Tetesi: What Kenyans do when given a chance to run a Tanzanian company

Geza Ulole

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Oct 31, 2009
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Dar renews efforts for extradition of KPC boss over scam
SUNDAY APRIL 22 2018

NGUMI.jpg

Kenya Pipeline Company Ltd chairman John Ngumi. Mr Ngumi and Bashir Awale are wanted in Tanzania to assist in a bribery case. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

In Summary
  • Tanzania looking for Kenya Pipeline Company chairman John Ngumi, who was in charge of the CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm, and Mr Bashir Awale, who served as Stanbic Tanzania CEO when the bond was floated in 2012.
  • Mr Awale is accused of using the money as an inducement to have state officials favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

  • Exactly a year ago, Kenya’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission said it was helping investigators from Tanzania under the Mutual Legal Agreement to have the two produced in Tanzania.
some.jpg

By KIPCHUMBA SOME
More by this Author
Officials in Tanzania prosecuting a Sh600 million bribery scandal relating to a government bond have now turned to the country’s Justice minister for help to get Kenyan authorities to extradite two of its citizens they believe will help solve the case.

They are looking for Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) chairman John Ngumi, who was in charge of the CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm, and Mr Bashir Awale, who served as Stanbic Tanzania CEO when the bond was floated in 2012.

The Tanzanian bond was handled by Stanbic Tanzania, a subsidiary of the Standard Chartered Bank PLC of the United Kingdom, which was fined in 2015 for its role in the scandal.

Mr Awale is accused of using the money as an inducement to have state officials favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

REQUESTS

Tanzania’s Attorney-General Adelardus Kilangi, whose office was reportedly co-ordinating the extradition requests, referred all questions on the matter to the Justice minister, Prof Palamagamba Kabudi.

He said only the minister would be issuing progress on the extradition requests as it involved two friendly nations.

“I wouldn’t be in a position to say right now what has not happened or happened as I am barely two months in office,” the AG said. “I prefer that our minister be the spokesperson on matters such as this touching on two countries.”

Dr Kilangi was appointed in February to replace Justice George Masaju, who is now a judge of the High Court.

The Prevention and Combatting of Corruption Bureau director-general Valentino Mlowola on April 12 said the extradition process of the two Kenyans wanted over the case was now being handled from the AG’s office.

STRATEGY

“It is the AG’s office that should be in a position to say how far the extradition process has gone. I am not authorised to speak about the matter,” Mr Mlowola said in a telephone interview. Mr Awale was Stanbic Tanzania chief for seven years and was fired on August 19, 2013 for failing to co-operate with investigators. The bank later announced that he had left voluntarily. The fact that he sat in the strategy team of the opposition presidential candidate Edward Lowassa did not help matters for him. He was deported for allegedly being in the country illegally soon after the 2015 General Election, which Mr Lowassa lost to CCM’s John Magufuli.

Exactly a year ago, Kenya’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) said it was helping investigators from Tanzania under the Mutual Legal Agreement to have the two Kenyans produced in Tanzania.

“We have received the MLA and are working closely with the State Law Office in line with the request. A team of investigators from Tanzania and Kenya has been put in place to implement the request,” EACC CEO Halakhe Waqo said at the time.However, Tanzania feels that Kenya is not keen on fulfilling its obligation. A source in the office of the director of prosecution close to the case told The Citizen — a publication of the Nation Media Group in Tanzania — that investigators have been so far unsuccessful in seeking the extradition of the Kenyans.

FRAUD

According to the source, who requested anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to the media over the matter, requests to extradite Mr Awale back to the country have not been honoured.

“Investigators attempts to summon for questioning other senior Standard Chartered Bank officials in Kenya over the Stanbic scandal have also not been successful,” said the source. He said some of those wanted were apparently enjoying high level political patronage.

The case first came to light after Standard Bank PLC pleaded guilty in a London court in 2015 to charges brought against it by the Serious Fraud Office, which accused its Tanzanian executives of failing to stop a $6 million bribery scandal.

According to UK court papers, the $6 million bribe was paid to a company known as Enterprise Growth Market Advisors (EGMA) as an agent for Stanbic Tanzania to win the $600 million government loan deal on behalf of the bank’s UK-based main unit, Standard Chartered Bank.

