel scandal was burning through KPC’s senior leadership and generating its first Senate committee hearings, a quieter restructuring was unfolding inside the Jaffer business empire that goes to the heart of whether the family can sustain what the patriarch built. Mohamed Jaffer is 78 years old. He has been described in regional business media as a work-in-silence billionaire who guarded his empire jealously and brokered political friendships along the way to protect it. That political protection is now being redistributed across a more complex ownership structure, and the question of whether it survives the transition is genuinely open.

    In 2024, MJ Group indirectly sold a controlling stake in Bulkstream through its Mauritius-based holding company Incorp Limited to African Infrastructure Investment Managers, the South Africa-headquartered institutional fund manager with assets under management of approximately $3.8 billion and a portfolio spanning toll roads, renewable energy, and port logistics across Africa. AIIM is itself a subsidiary of the Old Mutual group. The Incorp Limited holding structure places the transaction at arm’s length from direct Kenyan regulatory scrutiny while maintaining the family’s operational influence through subsidiary roles.

    AIIM is now reported to be preparing to sell approximately half of its stake in African Ports and Corridors Holdings, its Mauritius-based platform covering port and commodity logistics assets in Zambia and Tanzania, to Globe In Limited. Globe In is another Mauritius-registered entity with active cargo handling interests in Kenya and Uganda and traceable connections to the Jaffer network. The circular logic of the restructuring is not lost on analysts who track the group: institutional capital comes in through the front door, and network control is maintained through affiliated entities at the back.

    Mujtaba Jaffer and Abass Jaffer, sons of the founder, are the visible faces of the next generation. Mujtaba has fronted Bulkstream’s public statements in the Pan Afric Commodities wheat detention case. Abass, a director at Bulkstream, did not respond to questions from international media in late May 2026 about the lease renewal. Their ascension to operational leadership coincides with a period of maximum external pressure: a live criminal investigation into One Petroleum, multiple court battles over detained cargo, an Sh1.8 billion land compensation dispute involving Miritini Free Port Limited, and the spectacle of their patriarch’s name being read into the record of a Senate committee hearing on a national fuel crisis.

    The institutional investors now holding a controlling interest in Bulkstream through AIIM bring governance expectations and reputational considerations that the family structure did not face in the same way. Foreign institutional capital does not tolerate the kind of opacity that enabled three decades of parliamentary investigation without consequence. Whether AIIM views the One Petroleum scandal as a reputational contagion risk to its infrastructure fund is a question that will play out in boardrooms, not courtrooms. The sons are entering leadership not in a period of consolidation but in a period of acute vulnerability, and the difference between inherited political capital and proven political acumen is a gap that no business school curriculum can close.

    Mujtaba and Abass Jaffer are inheriting an empire under criminal investigation, buried in lawsuits, and restructured through layers of Mauritius-registered entities. The patriarch made it look easy. It was not.

    A PATTERN OF IMPUNITY: THE CONTROVERSIES THAT KEEP ACCUMULATING

    The grain monopoly and the fuel scandal are not aberrations in an otherwise clean record. They are the two largest current expressions of a pattern of controversy that has attached itself to the Jaffer empire across multiple sectors and over multiple decades. Court filings, parliamentary records, and investigative reporting have documented a series of disputes that individually might be dismissed as the inevitable legal friction of large-scale business but collectively form a picture of an empire that uses institutional chokepoints, legal attrition, and political proximity as competitive weapons.

    The Pan Afric Commodities case is illustrative of how Bulkstream’s market power translates into leverage over importers. The Ugandan firm purchased approximately 2,837 tonnes of Ukrainian wheat in 2018 under a charter party agreement. The wheat was shipped to Mombasa and handled by Bulkstream. A portion of the consignment, 1,514 tonnes, remained in storage as a dispute over import taxes and the intervention of a Ugandan receivership manager complicated the release. By September 2025, Bulkstream was asserting a bailment lien over the wheat pending payment of $1.1 million in accumulated handling and storage fees. The Mombasa High Court was still hearing the case into early 2026. A cargo shipped in 2018 was still impounded in 2026. The firm controlling the only bulk grain terminal in Kenya has no commercial incentive to resolve such disputes quickly.

