By SUNDAY NATION REPORTER newsdesk@ke.nationmedia.com
PSaturday, May 18 2013
PSaturday, May 18 2013
In Summary
- The payments across the year for the use of the jet will amount to $1.2 million (Sh100.56 million)
- The decision to procure the services of a different jet for Mr Ruto’s use will inevitably draw criticism as wasteful at a time when the government says it is trying to limit expenditure on running the government to free up resources for development
- The plane was reportedly last used by Kenyan clients when one was leased to take Prime Minister Raila Odinga to Cote d’Ivoire to mediate following a post-election crisis in that country
Deputy
President William Ruto’s office has hired a luxury jet for his travels
across the continent in a deal which will cost taxpayers up to $300,000
(Sh25.14 million) every three months.
Documents seen by the Sunday Nation
show that the invoice for the first instalment of the “quarterly
payment” for the Bombardier 850 Challenger plane was lodged on
Wednesday.
The plane is being supplied by VistaJet
Company, a firm which describes itself as the world’s premier luxury
aviation company for private jet charter and private jet ownership.
The payments across the year for the use of the jet will amount to $1.2 million (Sh100.56 million).
Mr
Ruto left the country aboard the jet on Thursday for a four-nation trip
which will take him to Gabon, Congo, Nigeria and Algeria.
The
Deputy President’s office issued a statement saying Mr Ruto was
representing President Kenyatta on the trips in response to invitations
by leaders of those countries when they attended the Kenyan leader’s
inauguration last month.
The Deputy President’s office
said the trips reflected a desire by the government to underline its
intention to pursue a foreign policy agenda guided by Pan-Africanism.
“The
Deputy President is representing the President on the official
engagements. This follows the emphasis by the government and President
Uhuru that the next frontier of the country’s partnership is the African
continent. We believe with the strategic leadership we have in the
region, Kenya needs to establish a partnership with countries in the
South, West, North and Central Africa.”
But the cost to taxpayers of the President’s and Deputy President’s foreign trips will raise eyebrows.
Mr
Kenyatta enjoys the services of a private jet purchased during
President Moi’s reign which he uses when travelling around Africa.
The
decision to procure the services of a different jet for Mr Ruto’s use
will inevitably draw criticism as wasteful at a time when the government
says it is trying to limit expenditure on running the government to
free up resources for development.
The speed with which
VistaJet was contracted to supply the lucrative jet hiring services
will raise questions as to whether any tender process was followed
before the contractor was identified.
An official whose
name appears on the “VistaJet Program Partnership Agreement” payment
request sent by the company from its offices in Salzburg, Austria,
flatly refused to comment on the matter saying it was a “sensitive
issue”. He demanded that the Sunday Nation reporters go physically to the office of the Deputy President to lodge their inquiries on Monday.
But
transparency campaigner Mwalimu Mati of Mars Group said the government
needed to halt trips abroad which were costing the taxpayer millions of
shillings.
“This is totally outrageous,” he said. “We
already have a presidential jet at the disposal of the President and his
Deputy. Why hire another one when you have already bought one? The
President should live up to his word that the government will not be a
gravy train and stop this.”
An initial list indicted that Mr Ruto was to be accompanied by 14 people including politicians and aides.
The plane which Mr Ruto’s team flew in lives up to its reputation as a luxury jet.
The
Bombardier 850 Challenger is marketed by VistaJet as a plane which
“fuses the capabilities of a larger aircraft with the comfort and
flexibility of an executive jet”.
It is capable of accommodating 15-19 passengers and the firm
says all its planes come complete with a mahogany finish and all-leather
interior. The jet has a bedroom at the rear for VIPs, wireless Internet
and a fully equipped kitchen.
The plane has a
transcontinental range meaning it can fly further than the official
President’s jet and, according to its manufacturers, the plane affords
“the best-in-class business environment, offering the widest cabin in
its class”.
“The Bombardier Challenger 850 aircraft was
created to challenge convention and establish a new class of business
aircraft,” the jet manufacturer’s promotional material reads.
“In
doing so, the jet has excelled in every way, setting the standard for
reliability, dependability and value in its class. Expansive and
versatile, it provides the flexibility to deliver customised solutions
for any corporate requirement.”
The plane has lately become a favourite of jet-set celebrities.
Last
year, American singer Beyonce bought a Bombardier Challenger 850 as a
gift for her husband, musician Jay-Z, on the occasion of Father’s Day.
The plane cost a reported $30 million (Sh2.5 billion).
The
jet is also popular in many parts of the world and VistaJet, whose
fleet is dominated by Bombardier planes, has recorded impressive growth
opening offices across Europe, the Middle East, Asiaand West Africa.
The
plane was reportedly last used by Kenyan clients when one was leased to
take Prime Minister Raila Odinga to Cote d’Ivoire to mediate following a
post-election crisis in that country.
On that
occasion, the bill was footed by various international organisations
which were sponsoring efforts to end the blood-letting following a
disputed election in that country.
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