PROTESTED

These arrangements were allegedly made by Mr Awale and Ms Shose Sinare, then the unit’s head of corporate and investment banking.

On April 13, Ms Sinare and Mr Sioi Solomon, a former senior official of the bank, protested in court over delay in prosecuting the case against them.

Appearing before the Kisutu Resident Magistrate Huruma Shaidi, they accused the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) of taking unnecessarily long to complete investigations.

The two alongside former Tanzania Revenue Authority Director-General Harry Kitilya were charged on April 1, 2016 with several charges relating to the bribe linked to the bond.

INTERVENES

The three were charged with seven counts, among them money laundering, forgery, abuse of office, corruption, obtaining advantage and transfer of proceeds. They have been in remand since then.

Appearing before the court for mention on Thursday, Sioi and Sinare asked the magistrate to intervene on the incessant claim by the prosecution that investigations were incomplete.

“We are nearing the third year in custody yet the case is yet to start with the same old song that investigations are incomplete. I am praying that the court intervenes,” said Mr Sioi.

Yesterday, Mr Ngumi did not respond to our enquiries on the matter while we could not reach Mr Awale. But last year, Mr Ngumi told the Sunday Nation he was not aware he was being sought in connection with the case.

Tanzania calls for arrest of Kenya Pipeline boss
 
Dar renews efforts for extradition of KPC boss over scam
SUNDAY APRIL 22 2018

NGUMI.jpg

Kenya Pipeline Company Ltd chairman John Ngumi. Mr Ngumi and Bashir Awale are wanted in Tanzania to assist in a bribery case. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

In Summary
  • Tanzania looking for Kenya Pipeline Company chairman John Ngumi, who was in charge of the CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm, and Mr Bashir Awale, who served as Stanbic Tanzania CEO when the bond was floated in 2012.
  • Mr Awale is accused of using the money as an inducement to have state officials favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

  • Exactly a year ago, Kenya’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission said it was helping investigators from Tanzania under the Mutual Legal Agreement to have the two produced in Tanzania.
some.jpg

By KIPCHUMBA SOME
More by this Author
Officials in Tanzania prosecuting a Sh600 million bribery scandal relating to a government bond have now turned to the country’s Justice minister for help to get Kenyan authorities to extradite two of its citizens they believe will help solve the case.

They are looking for Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) chairman John Ngumi, who was in charge of the CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm, and Mr Bashir Awale, who served as Stanbic Tanzania CEO when the bond was floated in 2012.

The Tanzanian bond was handled by Stanbic Tanzania, a subsidiary of the Standard Chartered Bank PLC of the United Kingdom, which was fined in 2015 for its role in the scandal.

Mr Awale is accused of using the money as an inducement to have state officials favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

REQUESTS

Tanzania’s Attorney-General Adelardus Kilangi, whose office was reportedly co-ordinating the extradition requests, referred all questions on the matter to the Justice minister, Prof Palamagamba Kabudi.

He said only the minister would be issuing progress on the extradition requests as it involved two friendly nations.

“I wouldn’t be in a position to say right now what has not happened or happened as I am barely two months in office,” the AG said. “I prefer that our minister be the spokesperson on matters such as this touching on two countries.”

Dr Kilangi was appointed in February to replace Justice George Masaju, who is now a judge of the High Court.

The Prevention and Combatting of Corruption Bureau director-general Valentino Mlowola on April 12 said the extradition process of the two Kenyans wanted over the case was now being handled from the AG’s office.

STRATEGY

“It is the AG’s office that should be in a position to say how far the extradition process has gone. I am not authorised to speak about the matter,” Mr Mlowola said in a telephone interview. Mr Awale was Stanbic Tanzania chief for seven years and was fired on August 19, 2013 for failing to co-operate with investigators. The bank later announced that he had left voluntarily. The fact that he sat in the strategy team of the opposition presidential candidate Edward Lowassa did not help matters for him. He was deported for allegedly being in the country illegally soon after the 2015 General Election, which Mr Lowassa lost to CCM’s John Magufuli.