    Parallel civil suits from Kenyan maize millers alleging Sh90 million in damages have traversed the court system over similar grievances. The cases share a structural dynamic: importers and processors who depend entirely on Bulkstream for their grain intake have no alternative handler to turn to, which means any contractual dispute places them at the mercy of their only logistics option. Parliament recognized this leverage in its 2020 report. The market still operates with that leverage fully intact.

    The Miritini Free Port land dispute has brought a separate line of allegations into view. Court records show that Bulkstream’s related entity Miritini Free Port Limited received approximately Sh1.8 billion from the National Land Commission as compensation for land in Jomvu, Mombasa. Those payments have been challenged in court, with proceedings in the Environment and Land Court in Mombasa. Justice Ogla Sewe extended interim orders in the case in July 2024, and as of the period of this publication the matter remains unresolved.

    Reports have also circulated, some contested, regarding allegations of parliamentary bribery in connection with Bulkstream’s interests. A report in August 2025 described allegations that officials connected to Bulkstream paid bribes to members of parliamentary committees handling matters relevant to the grain terminal. President Ruto had around the same time ordered investigations into rising corruption in parliamentary committees. Bulkstream has not formally addressed these allegations. The individuals named in those reports have not faced charges that this publication can verify. But the allegations follow a company whose relationship with parliamentary oversight has always been one of attrition rather than accountability.

    The ProGas and LPG sector dealings attributed to the Jaffer network have generated their own trail of regulatory disputes and court actions. LPG pricing, market access, and cylinder standards have all featured in filings that critics say point to an enterprise that replicates at the energy level the same stranglehold it maintains at the port. The pattern is consistent regardless of sector: identify a regulated infrastructure chokepoint, secure the position through initial investment and political relationships, then use the position to price competitors out while using legal process to exhaust those who resist.

    WHO PAYS THE TOLL

    The 20-year lease renewal is not merely a business story. It is a food security story, a public health story, and a governance story about what happens when accountability institutions fail to act on their own findings. Every parliamentary committee report, every court hearing on competitive procurement, every DCI investigation into fuel quality, represents a moment when the system had the information it needed to act. The lease renewal confirms that having the information and acting on it are not the same thing.

    For Kenyan consumers, the cost of the grain monopoly is embedded in the price of every loaf of bread and every bag of ugali. The $16 per tonne handling fee that Bulkstream charges millers, in a market where no alternative exists, is a tax on food that Parliament labeled a technical barrier to competition six years ago and which remains unchanged today. The landlocked countries that route their food imports through Mombasa inherit the same embedded inefficiency. Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, and the DRC are food-secure only insofar as Mohamed Jaffer’s terminal is willing and able to move their grain. That dependency is not a result of geography alone. It is a result of a deliberate regulatory choice to allow a single private operator to control the only specialized facility for 25 years and counting.

    The fuel episode added a dimension of physical risk to the economic one. Kenyan motorists who filled up over Easter 2026 did not consent to receive benzene-laced petrol. They had no way of knowing. The blending directive issued by Trade CS Kinyanjui was not disclosed publicly until it leaked. The government’s first communication was that the fuel had been blocked from the market. That statement was false. The fuel was already circulating. Vehicles had already been reported damaged. The subsequent order to withdraw the consignment came after the damage was done.

    Whether criminal charges ultimately follow Jaffer or his sons in the One Petroleum investigation remains to be seen. The DCI has stated it is pursuing the matter with international cooperation. Several officials who facilitated the procurement have resigned and face their own legal exposure. The Sh11.8 billion question is whether One Petroleum’s principals will face the same accountability or whether, as has happened before across multiple sectors and multiple investigations, the institutional protection that has kept this empire intact for 25 years will once again absorb the impact.

