[kictanet] Konza Land Issue
Sammy Buruchara
buruchara at me.com
Thu Aug 9 11:57:31 EAT 2012
Dear Dr. Ndemo,
It always amazes me how we succeed to shoot ourselves in the foot. We cut
our nose to spite our face.
Kenyans when shall we wake up and leave petty issues aside for the good of
the country? To see the big picture and avoid the side shows.
Very sad indeed.
Sammy
-----Original Message-----
From: kictanet
[mailto:kictanet-bounces+buruchara=mac.com at lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf
Of bitange at jambo.co.ke
Sent: Thursday, August 09, 2012 8:43 AM
To: buruchara at mac.com
Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Konza Land Issue
Listers,
A number of you have independently asked me to clarify the Konza Land issue
that was in the papers yesterday. Let me briefly explain the problem.
Prior to the purchase of Land we developed a conceptual framework on the
locationing of a tech city. Here we largely relied on the work done by Booz
Allen. Among other things research shows that a tech city must be located
at least 30 minutes from the airport and be in the outskirts of a major city
from where you can tap the human resource.
With this we crafted a tender document that restricted the suitable land
within the parameters of the conceptual framework. This was done openly and
we assumed it was indeed an open tender. But it emerged that the definition
of open was to advertise land availability anywhere without restrictions.
This grey area in the law is rediculous since land in Wajir will have been
of no use to us and as such we flouted the procurement law.
After our competitive bid, we consulted with the Ministry of Lands to give
us the valuation of which the recommendation was Ksh. 200,000. Since most
quotes were in the 300 range we focused on the most suitable piece and
offered to pay Ministry of Lands Valuation rate. In open tenders one is not
allowed to negotiate even when it is in the interest of the country.
Here it is said we manipulated the numbers.
This clearly is a misunderstanding since we still have grey areas in the
Procurement Law. Whereas KACC says we used direct or restricted tendering
to buying the land, our view was that the method was open since and one that
is in the interest of the country.
We did indeed consult the AG's office if what we did was in order and we
were given the clear. Much of this is done by various the departments but I
bear the ultimate responsibility.
What is absurd is the fact that the Daily Nation decided to highlight this
issue while we were having the Konza conference here with international
investors. This was the time we were telling investors that Kenya has
changed and corruption is being dealt with. Well they did a great damage to
my reputation. I read malice in the story since it is something that has
been around. I would rather have taken a six month jail term than mess up
with a project that I have devoted my life to. I have taken risky decisions
to have this project take off but it is now clear that we only rejoice on
successes.
KACC has a right to question what we do and indeed in Teams they were on our
case all through until the project was complete. The fact that they
question does not amount to corruption. This is how we can change laws and
make them dynamic with changing times. As much as I respect the Media, in
this case they hurt my character dearly yet what I did was right and hoped
we can change the law for future rational decisions. Never in my public
life have I tried to do something that is not in the interest of the
country.
Ndemo.
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