Tag: TripleOKlaw Advocates

  • Sh11 Billion Zakhem Debt Bombshell Rocks Kenya Pipeline Three Months After IPO, As Questions Mount Over What Investors Were Told

    Sh11 Billion Zakhem Debt Bombshell Rocks Kenya Pipeline Three Months After IPO, As Questions Mount Over What Investors Were Told

    Barely three months after Kenya Pipeline Company PLC made history as the first state enterprise to list on the Nairobi Securities Exchange under President William Ruto’s privatisation programme, the newly public company has been hit with a fresh lawsuit that could cost it close to eleven billion shillings, reigniting a decade old fight with a Lebanese contractor and forcing investors to confront a question they thought had already been answered before they bought their shares.

    On June 15, 2026, KPC issued a cautionary announcement to shareholders disclosing that Zakhem International Construction Limited had filed suit at the Milimani High Court, case number HCCOMM E346 of 2026, seeking a combined USD 84.1 million, equivalent to roughly KSh10.89 billion.

    The figure is dominated not by the original contractual dispute but by interest.

    According to the breakdown contained in the announcement, Zakhem is claiming USD19,036,187.46 in extension of time costs and a staggering USD65,081,253.70 in accumulated interest on delayed payments, a ratio that tells its own story about how long this fight has been allowed to fester and how expensive Kenyan institutions have made it for themselves to stall.

    KPC’s company secretary and General Manager for Legal Services, Flora Okoth, signed off on the notice, telling shareholders that the board, “based on the information currently available and the preliminary legal advice it has received from the Company’s advocates, is of the view that the Company has credible legal and factual grounds upon which to contest the claim.” The same notice carried the now familiar caution to the investing public to “exercise caution when dealing in the securities of the Company pending the resolution of the matter.”

    For a company whose shares were sold to the public on the strength of its position as one of the most profitable state corporations in Kenya, a pipeline operator moving the lifeblood of the economy from Mombasa to Nairobi, the timing could hardly be worse.

    A FIGHT THAT NEVER ENDED

    To understand why this latest claim landed with such force, it helps to go back to 2014, when KPC awarded Zakhem a contract worth approximately USD484.5 million for the procurement, construction, testing and commissioning of the Line 1 Replacement Project, the 450 kilometre pipeline carrying refined petroleum products between Mombasa and Nairobi under contract number SU/QT/032/13.

    The project, once completed, did not bring the dispute to a close. Zakhem filed suit in 2019, HCCC E322 of 2019, claiming it had not been paid sums due under the contract.

    In June 2020, the High Court entered a partial summary judgment in Zakhem’s favour for USD44,019,024.64. What followed was years of argument over how that decree should be satisfied, much of it tangled up with the Kenya Revenue Authority.

    According to a demand letter dated February 25, 2026 from Ahmednasir Abdullahi Advocates LLP, acting for Zakhem, KRA had issued agency notices against KPC’s accounts for tax arrears tied to the Zakhem payments, and KPC ultimately remitted a total of USD36,861,199.86 to KRA in two tranches, KSh3.099 billion in October 2020 and KSh915.3 million in January 2021. After deducting these remittances from the decretal sum, the letter calculates a residual balance of USD7,157,824.77 as at January 31, 2021.

    From that balance, Zakhem says it has so far recovered only part of what it is owed. In June 2025, the Lebanese contractor obtained a garnishee order absolute against KPC’s accounts at Equity Bank, extracting KSh485 million, equivalent to roughly USD3.75 million at the prevailing exchange rate.

    That left, by Zakhem’s calculation, a principal balance of USD3,406,434.43 still outstanding from the 2020 decree, on which interest at the court rate of 14 percent per annum had by the law firm’s reckoning ballooned to USD2,622,954.51 over five and a half years, bringing that single residual claim to USD6,029,388.94. The February letter gave KPC fourteen days to pay or face further legal action, and warned explicitly that “other claims that will be addressed to you at a later stage” were still coming.