    THE RUNWAY THAT NEVER ENDS

    Under President Moi, Grain Bulk Handlers Limited signed a 33-year concession that gave it exclusive rights over Kenya’s only bulk grain terminals. Under President Kibaki, the exclusivity window expired but the monopoly persisted. Under President Kenyatta, parliamentary committees investigated and recommended competition. Under President Ruto, the answer was a 20-year extension signed seven years early while the country’s DCI was actively investigating the same family’s fuel company for importing contaminated petroleum.

    The Billionaires Africa publication that broke the renewal story noted that across four presidencies, the answer to whether Jaffer wins at the Port of Mombasa has always been yes. That observation is accurate and damning. It points not to a single government’s failure but to a systemic failure of the Kenyan state to subordinate private infrastructure control to public interest when the private controller has sufficient political proximity and legal firepower to resist. That resistance has been sustained across decades, across party lines, and now apparently across criminal investigations.

    Abass Jaffer did not respond to questions about the lease renewal. Mujtaba Jaffer has been the public face of a grain company fighting a cargo lien case in Mombasa courts. KPA’s managing director, the Ministry of Transport, and Bulkstream representatives all declined to comment on the early renewal when contacted by international media. The silence is coherent with a business that has never needed to justify itself to the public because the public has never had a meaningful alternative.

    The 20-year lease simply extends the runway. Ordinary Kenyans will keep paying the toll on their bread. Ugandan wheat importers will continue navigating the lien disputes of the only terminal operator in East Africa’s largest port. Senators will keep naming names in committee rooms. Parliamentary committees will keep writing reports that no one is obliged to implement. And somewhere in the Ministry of Roads and Transport, the gazette notice is being prepared.

  • Exclusive: How Mombasa Tycoon Mohammed Jaffer Built an Empire Through Blackmail, Monopoly and Character Assassination

    Exclusive: How Mombasa Tycoon Mohammed Jaffer Built an Empire Through Blackmail, Monopoly and Character Assassination

    Abubakar Joho’s Brave Court Testimony Exposes Decades of Systematic Smear Campaign

    By Kenya Insights Investigative Team

    Mombasa, Kenya – In a watershed moment that has sent shockwaves through Kenya’s business corridors, respected Mombasa businessman Abubakar Ali Joho has finally broken his silence, exposing what he describes as a calculated, decades-long campaign of character assassination orchestrated by his business rival, tycoon Mohammed Jaffer.

    Speaking publicly for the first time in a Mombasa court during a defamation case, the elder brother of Mining and Blue Economy Cabinet Secretary Ali Hassan Joho painted a damning picture of how Jaffer has systematically used blackmail, fabricated scandals, and legal warfare to eliminate business competition while building his monopolistic empire.

    The Victim Speaks: A Family Under Siege

    For years, the Joho family has endured a barrage of accusations linking them to drug trafficking, massive corruption, and embezzlement – allegations that have now been traced back to what Abubakar describes as Jaffer’s orchestrated smear machine.

    “This man has destroyed my family’s reputation for business gain,” Abubakar told the packed courtroom, his voice heavy with years of suppressed frustration. “We have been victims of the most vicious character assassination campaign, all because I dared to compete in sectors he considers his personal domain.”

    The businessman, who operates Autoport Freight Terminus and Portside Freight Terminal, detailed how a viral letter – later traced to Jaffer’s camp – falsely accused him and his brother of stealing Sh40 billion from Mombasa County and trafficking drugs hidden in rice shipments. The letter even attacked their elderly mother, making salacious claims about her personal life.

    “When someone attacks your mother, crosses every line of decency, you know you’re dealing with pure evil,” Abubakar said, fighting back tears. “This isn’t business competition – this is systematic destruction of human dignity.”

    (Click to watch full video of Abu’s court testimony)

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    The Smoking Gun: Jaffer’s Secretary Exposed

    The breakthrough came when cybercrime investigators traced the defamatory content back to Matilda Maodo Kinzani, Jaffer’s personal secretary, who now faces criminal charges for her role in the smear campaign. Court documents reveal a sophisticated operation designed to flood social media and mainstream outlets with fabricated stories targeting the Joho family.

