Former Cabinet minister James Orengo on
Monday hit back at the government accusing it of selectively revoking
titles issued for land grabbed in Lamu County.
Mr
Orengo at the same time exonerated himself from accusations by the Lands
Cabinet Secretary Charity Ngilu that he abetted land grabbing by
corruptly allocating public land without any regard to the laid down
procedures when he was in charge of the docket.
He
instead blamed what he termed as corrupt networks fighting back alleging
they were getting back at him after he revoked some 850 titles while he
was the minister for Lands in the Coalition Government in 2011.
At
a press conference in Nairobi on Monday, Mr Orengo, who is now the
Siaya Senator, distributed a list of who is who in the country whom he
claimed were the owners of land whose titles were revoked for land
spread across the country and whom he said had now regrouped to fight
back.
Among those in the list include the Deputy
President William Ruto and Labour Cabinet secretary Kambi Kazungu whose
allocations he revoked with the land reverting back to the government or
to the community.
“Cartels in the land sector are
powerful, organised and have regrouped and are using the people who are
now shouting on mountain tops to accuse others of grabbing yet they are
the people involved in alienating land in this country from the rightful
owners including in Lamu,” Mr Orengo said. (READ: Arrest Orengo and we expose you, Cord dares Jubilee)
PRESIDENTIAL UNIT
In
a strange twist, PSCU directors, Dennis Itumbi, Munyori Buku, Eric
Ng’eno, James Kinyua, Thomas Kwaka, Munira Mohammed, David Nokia and
Emmanuel Talaam circulated an e-mail message to news rooms hitting back
at Mr Orengo.
They accused him of resorting to
dropping names of President Kenyatta and his Deputy Mr Ruto without
giving any proof. The list that does not look exhaustive as the names
of previous allottees to some of the revoked pieces are not given,
contains names of people allocated the Lamu sand dunes as well as
community land.
Among the names that feature
prominently include that of politician Fahim Yasin Twaha and Abdallah
Mohammed Abdalla whose identity could not be immediately established.
He
challenged the government to implement the Truth, Justice and
Reconciliation Commission and the Ndung’u Reports saying it was the best
way to deal with historical injustices on land.
Mr
Orengo who was flanked by the Kakamega Senator Boni Khalwale and Suna
East MP Junet Mohammed however welcomed a directive by Mrs Ngilu that
the government will revoke illegally acquired title deeds dating back to
1963 saying he would honour any summons issued.
On the
Lamu land issue, Mr Orengo accused the government of dishonesty by not
revealing all the people and families he said were responsible for
alienating the locals from their land.
The start point would be to publish the names of all land owners with more than 200 acres in the county, he added.
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