    Four months later, they arrived. The USD84.1 million claim filed in June 2026 is that “later stage.” It is a new and separate action under a new case number, built around extension of time claims and a fresh interest calculation running on the broader contract, not merely the residual balance from the 2020 decree. Put simply, this is not Kenyan officialdom being blindsided by an old, forgotten file. It is the predictable next instalment of a dispute that Zakhem’s lawyers had been openly signalling for months, in writing, with deadlines attached.

    WHAT INVESTORS WERE ACTUALLY TOLD

    This is where the story gets complicated, and where the loudest voices on social media may be aiming their fire at the wrong target, or at least an incomplete one.

    Within hours of KPC’s cautionary announcement, the question that mattered most to retail investors began circulating on X.

    Mwango Capital, a widely followed markets commentary account, asked directly: “Why was this information not disclosed in the information memorandum that was prepared for the IPO?” Markets commentator Paras Shah amplified the point, arguing that the matter “should have been disclosed and certainly wild have been known as a potential claim,” and called on “the able team of transaction and legal advisors” to answer for it. Another user went further, naming Faida Investment Bank’s transaction team directly.

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    It is a fair question to ask. It is also, on the public record, not quite as simple as “this was hidden.”

    KPC’s Information Memorandum, dated 17 January 2026 and prepared under the stewardship of Faida Investment Bank Limited as Lead Transaction Advisor, with TripleOKLaw Advocates LLP and G&A Advocates LLP as joint legal advisers, was not the first time Kenyans had been told that KPC was carrying contingent liabilities tied to Zakhem.

    Months earlier, in October 2025, Parliament adopted Sessional Paper No. 2 of 2025, the policy document that formally approved KPC’s privatisation through an IPO.

    According to reporting at the time by the Business Daily and the Kenyan Wallstreet, that sessional paper explicitly flagged that pending lawsuits would consume Sh5.75 billion of the privatisation proceeds, and itemised among those liabilities “a garnishee order of Sh485 million in favour of M/s Zakhem International following contractual disputes.”

    The paper’s own policy resolutions stated that the Privatisation Commission was to ensure “all liabilities-debt and credit and risks affecting the valuation of KPC are comprehensively assessed, transparently disclosed, and factored into the transaction valuation before proceeding with the IPO.”

    In other words, the Zakhem name, the Sh485 million figure, and the existence of an active, contractually rooted dispute over the Line 1 project were sitting in a parliamentary policy document months before Faida’s transaction team and the legal advisers sat down to finalise the Information Memorandum, and that document was itself covered in the mainstream business press.

    What appears to be different, and what the IM critics have not yet been able to point to with documentary proof, is whether the January 2026 Information Memorandum’s risk factors and litigation sections carried forward that same level of specificity, naming Zakhem and quantifying the live exposure, including the open-ended threat contained in the February 2026 Ahmednasir Abdullahi demand letter that “other claims” would follow.

    That demand letter was dated five weeks before the IPO closed and roughly three weeks after the IM itself was dated, raising a narrower but sharper question: not whether KPC’s contingent liabilities were known to exist in general terms, but whether the live, escalating, lawyer-flagged threat of a fresh multi-million dollar claim, sitting in KPC’s and its advisers’ inboxes weeks before the offer closed, was carried into the disclosure documents with the specificity investors were entitled to expect.

    That is a question for Faida Investment Bank, as the bank that earned an estimated KSh1.06 billion success fee for shepherding this transaction, and for TripleOKLaw and G&A Advocates, who under Appendix IV of the Information Memorandum gave their written consent to the legal opinion included in the offer document and authorised its contents. Neither firm has yet issued a public response to the questions raised on social media, and KPC’s own announcement does not address the IPO disclosure question at all, confining itself to the new suit and the standard caution to shareholders.

    A COMPANY ALREADY UNDER SIEGE

    The Zakhem claim does not land on a quiet company. It lands on a state enterprise whose post-listing months have been turbulent by any measure.