    “For the first time, we have concrete evidence of who was behind these lies,” said a source close to the investigation. “This isn’t random gossip – this was a coordinated attack with one clear objective: eliminate Abu Joho from the port business.”

    The Jaffer Monopoly Machine: How It Really Works

    Kenya Insights‘ extensive investigation reveals that the attack on the Joho family is just one chapter in Jaffer’s playbook for maintaining monopolistic control across multiple sectors. Here’s how the empire operates:

    1. The LPG Stranglehold: Crushing Competition Through Manipulation

    Jaffer’s Pro-Gas company has maintained an iron grip on Kenya’s LPG market through what insiders describe as “regulatory capture.” Sources reveal he successfully lobbied to outlaw isotank transportation of LPG – a move that conveniently eliminated smaller competitors importing from Tanzania and Zambia.

    His most vicious battle was against Taifa Gas, owned by Tanzanian billionaire Rostam Aziz. When legitimate competition threatened his profits, Jaffer allegedly:

    • Funded fake civil society groups to file frivolous lawsuits
    • Orchestrated protests based on fabricated environmental concerns
    • Spread false safety reports about competitor facilities
    • Used his political connections to create regulatory barriers

    The operation was so brazen that Aziz was forced to complain directly to President William Ruto, leading to an investigation that exposed Jaffer’s tactics. Aziz has since been allowed to put up his plant in Kenya.

    2. Regional Dominance: Cross-Border Monopoly Schemes

    Tanzania: After President John Magufuli revoked Jaffer’s Import Container Depot license – a sweetheart deal originally granted by former President Jakaya Kikwete – Jaffer sued the Tanzanian government. The case remains unresolved, but sources say it’s part of his strategy to maintain regional logistics dominance.

    Uganda: Jaffer acquired 200 acres in Tororo with plans to establish an ICD that would give him monopolistic control over Uganda’s import logistics. President Yoweri Museveni reportedly blocked the move after being briefed on Jaffer’s monopolistic practices in Kenya.

    Vanga Fishing Port: Local sources report Jaffer is behind efforts to relocate indigenous fishing communities to gain exclusive control of this strategic coastal facility.

    3. The “Gas Yetu” Betrayal: Sabotaging Government for Profit

    Perhaps the most damaging revelation involves Jaffer’s alleged sabotage of the government’s subsidized Gas Yetu initiative – a program designed to provide affordable cooking gas to millions of Kenyan families.

    Investigation reveals that Jaffer, fearing the program would undercut Pro-Gas profits, orchestrated a sophisticated campaign to kill the Sh3 billion project through:

    • Strategic bribes to key officials
    • Creation of artificial supply chain problems
    • Spreading false technical reports about program viability
    • Using his media influence to generate negative coverage

    The result? Millions of Kenyans continue paying inflated gas prices while Jaffer’s profits soar.

    4. The SGR Scandal: Billions Wasted for Personal Gain

    Sources within the Uhuru Kenyatta administration reveal that Jaffer allegedly bribed officials to reroute the Standard Gauge Railway away from his Agol facility in Dongo Kundu. This seemingly minor change cost taxpayers billions in redesign fees and construction delays – all to protect Jaffer’s property values.

    5. Land Grabbing: The Dongo Kundu Heist

    The Sh3 billion land dispute with Mzee Gichanga represents Jaffer’s modus operandi perfectly. After offering a paltry Sh500 million for prime property valued at Sh3 billion by independent surveyors, Jaffer allegedly used legal manipulation and political connections to force the transaction.

    6. Market Manipulation: The Aflatoxin Conspiracy

    As Jaffer prepared to launch Ajab Millers, competing maize flour brands suddenly faced aflatoxin contamination scandals. Industry insiders allege he manipulated the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA) to target rivals while positioning his products as the “safe” alternative.