Exactly a year ago, Kenya’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) said it was helping investigators from Tanzania under the Mutual Legal Agreement to have the two Kenyans produced in Tanzania.

“We have received the MLA and are working closely with the State Law Office in line with the request. A team of investigators from Tanzania and Kenya has been put in place to implement the request,” EACC CEO Halakhe Waqo said at the time.However, Tanzania feels that Kenya is not keen on fulfilling its obligation. A source in the office of the director of prosecution close to the case told The Citizen — a publication of the Nation Media Group in Tanzania — that investigators have been so far unsuccessful in seeking the extradition of the Kenyans.

FRAUD

According to the source, who requested anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to the media over the matter, requests to extradite Mr Awale back to the country have not been honoured.

“Investigators attempts to summon for questioning other senior Standard Chartered Bank officials in Kenya over the Stanbic scandal have also not been successful,” said the source. He said some of those wanted were apparently enjoying high level political patronage.

The case first came to light after Standard Bank PLC pleaded guilty in a London court in 2015 to charges brought against it by the Serious Fraud Office, which accused its Tanzanian executives of failing to stop a $6 million bribery scandal.

According to UK court papers, the $6 million bribe was paid to a company known as Enterprise Growth Market Advisors (EGMA) as an agent for Stanbic Tanzania to win the $600 million government loan deal on behalf of the bank’s UK-based main unit, Standard Chartered Bank.

PROTESTED

These arrangements were allegedly made by Mr Awale and Ms Shose Sinare, then the unit’s head of corporate and investment banking.

On April 13, Ms Sinare and Mr Sioi Solomon, a former senior official of the bank, protested in court over delay in prosecuting the case against them.

Appearing before the Kisutu Resident Magistrate Huruma Shaidi, they accused the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) of taking unnecessarily long to complete investigations.

The two alongside former Tanzania Revenue Authority Director-General Harry Kitilya were charged on April 1, 2016 with several charges relating to the bribe linked to the bond.

INTERVENES

The three were charged with seven counts, among them money laundering, forgery, abuse of office, corruption, obtaining advantage and transfer of proceeds. They have been in remand since then.

Appearing before the court for mention on Thursday, Sioi and Sinare asked the magistrate to intervene on the incessant claim by the prosecution that investigations were incomplete.

“We are nearing the third year in custody yet the case is yet to start with the same old song that investigations are incomplete. I am praying that the court intervenes,” said Mr Sioi.

Yesterday, Mr Ngumi did not respond to our enquiries on the matter while we could not reach Mr Awale. But last year, Mr Ngumi told the Sunday Nation he was not aware he was being sought in connection with the case.

Tanzania calls for arrest of Kenya Pipeline boss
Why are Tanzanians not given a chance to run Kenyan companies
 
Ngumi and Awale could only pull out that kind of heist in complicit with other Tanzanian executives in the firm. So none in the file and rank of the bank should be overlooked while they pursue the Kenyan duo.
 
Ngumi and Awale could only pull out that kind of heist in complicit with other Tanzanian executives in the firm. So none in the file and rank of the bank should be overlooked while they pursue the Kenyan duo.
The Tanzanian culprits are already in court.
 
Haha, imefikaje huko nani kaileta. Btw, Odingia anatia mguu sana Tanzania, ni yeye kuachiliwa?
Naona wenzako wanasema Nyang'au ni mwizi, sasa hizo shs 1.5Trillion kwanini mnasingizia maskini wa mungu sisiemu? Njooni mzifate huku huku Kenya bana.
 
Naona wenzako wanasema Nyang'au ni mwizi, sasa hizo shs 1.5Trillion kwanini mnasingizia maskini wa mungu sisiemu? Njooni mzifate huku huku Kenya bana.
Hiyo ni sifa mmejijengea wenyewe wala hamkupewa na watanzania. Yani kundi moja na wanigeria.
 
Ngumi and Awale could only pull out that kind of heist in complicit with other Tanzanian executives in the firm. So none in the file and rank of the bank should be overlooked while they pursue the Kenyan duo.


ippmedia.com/en/news/stanbicbribery-case-takes-new-turn

April 23, 2018
They are looking for current Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) chairman John Ngumi, who was in charge of CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm, and Bashir Awale, the Stanbic Bank Tanzania CEO when the bond was floated in 2012.

