By Andrew Teyie
NAIROBI, KENYA:
Former President Kibaki is in the eye of the storm following a
controversial retirement ‘gift’ of a multi-million shilling petrol
station by the management of the National Oil Corporation of Kenya ( NOCK).
Several
members of the Board of Directors of the State corporation that is
mandated to set up strategic infrastructure that will help bring down
and stabilise prices of petroleum products have petitioned the Permanent
Secretary for Energy, Patrick Nyoike,
arguing the decision to ‘gift’ retired President a petrol station was a
unilateral decision made by two individuals in the board.
“We the Board of Directors read in the media that NOCK
chairman and the Chief Executive Officer had donated a petrol station
to former President Kibaki. The Board had not discussed this matter and
we therefore wish to exonerate ourselves from this donation that is not
only illegal, but also an embarrassment to the former President,” the
protesting board members said in their letter to the PS date April 18.
But
when contacted on Saturday, Isaiah Kabira, a spokesman of former
President Kibaki said: “The (former) President did not ask for the gifts
neither did he demand any. (Former) President Kibaki should not be
drawn into the internal intrigues of the National Oil Corporation,”
Kabira
recalled that during the State House farewell party for Kibaki by
employees of the public service, many organisations asked the President
to choose his preferred gifts.
“They asked him to choose the gift
he wanted and he is yet to choose one so he should not be drawn into
Nock internal issues,” said Kabira.
Five Board Members of NOCK
Jessie Mutura, James Gacheru, Stanley Kamau, Bernard Njoroge, and
Fatuma Hassan signed the protest letter to the PS saying they were not
party to ‘gifts’ promised to the retired president.
The four board
members who did not sign were Jaafar Sheikh, Ezekiel Koimett, Paul
Ngatia, Peter Gitonga, and the CEO, Sumayya Athmmani and Board Chairman
Peter Munga, who naturally could not be expected to sign since issues
were being raised against them.
NOCK
management offered the petrol station as a ‘gift’ to Kibaki during the
last farewell party for the President, which took place at State House
on April 5, just a few days before the inauguration of President Uhuru
Kenyatta.
NOCK
promised to build Kibaki a petrol station at a place of his choice. In
what turned out into a comical competition between ministries and State
corporations on who would come up with ‘best gift’ for the retiring
president. The Ministry of Fisheries said it would build fishponds for
him, while the National Youth Service promised to sink boreholes for the
former Head of State. But Nock’s petrol station deal seems to have come
tops and with that came the controversy. Industry experts put the cost
of constructing a petrol station in the region of Sh50 million.
Board wars
But for some reasons, the rather unorthodox gift escaped public
attention and would have disappeared from public radar and scrutiny were
it not for the complaints raised by Nock Board Members.
The dissenting members of NOCK
Board further said in their letter to PS Nyoike: “There is no laws in
this country that allows public assets to be donated to any person and
therefore any expenditure relating to this donation is misappropriation
of public funds and those responsible should be surcharged.”
And on her part, the CEO of NOCK,
Sumayya Athmani, responded to the letter by board members with her own
comprehensive 18-page letter to the PS in which she accused the
complaining board members of malice.
“The constant hostility
directed at the CEO (by some board members) is essentially because of
these board members feeling aggrieved that they are not personally
benefiting from the corporation,” said the CEO in her letter to the PS
dated April 26.
The CEO, however, did not explain if there were
some board members who were “personally benefiting from the
corporation”, as opposed to those who were not, hence their constant
complaints against the CEO.
Summayya also sought to explain the basis of a petrol station ‘gift’ to the retired President.
Addressing
the issue of petrol station ‘donation’ to the former President, Sumayya
explained: “The National Oil Corporation has an initiative of
partnering with Kenyans who own land in strategic places to construct
retail stations on the said land and recover the costs from sales of
fuel. This is the same model that will be adopted in respect to the
former President should suitable land be identified.”
The petrol station ‘gift’ controversy is just one among several issues that made Energy PS Patrick Nyoike
to summon an urgent board meeting for Nock directors early this week
where he reportedly advised board members to mend its differences.
The
controversy and problems facing National Oil Corporation, a strategic
parastatal come at a time when retail fuel prices have become a major
burden for Kenyans with the constantly increasing prices leading to
escalating cost of living.
NOCK,
a parastatal owned by the Government 100 per cent under the Ministry of
Energy was incorporated in April 1981 participate in all aspects of
petroleum industry to mitigate against profit-driven multinationals that
dominate the petroleum industry.
The parastatal started its
operations in 1984 generally focusing on exploration activities before
moving downstream (retail business) four years later setting up petrol
stations. The formation of the Corporation was brought about by the
fuel crisis of 1970s and early 1980s, with the Government stepping in to
try and stabilise fuel prices as well as the supply.
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