EACC sues ex-Lands Commissioner for transferring Ksh.100M KeNHA land to his brother
Integrity Centre
Audio By Vocalize
The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) has moved
to court seeking to recover a grabbed piece of land worth Ksh.100 million belonging to the
Kenya National Highways Authority (KeNHA).
EACC accuses former Commissioner of Lands Sammy Mwaita of irregularly transferring the 3-acre (1.5 hectares) piece of land to his brother Hillary Kipkorir Mwaita.
According to the court papers, EACC secured injunction
orders from the Nakuru Environment and Land Court against Hillary Kipkorir
Mwaita, his brother Sammy Mwaita and the
Chief Land Registrar.
“EACC has secured injunction orders from the Nakuru
Environment and Land Court against Hillary Kipkorir Mwaita who the Commission has sued for grabbing
public land valued at Kes.100,000,000, where KeNHA is currently
constructing its regional headquarters in Nakuru,” reads a section of the
document.
EACC records that Sammy Mwaita while serving as the commissioner in 1998 irregularly transferred the said land to his brother Kipkorir.
"In 1998, the then Commissioner of Lands Sammy Mwaita illegally and irregularly allocated the parcel of land to his brother Hillary Kipkorir Maida using a forged Part Development Plan (PDP) Reference No. R7/98/188 which does not exist in the Directorate of Physical Planning records," EACC stated.
The petition lists Kipkorir as the first defendant, his brother Sammy as the second, and the Chief Land Registrar as the third.
In the suit, the commission sought to permanently bar the first defendant who possesses the title deed from interfering with the said property pending the hearing and determination of the case.
EACC similarly wants the Chief Land Registrar to cancel the entries relating to lease certificate issuance and declare the initial land allocation and transfer to Hillary Kipkorir illegal.
Justice
Antony Ombwayo on Monday, therefore, issued the injunction orders against Kipkorir and
any other involved persons barring them from interfering with the land.
The case will be heard on January 26, 2023.


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