The bond was handled by Stanbic Tanzania, a subsidiary of Standard Chartered Bank PLC of the United Kingdom, which was fined in 2015 for its role in the scandal.

Awale (pictured) is accused of using the money as an inducement to have state officials favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

Tanzania’s attorney general Adelardus Kilangi, whose office is reportedly coordinating the extradition requests, referred all questions on the matter to the Minister for Justice and Constitutional Affairs, Prof Palamagamba Kabudi.

He said only the minister will be issuing progress reports on the extradition requests as it involves two friendly nations.

“I wouldn’t be in a position to say right now what has happened or not happened as I am barely two months in this office,” the AG said, adding: “I prefer that our minister be the spokesperson on matters such as this.”

Kilangi was appointed AG in February to replace George Masaju, who is now a judge of the High Court of Tanzania.

Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau (PCCB) director-general Valentino Mlowola said in a telephone interview April 12 that he also is not “authorised” to speak about the matter.

Awale was Stanbic Tanzania chief for seven years before being fired on August 19, 2013. The bank later announced that he had left voluntarily.

He was then deported back to his native Kenya soon after the 2015 general election, the reasons cited then as his illegal stay in Tanzania.

Exactly a year ago, Kenya’s Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) said it was helping investigators from Tanzania under a mutual legal agreement to have the extradition requests honoured.

“We have received the MLA and are working closely with the State Law Office in line with the request. A team of investigators from Tanzania and Kenya has been put in place to implement the request,” EACC chief executive officer Halakhe Waqo said at the time.

But the fact that the extraditions have so far been unsuccessful has led to suspicions in Tanzania that Kenya is not keen on fulfilling its obligations under the MLA.

“Investigators’ attempts to summon for questioning other senior Standard Chartered Bank officials in Kenya over the Stanbic scandal have also not been successful,” one source in the office of Tanzania’s director of public prosecutions was quoted as saying.

The source suggested that the two extradition targets may be enjoying high-level political patronage.

The case first came to light after Standard Bank PLC pleaded guilty in a London court in 2015 to charges brought against it by Britain’s Serious Fraud Office, which accused its Tanzanian executives of failing to stop the massive bribery scandal.

According to UK court papers, the $6 million bribe was paid to a company known as Enterprise Growth Market Advisors (EGMA), as an agent for Stanbic Tanzania to win the $600 million government bond deal on behalf of the bank’s UK-based main unit, Standard Chartered Bank.

These arrangements were allegedly made by Awale and Shose Sinare, then the unit’s head of corporate and investment banking.

Sinare, Sioi Solomon - another former senior official of the bank - and former Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) director general Harry Kitilya are currently being prosecuted on several charges relating to the bribe linked to the bond.

The seven counts in the charge sheet cover money laundering, forgery, abuse of office, corruption, obtaining advantage and transfer of proceeds.

All three accused have been in remand prison since they were first charged on April 1, 2016. When the case last came up for mention at the Kisutu resident magistrate’s court in Dar es Salaam on April 13, Sinare and Solomon protested over case delays and accused the DPP’s office of taking unnecessarily long to complete investigations.

“We are nearing the third year in custody yet the case is yet to start with the same old song that investigations are incomplete. I am praying that the court intervenes,” said Solomon.
 
KPC boss Ngumi cites witch-hunt in Tanzania's fresh probe into Sh600m bribery scam
Apr. 24, 2018, 6:00 pm
By LILLIAN MUTAVI @mutavikelykelly
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Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC) chairman John Ngumi says he reads witch-hunt in Tanzania's renewed efforts to have him extradited to face bribery charges.

Officials in the neighbouring country are prosecuting a Sh600 million bribery scandal relating to a government bond floated in 2012.

They want Kenyan authorities to extradite Ngumi and former Stanbic Tanzania CEO Bashir Awale in the belief they will help solve the case.

Awale is accused of using the money as an inducement for state officials to favour the two banks when Tanzania floated the international bond.

