‘Mortgaging the country’: MPs want JKIA-Adani deal stopped
Members of Parliament say
Adani Airport Holdings Limited’s controversial proposal to take over and facelift the Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport (JKIA) in Nairobi is akin to “mortgaging the country” and
should be stopped in its entirety.
In a session where Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi appeared before the National Assembly Public Investment Committee on Commercial Affairs and Energy on Tuesday, legislators called for a special audit of the $1.85 billion deal (about Ksh.239 billion at current rates).
The David Pkosing-led committee directed the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) managing
director “not to do any further thing with Adani until this committee submits a
report to Parliament by the end of October.”
“It looks like KAA
cannot guide itself, Adani is the one guiding you and Parliament
is here to do that,” Pkosing said.
The MPs raised concern
over the Indian Adani Group-owned company’s sudden interest in several Kenyan sectors.
“How comes all of a
sudden Adani is everywhere; SHIF, KETRACO… it is now becoming a big
shareholder of Kenya,” Pkosing posed, a reference to Adani’s Ksh.94 billion deal with
the Kenya Electricity Transmission Company Limited for
the construction of 422 kilometres of power transmission lines and its
purported interest in running Kenya’s new Social Health Insurance Fund (SHIF).
The committee directed an audit into Adani’s
selection for the JKIA facelift project, testaments of the work, the scope of what Adani will do, and
an assessment of whether a privately-initiated proposal
(PIP) was the most suitable procurement
method.
The audit should also look
into what happens with other Kenyan airports and airstrips amid talk that the
Indian firm targets beyond JKIA, and the fate of KAA staff who have been
protesting over concerns the deal poses a risk to their jobs.
The court on September 9 halted all further action on the proposed lease of JKIA to Adani until a case lodged by the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) and the Law Society of Kenya (LSK) on September 9 blocking the deal was fully resolved. It is up for mention on October 8.
But Adani holds that while it already paid a $50,000 (about Ksh.6.4 million) review fee to the Kenyan government for the project, it is still at the review and due diligence stage.
The firm last week dismissed statements that JKIA has already been leased for 30 years as a misrepresentation of facts.
CS Mbadi has repeatedly defended the deal, saying Tuesday "it underwent review and significant changes were made."
"If Kenyans still think they want to discontinue the deal, who am I to say no? But let us allow for constructive engagement," the minister told MPs, adding, "If a better deal emerges, we can stop the Adani one, but the new developer will need to compensate Adani for their involvement."
($1 = Ksh.129.18)
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