By Moses
Michira Kenya:
President Uhuru Kenyatta will Thursday
commission the construction of the Mombasa-Nairobi railway line, as a row
escalates over procurement issues that could derail the project. A
parliamentary committee last week grilled Transport Cabinet Secretary Michael
Kamau on the procurement procedure used to pick China Bridges and Roads
Construction as the contractor for the Sh220 billion project. The committee on
Transport, Public Works and Housing had expressed reservations about the way
Kenya Railways Corporation (KRC) issued the tender but its report is yet to be
tabled in Parliament. While Kamau defended the deal saying that the Chinese
government had seconded the contractor because it was funding most part of the
project, Attorney General Githu Muigai had earlier trashed that argument.
Prof
Muigai said KRC should have sought a contractor for the project competitively
to promote fair competition, transparency and accountability. The AG’s opinion
had been sought by the Public Procurement Oversight Authority (PPOA). In his
letter dated April 30, Muigai warned that the tender had been awarded
unlawfully to the Chinese contractor, presenting the newest possible hurdle
that could set the project up for delays or even cancellation. “It is my
opinion that a so-called government-to-government agreement is not a method for
selecting suppliers,” said Muigai, who is the chief legal advisor to the
Government. It is expected that the AG’s opinion could shape the decision of
the parliamentary committee, which was asked to determine issues relating to
how the tender was awarded, and if the winning contractor had the capacity to
execute the project. Nyali MP Awiti Bollo earlier this month also demanded
answers on what action the State would take should KRC be found to have erred
in awarding the tender. Among the arguments raised was that the Kenya
Government was funding part of the project using public resources, which would
then demand that a competitive process be pursued in determining the winning
contractor. Earlier, KRC had flip-flopped over the question whether the project
had been tendered or the agreement was entered between Kenya and China at
intergovernmental level.
Nduva Muli,
the Transport principal secretary and previous KRC managing director, had
submitted to the public procurement watchdog that the tender had been floated
‘in error’ before it was withdrawn. “The procurement is a G to G contract,
which is to be funded by negotiated grant/loan and is, therefore, exempt from
the application of the PPD Act 2005,” read part of Mr Muli’s letter to the
PPOA. KRC had been asked to explain why it cancelled the tender for the
Mombasa-Nairobi standard gauge railway project. Muli submitted that a
memorandum of understanding and co-operation had been entered into between the
Transport ministry through the then minister Ali Mwakwere and the contractor in
2009 for design and construction of the railway project. The Mombasa-Nairobi
track is the first phase of a 1,250-km project that would eventually end in
Kampala. The next phase will involve developing the Nairobi-Malaba railway line
after completion of the first phase. The entire project worth Sh1.2 trillion is
expected to take five years to complete, with a six-month allowance to cover
any unforeseen challenges.
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