The KPC boss, who is facing protests by Concern Citizen - an NGO, was in charge of the CFC Stanbic Bank’s East Africa investment arm.

Concern Citizen has announced that it will hold a protest at the KPC headquarters on Wednesday to press for Ngumi's resignation.

The organisation wrote to the police notifying them of the planned peaceful demonstration.

But the KPC boss says the probe is targeting him following the position he is currently holding in Kenya.


"It is total rubbish. The case has nothing to do with Tanzania but witch-hunt on what we are doing in Kenya," Ngumi said.

"I was not mentioned during the investigation done by the Serious Fraud Office since I was not involved," he told the Star on phone.

KPC boss Ngumi cites witch-hunt in Tanzania's fresh probe into Sh600m bribery scam

MY TAKE

Aje ajibu Kesi! Gutter press won't cleanse him.
 
Kenya has not received any Ngumi extradition request
Apr. 26, 2018, 12:45 am
By STAR REPORTER @thestarkenya

1170388_0.jpg

KPC board chairman John Ngumi during the signing off the the a loan agreement between six consortium banks to finance the construction of a 450 square kilometers Mombasa Nairobi pipeline. Photo/Enos Teche.​

The EACC and the Attorney General’s office have denied that Tanzania has requested the extradition of Kenya Pipeline chairman John Ngumi.

A story in the Nation on Sunday, headlined ‘Dar renews efforts for extradition of KPC boss over scam’, said that the Tanzanian authorities had renewed efforts to extradite former Stanbic Tanzania boss Bashir Awale and Ngumi, the Stanbic head of Investment Banking Coverage for East Africa in 2012.

The Sunday Nation story was immediately taken up by bloggers Cyprian Nyakundi and Robert Alai who called for Ngumi’s removal.

On Tuesday, Alai also tweeted a call for a demonstration against Ngumi by Concern Citizens Kenya. The letter notified police of a demonstration on Wednesday lunchtime at the KPC offices, demanding Ngumi’s resignation because of the alleged Tanzania extradition demand.

In April 2017, the Tanzanian government asked Kenya to extradite Awale to face charges of fraud. There is no record that Tanzania has ever submitted an extradition request for Ngumi.

“We have not been asked by Tanzania to extradite Ngumi,” said an official in the Attorney General’s office.

“We have a request from Tanzania for Mutual Legal Assistance for Awale but where Ngumi comes in, I don’t know. They have not asked us to do anything about Ngumi. I was also surprised to see his name in the Sunday Nation,” said a senior official at the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission.

The Attorney General is supposed to handle the mechanics of extradition while the EACC handles the investigation aspect.

In 2015 Standard Bank, the parent company of Stanbic Tanzania, pleaded guilty to paying a bribe of $6 million (Sh600 million) in a case brought by the Serious Fraud Office in London. The judge fined Standard Bank a total of $32 million ( Sh3.2 billion).

The bribe was paid by Awale and Shose Sinare, the then head of corporate banking at Stanbic Tanzania, to secure a government private placement of $600 million ( Sh60 billion) in 2012, according the statement of facts from the London court.

The bribe was paid in the form of a hidden extra commission of one percent to an advisory company called Export Growth Market Advisors that represented three Tanzanian officials.

Awale handled the transaction with Florian van Hartig, the South Africa based Head of Global Debt Capital Markets for Standard Bank.

Technically, Awale reported to Ketili Mbathi, the then Regional CEO for Stanbic Bank in East Africa. However the EGMA transaction was supervised by the London office of Standard Bank so the Nairobi office and Mbathi were not involved in the Sh60 billion private placement in Tanzania.

Ngumi’s name did not appear in the judgement or statement of facts in the London case in 2015, nor did any name from the Nairobi office of Stanbic Bank.

Rivalries inside KPC may be behind the unfounded allegations against Ngumi. KPC is highly profitable and made Sh8.4 billion profit in 2016.

Last year, the Public Investments Committee blocked KPC from paying a Sh11 billion claim from Zakhem International Construction, for a cost overrun on the new pipeline from Mombasa to Nairobi, which is due for completion this month.

Kenya has not received any Ngumi extradition request
 
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