    On April 2, 2026, barely three weeks after KPC’s shares began trading, the company’s substantive Managing Director, Joe Sang, was arrested alongside Petroleum Principal Secretary Mohamed Liban and Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority Director General Daniel Kiptoo over allegations tied to the importation of a substandard fuel consignment aboard the tanker MT Paloma.

    All three resigned within days, in what State House described as a response to “egregious misrepresentation” in the petroleum supply chain. Pius Mwendwa, KPC’s General Manager for Finance, was named acting Managing Director, with the board moving quickly to reassure shareholders that operations remained stable.

    It was, by multiple accounts, Sang’s second brush with the DCI. He had previously been charged, and later acquitted for lack of evidence, in connection with the Sh1.8 billion Kisumu Oil Jetty contract saga, a case that also implicated other senior KPC officials of that era.

    For a company barely out of the IPO gate, the optics are difficult to overstate. Within one financial quarter of listing, KPC has had to disclose the arrest and resignation of its chief executive over a fuel quality scandal, and now a near eleven billion shilling lawsuit from a contractor whose claims against the company stretch back over a decade. Retail investors who bought into the narrative of a stable, cash generative monopoly are entitled to ask whether the picture painted for them in January was the full one available at the time.

    WHAT THIS MEANS FOR THE MARKET

    The immediate market consequence is the one KPC itself has flagged: heightened uncertainty around the counter, and a formal caution to shareholders dealing in the stock.

    Beyond that, the Zakhem claim and its predecessors illustrate a pattern that ought to concern anyone underwriting Kenyan state enterprise valuations going forward.

    The interest component of the new claim, at over USD65 million against a principal claim of just over USD19 million, is the clearest illustration of what happens when contractual disputes with international counterparties are allowed to run for years through Kenya’s courts while the meter keeps running at 14 percent annually.

    The same dynamic is visible in the smaller, already-litigated USD6.03 million residual claim from the 2020 decree, where interest alone had grown to outstrip the underlying principal balance several times over.

    If KPC ultimately loses or settles even a portion of the new USD84.1 million claim, the financial hit will not fall on the Government of Kenya, which retained 35 percent of the company and pocketed the bulk of the roughly KSh106 billion raised in the IPO. It will fall on the balance sheet of a company in which 70,000 ordinary Kenyans, alongside institutional and diaspora investors, now hold a direct stake.

    For Faida Investment Bank and the joint legal advisers, the reputational stakes extend well beyond this single transaction. Kenya’s privatisation programme, of which the KPC IPO was the flagship and the first major test in nearly two decades, depends on investor confidence that the due diligence behind these offers is rigorous and that material risks are surfaced before, not after, the public is asked to buy in.

    A credible, documented answer to the question Mwango Capital and Paras Shah have posed, specifically, what the January 2026 Information Memorandum said about Zakhem and when the advisory team became aware of the February 2026 demand letter, is now squarely in the public interest.

    KPC has said it intends to defend the new suit vigorously and has briefed its advocates accordingly. The Commercial and Tax Division of the High Court will, in time, determine whether Zakhem’s USD84.1 million claim succeeds. But for the advisers who took home hundreds of millions of shillings in fees to bring KPC to market, and for the regulators who signed off on the offer documents, the more immediate reckoning may be the one playing out in public, where investors are asking, with increasing impatience, exactly what they were told, and what they were not.

    This newspaper has sought comment from Faida Investment Bank, TripleOKLaw Advocates and G&A Advocates LLP on the specific question of how the Zakhem litigation history and the February 2026 demand letter were treated in the Information Memorandum’s risk disclosures, and will publish their responses in full if and when they are received.

  • Respite For British Couple In Sh500M Property Row With Lawyer John Ohaga

    Respite For British Couple In Sh500M Property Row With Lawyer John Ohaga

    A British couple entangled in an ownership dispute of a multimillion property with a senior lawyer and his family members got a reprieve after High Court invalidated an eviction order and reinstated them to their premises.

    Andrian and Carolyne Radcliffe, a British couple were evicted from the suit property L.R Number 1196/32 registered under John Cecil Ball situated along Train Lane in Karen, Nairobi after living there for 33 years.

