By BENSON WAMBUGU benwambugu62@gmail.com AND RICHARD MUNGUTI rmunguti@ke.nationmedia.com, Saturday, May 18 2013
In Summary
- Long-running dispute involved the width of the road reserve adjacent to the palatial residences
- Judge orders residents to surrender to the government the 20 metres out of their respective parcels within 90 days from April 25
- The Northern Bypass is a 25-kilometre road linking Thika Road to Waiyaki Way which is part of the Nairobi-Nakuru highway
At
least 296 families in Nairobi’s upmarket Runda Estate will be rendered
homeless after the High Court ordered partial demolition of the gated
community to create room for the construction of the 21-kilometre
Northern Bypass corridor.
Lady Justice Mumbi Ngugi
threw out twin petitions by Runda Mimosa Estate and Cycad Properties Ltd
seeking to stop the government from reclaiming 20 metres consumed by
the housing estate from the original 80 metres earmarked for the road
expansion.
The long-running dispute between Runda
residents, Lands and Roads ministries, Kenya National Highways
Authority, Kenya Urban Roads Authority and the Attorney-General involved
the width of the road reserve adjacent to the palatial houses.
While
the residents argued that the road’s width is 60 metres according to
records in the Lands ministry, the government insisted it was 80 metres
as delineated on November 20, 1970.
The land,
originally owned by Edith Cockburn, covered 6.4 acres when the parent
parcels were compulsorily acquired by the government.
The
AG, through Mr Charles Mutinda, said that after the compulsory
acquisition, the land owners were compensated in respect of their
portions and the titles reverted to the government. Others who
originally owned the land were Estav Ltd (16 acres) and Runda Coffee
Estate Ltd (27.9 acres).
The petitioners had urged the
court to declare that their rights, individually or in association with
others to acquire and own property, were being violated as guaranteed by
Article 40 of the Constitution.
However, the judge
said she was satisfied with submissions by KeNHA’s lawyer, Mr Anthony
Mulekyo, that the residents knew of the public nature of the land
through Gazette notices that warned the public against encroaching on
road reserves and bypasses.
“In the two petitions
before me, I don’t see any violation or limitation of the residents’
right to property. In my view, the residents are unwitting victims of
landowners who sold the properties to them without having regard to the
public interest,” ruled Justice Ngugi.
She also turned
down a plea by the residents that Sh2 billion had been invested in
constructing the houses, observing that the right to property can only
be exercised within and in accordance with legal framework as public
lands had overriding interests under Registered Land Act.
“While
I appreciate the large investments that have gone into the construction
of the residential houses and sympathise with the situation of the
owners, I believe their recourse in legal claim is against those who
sold land to them,” said the judge.
The judge ordered
the Runda residents to surrender to the government the 20 metres out of
their respective parcels within 90 days from April 25 and directed the
Lands office to rectify the titles accordingly. Mr Mulekyo told the
court that the petitioners – Cycad and the 296 residents – were fully
aware of the encroachment and “what they are now seeking from the court
is to be allowed to clean up their tainted titles”.
“The
petitioners cannot clothe their encroachment on public land with
legality through a declaration of rights that they are not entitled to,”
submitted Mr Mulekyo, who urged the court to block the residents from
any attempt to gain collateral advantage.
The Northern
Bypass is a 25-kilometre road linking Thika Road to Waiyaki Way which is
part of the Nairobi-Nakuru highway. It runs through Kahawa West,
Githurai and upmarket Thome, Windsor, Runda and Kitisuru estates.
Drawings
dating back to 1970 show the road was designed to use 80 metres and not
60 metres as argued by lawyers Mohammed Nyaoga and Geoffrey Imende for
the 296 affected families. Mr Nyaoga said demolishing the houses would
infringe on the residents’ right to private property.
However,
the Kenya Urban Roads Authority, through its lawyer Geoffrey Ondongo
and the Attorney-General, who are named as respondents, said the
government had spent Sh8 billion in constructing the 25-km Northern
Bypass.
No comments:
Post a Comment