    The Human Cost: A Family’s Decade of Suffering

    What makes this case particularly tragic is the human cost of Jaffer’s business tactics. The Joho family has endured:

    • Constant death threats and security concerns
    • Damage to business relationships and opportunities
    • Personal anguish from attacks on family members
    • Enormous legal costs defending against fabricated charges
    • Social ostracism based on manufactured scandals

    “You cannot imagine what it’s like to wake up every day not knowing what new lie will be published about your family,” Abubakar said. “My mother, an elderly woman who has never hurt anyone, has been dragged through the mud. My children have been affected. This is not business – this is cruelty.”

    Community Support: Mombasa Stands with Abu

    Mombasa businessman Abubakar Ali Joho testifies in a Mombasa court in a case where a woman is accused of defaming him.

    The revelation has dramatically shifted public opinion in Mombasa, where Abubakar Joho is widely respected as a father figure and benefactor to thousands of families. Community leaders have rallied around him, with many expressing relief that the truth has finally emerged.

    “Abu Joho is a man of integrity who has employed thousands and supported countless families,” said a prominent Mombasa religious leader. “We always knew these accusations were false, but now we know who was behind them.”

    Local business associations have also condemned Jaffer’s tactics, with many revealing they too have been victims of similar intimidation campaigns.

    The Wider Web: A Pattern of Destruction

    The Joho case appears to be part of a broader pattern. Kenya Insights has identified numerous other businesses and individuals who report similar treatment from Jaffer’s organization:

    • Competing logistics companies forced out of port operations through fabricated safety violations
    • LPG distributors bankrupted by sudden regulatory changes favoring Pro-Gas
    • Land owners pressured to sell prime coastal properties at below-market rates
    • Government officials who refused cooperation facing manufactured scandals

    “This isn’t isolated incidents – it’s a systematic approach to business that relies on destroying people rather than competing fairly,” said an industry analyst who requested anonymity.

    The Legal Reckoning

    As the defamation case continues, legal experts say Abubakar Joho’s testimony could mark a turning point in holding Jaffer accountable. The case has already resulted in criminal charges against Jaffer’s associates and opened new investigations into his business practices.

    “This is the first time someone with Abu Joho’s stature has been willing to publicly challenge Jaffer’s empire,” said a legal expert. “It could encourage others to come forward and finally break the culture of fear he’s created.”

    A Call for Justice

    Abubakar Joho’s brave stand represents more than one man’s fight for his reputation – it’s a battle for the soul of Kenyan business ethics. His testimony has exposed how unchecked monopolistic power can corrupt entire sectors and destroy innocent lives.

    “All I want is justice,” Joho concluded his testimony. “Not just for my family, but for every Kenyan who has suffered under this man’s ruthless pursuit of profit at any cost.”

    As this case unfolds, it promises to reshape not just Mombasa’s business landscape, but potentially Kenya’s entire approach to monopolistic practices and business ethics. The question now is whether our institutions have the courage to hold powerful tycoons accountable, regardless of their political connections.

    For the Joho family, vindication has been a long time coming. For Kenya, this case represents a critical test of whether truth and justice can prevail over money and manipulation.


    This investigation is ongoing. Kenya Insights continues to welcome information from whistle-blowers and affected parties. Contact us for confidential reporting.

  • Besieged Gas Tycoon Dumps Raila For Rigathi

    Besieged Gas Tycoon Dumps Raila For Rigathi

    Mohammed Jaffer of Grain Bill Handlers Limited (GBHL) and proprietor of Pro Gas been forced to fold abs embrace the Kenya Kwanza government. The billionaire who has enjoyed the monopoly of controlling Mombasa port and liquified gas industry, winning multibillion contracts, got in the bad books with the current regime that saw president Ruto bring in Tanzanian business mogul Rostam Aziz to counter the competition.

    President William Ruto (right) and Taifa Gas Group Chairman Rostam Aziz during the ground-breaking ceremony of the 30,000-tonne plant at the Dongo Kundu Special Economic Zone in Likoni, Mombasa on February 24, 2023.

    In the plans, Mr. Aziz who reportedly financed Ruto’s campaigns is set take over the gas industry that Jaffer has been controlling in the past. The cheap gas is set to hit the markets according to Ruto’s announcement.

