Nasir Manji with documents of a disputed
property
at the Press conference addressed by
Lands Cabinet
Secretary Charity Ngilu in Nairobi’s
Ardhi House.
|
March 21st 2014
By GEOFFREY MOSOKU Kenya: Lands Cabinet Secretary
Charity Ngilu has vowed to dismantle the cartels at her ministry, which she
says were responsible for forgery of land documents that have aided in de
frauding Kenyans. Ngilu disclosed that there were over 7,000 cases in court
where ministry officials have colluded to aide fraudsters get court nods over
ownership. “This is something we are not going to condone and we will root out
these people who are not only out to taint the image of the ministry but also
the government,” she said. Ngilu, who was addressing a news conference at her
Ardhi House office, was accompanied by an Asian family that is locked in a
legal tussle with a company over a multi-million plot in Nairobi’s Parklands
area.
The family had been sent to Ngilu by Industrialisation Cabinet Secretary
Adan Mohamed. “We were referred to madam by her colleague Adan to present our
case. We are the genuine land owners but someone wants to con us,” Nasir Manji,
a director of Mbesa limited that claims ownership of the plot said. According Ngilu,
Mbesa’s file had disappeared from the registry and a new one allegedly created
that had commenced a process of allocating the said land to Flash Audio
Services limited, whose director is shown as James Gichuki Wambugu
Ngilu said she
had written to the CID as well as the Ethics and Anti corruption Commission to
investigate close to 1000 land fraud cases. She failed to mention officers
implicated and only told the media to help her clean Ardhi House because the
cartels are land barons who are very powerful. On her stand off with the
National land Commission (NLC), Ngilu insisted that the constitution only gives
the commissioner power to manage public land and not private land. She told the
Muhamad Swazuri led team to concentrate on its mandate as per article 67 of the
Constitution and leave registration of titles to the ministry. “I am the
minister and the NLC is an agent of the ministry, let us be clear on that,”
Ngilu said while cautioning Kenyans not to use title registration forms that
were recently gazzetted by the NLC. She refuted reports of a paralysis in the
ministry saying that registration of titles was being done by Jane Ndiba who
had been appointed in an acting capacity by the Public Service Commission. Ngilu
said she was facing resistance in fighting land cartels that are depriving
genuine landowners of their land.
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