    The eviction was executed by Karen police officers and Jephys Auctioneers who carted away all household goods and demolished the house.

     

    “Having demolished the house in which the petitioner with his family, Mr Radcliffe will decide how he wants to continue possession of the property until the issue of proprietorship is determined. If he wants to put up a tent, a mobile house on the land, it’s for him to make that decision,” said Justice Oscar Angote, while quashing the eviction order.

    Radlicliffe, 60, and his wife are currently staying with friends following the eviction despite having occupied the contested land since August 1, 1989.

    At the center of the long running ownership dispute is a Senior Counsel and Managing Partner of TripleOKlaw Advocates John M Ohanga, his wife, mother-in-law and sister-in-law, who the Britons accuse of fraudulently dispossessing then of the 5.7 acres.

    ”It is the Petitioner’s case that he only learnt of the case filed at the Chief Magistrates court when he saw the Order with the Auctioneer; that his advocate was then able to get the pleadings in MC ELC No. E008 of 2022 together with the order of eviction and that he has looked at the copy of title to the suit property annexed by the 1st Respondent in MC ELC No. E008 of 2022 and has had an opportunity to compare it with the copy which was annexed in the valuation report by Knight Frank dated 2nd June 2004, and that there are reasons to believe that the title relied upon by the 1st Respondent is a forgery,” the petitioner told the court.

    Mr Ohaga had initially acted as the couple’s attorney in a suite they instituted seeking adverse possession of the property but Mr Radcliffe claims the lawyer turned against them to acquire the Sh500 million property with his family.

    This was after Kena Properties whose directors are Mr Ohaga’s wife, her sister Jean Ngini Kamau and mother-in-law Mrs Leah Ngini.

    Incidentally, the disputed land which Ohaga’s nuclear and extended family members lay claim for purposes of expansion prospects of St. Cristopher International School is also owned by Kane Properties directors.

    The court was also told that they are the Directors and shareholders of St. Christopher’s Holdings Limited; that St. Christopher’s Holdings Limited is the proprietor of St Christopher’s International School which has been in operation for over 40years and that the property on which St. Christopher’s International School is built is owned by the 1stRespondent(Ohaga’s wife) and has been owned by the family since 1965.

    The court was also told that the law firm of TripleOKlaw Advocates LLP also advises both the 1stRespondent as well as St. Christopher’s Holdings Limited with respect to all their legal work including property acquisitions and the transactions relating thereto and that the Petitioner and his wife Carolyne are known to her husband and herself.

    Kena Properties is said to have used the title of the land which the Britons allege to be forgery, to obtain Sh40M loan at Prime Bank. The firm claims it bought the property for Sh135M.

    Mr Radcliffe has named Kena Properties Limited as the first respondent in the petition while Mr Ohaga is the fifth respondent. Prime Bank and Jephys Auctioneer are interested parties in the suit.

    Adrian says he first came to Kenya in 1984 while doing his Master’s Thesis before he started working in Marsabit in 1986.

    The court heard that later came to Nairobi in 1988 and moved to the suit property in 1989 after being shown the land by Donald Vincent Limited.

    However, Donald Vincent Limited was not the registered owner but he promised to introduce to the proprietor (John Cecil Ball, now deceased) of the property later.

    It was not until 1992 when Andrian received a letter from the registered owner, John Cecil Ball about the outstanding land rates arrears amounting to Sh120, 000 which the petitioner cleared in full.

    Ball died in 2012 while his wife Daphne Ball passed on in 2019.

    Thereafter, in 2005, Andrian through Sheila and Sheikh & Company Advocates filed for adverse possession of the land which was dismissed by court.

    Thereafter, Andrian told the court that he got John Ohaga whose daughter went to the same school with his daughter.

    Just like Sheila & Sheikh Advocates, Ohaga advised him not to appeal against the dismissal of the suit.

    “According to the petitioner, he does not know at what point John Ohaga stopped representing him and begun acting against his interest in regard to the suit property.” Court documents show.