    However, Jaffer who’s been able to court different regimes since Moi for survival is keen to maintain his grip in the market. He’s recently been reported to be shifting his allegiance to the Kenya Kwanza government and held different meetings to square up their differences.

    In what could perhaps be one of the clear signs that the tycoon is in good books with GoK is the latest lowering of unga prices that has been a source of headache to the government abs one of the reasons the Raila’s Azimio led opposition has been banking on against the state in their demonstrations that are set to resume in May.

    Through his firm Grain Industries Limited (GIL) Jaffer’s affiliated Maize brands Umi & Ajab have drastically reduced their prices. Mohamed has an upper hand in handling grains through GBHL that handles most imports through Mombasa Port.

    His alignment with the state hasn’t gone down with critics who alleges he’s being for political scoring.

    With Taifa Gas making inroads into the country, many are waiting to see how the empire of Jaffer will stand the tear of time and maintain their hold of the market. Previously, the idea of cheap gas was fought down with corrupt state officials. Pro-Gas penetrated the market at the time with cheaper gas prices. He owns Sea Gas too.

  • Mohammed Jaffer Takes His Battle With Johos On Bulk Grain Handling Further

    Mohammed Jaffer Takes His Battle With Johos On Bulk Grain Handling Further

    The supremacy battle of bull grain handling between Mombasa oligarch Mohammed Jaffer and the Joho family has escalated.

    According to the latest report, activist Okiya Omtatah has sued the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA), seeking to have it compelled to issue him with a copy of the licence or permit issued to Portside Freight Terminals Ltd and Heartland Terminals Ltd to develop a second bulk grain handling facility in Mombasa. In a case likely to delay the project, Mr Omtatah accuses KPA of refusing to provide a copy of the licence or permit though the state is obligated under the law to publish the information.

    The two companies are associated with the Joho’s family.

    In his petition filed in the High Court in Mombasa, Mr Omtatah has also sued Portside Freight Terminals Ltd, Heartland Terminals Ltd and Portside CFS Ltd, and has named the Dock Workers Union as an interested party.

    Governor Joho and his brother Abu (left).

    The petitioner argues that the respondents are frustrating a public evaluation of the permit and violating his constitutional right and duty to be involved in a matter of significant public interest (procurement of the second bulk grain handling facility).

    Mr Omtatah says that Executive Order No 2 of 2018 requires all procuring public entities to publish tender opportunities and contract awards through the Public Procurement Information Portal.

    The petitioner also says that contrary to the order, KPA has not published on the portal a copy of the licence or permit it granted to Portside Freight Terminals Ltd and Heartland Terminals Ltd.

    He also argues that the licence or permit was issued in violation of conservatory orders issued by the court in another petition that bound KPA not to act.

    Mr Omtatah wants a conservatory order suspending the licence issued by KPA to the two companies to develop a second bulk grain handling facility pending the determination of his petition.

    Parliament on bulk grain monopoly 

    Last year the Lawmakers raised an issue over the bulk grain handling monopoly and wanted KPAto fast track authorisation of design, development and implementation of more grain bulk handlers at the facility to enhance competition and optimise revenue collection.

    In a report, the National Assembly Finance, Planning and Trade Committee took issue with the current monopoly enjoyed by the Grain Bulk Handlers Ltd, a private entity, and especially low tariffs that it is charged as compared to other grain bulk handlers, saying it is a technical barrier to trade and competition.

    Mohammed Jaffer, owner GBHL.

    Grain Bulk handles 98 percent of grains imported to Kenya according to the report.

    “The current rates payable for grain bulk handling under the GBHL service is $3.85 (Sh422.7) per metric tonne as provided for in the KPA Tariff Book while conventional grain bulk handlers are charged $10.4 (Sh1,141) per metric tonne. This price differentiation has presented a technical barrier to trade and competition,” reads the committee’s report.

    The tariffs were set in 2000 though they were marginally adjusted in 2008 and 2012.

