BY Kibiwott Koross ,Tuesday, August 19th
2014
The Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs) has struck off a
Japanese company from its roll of motor vehicle inspectors for allowing overage
and defective vehicles into the country. The national standards body warned
Kenyans in a statement posted on its website that its contract with Japan
Export Vehicle Inspection Company (Jevic) has been terminated. "This is to
notify all importers of motor vehicles into Kenya that the contract for motor
vehicle inspection between Kebs and Japan Export Vehicle Inspection Center Co.
has been terminated in line with the current contract that expires on January
15, 2015. Please be advised," the statement reads in part. Kebs Chairman
Lucas Maitha yesterday said they took the decision after verifying more than
200 complaints raised against Jevic. The company was contracted by Kebs to
conduct inspection for vehicles destined for Kenya from Japan, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, Singapore and South Africa.
"It is true we have
terminated our contract with Jevic and that is irrevocable for now. The council
found out that they were actually letting in defective and overage vehicles
into the country, which is against the regulations," he said on phone. Mr
Maitha said the council made the decision after several months of
investigations, adding, "We had to do investigations and this has been
verified. Jevic failed to do the work we gave them and that is why we have
terminated their services." Two Japanese firms, Jevic and QISJ, had
competed for the lucrative tender, but the management backtracked on the
tendering committee's decision that had declared QISJ the winner. The firm was
later found to have failed to meet the conditions set in the initial tendering
process. A board meeting on October 31, 2011 agreed that the tender be awarded
to Quality Inspection Service of Japan (QISJ), but Kebs management at the time
defied the orders and subsequently cancelled the tender on November 1. The
Public Procurement and Oversight Authority (PPOA) had said the tendering was
flawed and needed to be repeated, but the ruling was ignored. PPOA had
expressed concern over the awarding of marks by the evaluation committee and
noted that the process was riddled with personal and political interests right
from the start. Insiders at Kebs told The Standard that the management of Jevic
camped at Kebs managing director's office for the better part of yesterday as
they sought audience. An investigation by The Standard in April exposed how
overage vehicles were cleared in by Jevic company in Mombasa. By allowing
overage cars, Kenyans could be losing millions of shillings buying vehicles at
a price above their real values.
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