    However, in a replying affidavit, Ohaga terms the petitioner a pathological liar.

    “I will state from the outset that the affidavits of the Petitioner in support of both the Petition and the Notice of Motion are riddled with lies and half-truths.”

    “I wish to first confirm that the petitioner and his wife Carolyne are both well known to me as their daughter Katie and my daughter went to the same school and were close friends. Indeed, my daughter has slept over at the petitioner’s residence and his daughter has similarly slept over at our house on several occasions.” He continues.

    “My wife and I therefore considered the Petitioner and his wife to be our friends.” Ohaga says through his lawyer James Ochieng, his senior partner at TripleOKLaw.

    In 2014, Ohaga wrote to  Andrian, his former client vide a letter dated September 16, 2014 informing him that the suit property had been transferred to another buyer whom he did not disclose and a similar reminder through a letter dated May 25, 2015.

    Consequently, through a letter dated May 24, 2016, Andrian told the court that Ohaga demanded payment of monthly rent from his and forwarded him a tenancy agreement for signing.

    The petitioner told the court that he has continued to receive land rates demand notices as late as last year, 2021 with regard to the suit property in the name of Ball.

    ”It was deponed by the Petitioner that the City Council of Nairobi, now the City County Government of Nairobi, has continued to send him demand notices for payment of rates in regard to the property known as L. R. No. 196/32 in the name of John Cecil Ball and that as late as 2021, he received the demand notice and paid the requisite rates,” the court document reads in part.

    On February 2018, Andrian told the court he received communication that the property had been sold and should consider paying rent to the new owner.

    He was then evicted on February 4, 2022 by police and auctioneers through ex parte orders which have since been vacated by Justice O. A Angote.

    “This Court hereby sets aside the ex parte orders issued by Hon. D. M. Kivuti (Principal Magistrate) on January 21, 2022 and confirmed on January 27, 2022 in the Chief Magistrate’s Milimani ELC E008 of 2022 between Kena Properties Limited and Andrian Radcliffe pending hearing and determination of the petition.” The order reads in part.

    Further, an order was issued reinstating the petitioner and his family back to the suit property pending hearing and determination of the petition.

    “I also confirm that the 1st Respondent, Kena Properties Limited, is well known to me and has been a client of the Firm for a considerable period of time. I also confirm that the directors of the 1st Respondent are Mrs. Carolla Ohaga who is my wife, Ms. Jean Kamau who is my wife’s sister, and Mrs. Leah Ngini who is my wife’s mother.” Ohaga says through a replying affidavit.

    The petitioner is being represented by Khaminwa and Co Advocates.

    While arguing in his favor, Dr Khaminwa told the court in part while punching holes in Mr Ohaga’s case, “The Petitioner’s counsel submitted that the Petitioner believed that the 5th Respondent, who was his advocate, would guide him on the intricacies of the law; that the letter dated 28thSeptember, 2011 addressed to the Petitioner and his wife shows that the 5th Respondent was his advocate; that the letter is an acknowledgement of payment of legal fees and that in the letter of 16th September, 2014 addressed to the Petitioner and signed by the 5th Respondent, the 5th Respondent informed the Petitioner that the land had been transferred to a buyer but did not disclose the name of the buyer, and yet the buyer was the 5th Respondent and his wife.”

    Dr Khaminwa told the court, “it is curious that the individual who is supposed to be the lawyer of the Petitioner is now the buyer of the suit property but did not disclose that fact to the Petitioner; that the 5th Respondent(Mr Ohaga) wants to be the Petitioner’s lawyer and the lawyer for himself and that the Petitioner had a lot of trust in the 5th Respondent, which trust was breached.”

    Dr Khaminwa submitted that it is difficult to understand how the Respondents allowed the Petitioner and his family to occupy the suit land for more than 20 years without paying any rent at all and yet they (the Respondents) were required by monthly instalments to liquidate an alleged loan at commercial rates and that the transfer of the suit property to the 1stRespondent was suspicious and fraudulent.