    Dry grain

    KPA, through a Wayleave Agreement of 1992 for a period of 45 years and License Agreement entered in 2000 for 33 years, designated berths 3 and 4 to Grain Bulk Limited to handle grain bulk vessel discharge alongside the regular dry grain and fertiliser handling that utilises drags for bagged cargo. It is the sole operator for grain bulk handling at the Port of Mombasa.

    As part of the 2000 agreement, GBHL was granted exclusive rights to handle the grain bulk business at the port for eight years to allow it to recoup its expenditure before the licensing of other handlers.

    After the agreement expired in February 2008, the KPA board resolved to liberalise handling of grain at the port to eliminate monopoly and promote healthy competition but the search for a second grain bulk handler aborted after the government cancelled the tender ostensibly to allow for more stakeholder competition. KPA now plans to conclude the process by next year.

    With grain handling at the Port of Mombasa projected to grow by seven percent annually, MPs concurred that there is need to licence more operators but hastened to add that the process must be fair, open, transparent and adhere to the Public Procurement and Disposal Act 2005 to ensure non-discrimination and accountability.

    GBHL is owned by Mohammed Jaffer.

  • Fact Check: Does Raila Own Majority Of Gas Companies In Kenya

    Fact Check: Does Raila Own Majority Of Gas Companies In Kenya

    A big debate following the increase of cooking gas prices from the 16pc VAT increase has sparked different angles on conversations. With most Kenyans expressing their disappointment and fury over the inflated prices, the discussion hasn’t missed a political war.

    Coming also at a time when the Deputy President and Raila Odinga exchanging jabs on corruption allegations, fanatics seemingly allied to the DP Ruto have been pushing a narrative that the former Prime Minister owns majority of gas companies with wild allegations that he’s a beneficiary of the price increases.

    https://twitter.com/sammacoha/status/1411969517060857859?s=21

    Now let’s get to the facts and churn out the fictions. East Africa Spectre Ltd the company owned by the Raila family is a Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) Cylinder Manufacturer & Revalidating Company and doesn’t deal in gas manufacturing as perceived. Spectre Manufactures LPG Cylinders for Domestic & Commercial Use for Oil Marketing Companies.

    Even though different from East African Spectre, the liquefied petroleum gas cylinder manufacturer based in Nairobi, Spectre International Ltd is part Raila’s flagship business based in Kisumu but has not been in operation since 2017.

    One of the biggest gas cylinders manufacturers in the region, Spectre according to the company’s portfolio, About 20% Market Share in New LPG Cylinders Manufacture Versus Over 80% of the Revalidation Market Share.

    There’s a likelihood that the gas cylinder you’re using now was made by Spectre and the filling down by the branded company.

    Now, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) dealers are the ones who does the filling and branding it to your favorite labels that you have in your kitchen.

    LPG market has its owners too, Kenya has approximately 77 licensed LPG dealers but the market is controlled by about 5 key companies and ProGas owned by the Africa Gas And Oil(AGOL) which also owns Proto Energy Limited associated with Mombasa Tycoon Mohammed Jaffer dominating the Kenyan market with about 50pc grip of the market share.

    Others include; Total, K-Gas, AfriGas and all working under Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA).

    Now with the Finance Act 2019 that reinstated 16% VAT on liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), but delayed the levy for one year to July 1 due to concerns about the cost of living being in place, Kenyans are faced with the harsh reality of tougher times to make a place.

    A temporary reprieve from the Energy Dealers Association who filed a petition at the High Court seeking to freeze implementation of the tax.

    The association says the new tax will make cooking gas unaffordable and force some dealers to close shop on low demand for LPG.

    They are apprehensive that many Kenyans will shy away from using LPG and shift to dirty kerosene and charcoal for cooking.

    The increase in levy would be an added advantage to market dominants and see small firms out of the market if the argument is anything to go by.

    Households are paying at least Sh400 more for the 13-kilogramme cooking gas that is retailing at an average Sh2,650, a price level last seen in March 2015.