(From L to R) Daniel Moi - The man who was President for 24 years has business interests in banking, media, hotel and tourism, manufacturing, airline and education. Mama Ngina Kenyatta - The family of founding father Jomo Kenyatta has investments in land, manufacturing, real estate, energy and banking. Simeon Nyachae - The former Cabinet minister and presidential aspirant has business interests in manufacturing, transport, banking and ranching. NATION MEDIA GROUP
By PATRICK NZIOKA
People with political connections control more than 50 per cent
of the Kenya’s wealth that is owned by individuals, a new report has
shown.
Highlighting this as one of the factors that
could negatively impact on Kenya economic growth in future, the Wealth
in Kenya 2014 report says that a common thread running through almost
all the dollar millionaires is their political connections as well as
their ownership of large tracts of land.
The list of the wealthy political dynasties and billionaire landowners reflects Kenya’s top political leadership.
However,
the report does not give details about how their wealth was acquired
and does not suggest in any way that the wealth was acquired
irregularly.
The Kenyatta, Moi, Kibaki, Karume, Kulei,
Biwott, Nyachae, Odinga, Saitoti, Michuki and Mwau families are listed
among the wealthiest in the report compiled by a British organisation.
The same families also own large tracks of land.
Other
large individual land owners include Mr Swaleh Nguru, Mr Saleh Said
Sherman, Mr Tahir Sheikh Said (TSS) and Kamlesh Pattni.
The group is likely to get even richer because property prices continue to rise.
The group is likely to get even richer because property prices continue to rise.
According
to the report, Kenya’s residential property prices rose by four per
cent in dollar terms and 42 per cent in shilling terms, fuelled by
strong economic growth and high demand by foreign buyers particularly in
Nairobi and coastal area.
The price of top end
property in Nairobi was valued at $1,700 per square metre in 2013,
according to a Knight Frank report. This made Nairobi the fourth most
expensive city in Africa for property after Cape Town, Johannesburg and
Luanda. Nairobi also ranked ahead of Lagos.
Some of the families have been selling the land and this has raised their cash holding.
THE KENYATTA FAMILY
The
family of the founding father of the nation is one of the richest in
Kenya. President Uhuru Kenyatta is a scion of the family.
Going
by the rankings of the New World Wealth report, the family can be
ranked among centimillionaires, whose wealth range between $100 million
and $1 billion.
The family, with Enke Holdings at the
core of its wealth, has interests in banking — with a stake in
Commercial Bank of Africa — tourism (Heritage Hotels among others),
mining, insurance, airline, education, real estate and energy. It also
has interests in telecommunications, dairy farming (through Brookside
Dairies) and transport.
The size of land owned by the
Kenyatta family remains the subject of debate but according to the
Ndung’u Commission report published in December 2004, the family has
about 94 acres in Kiambu in the name of Jomo Kenyatta’s widow Mama
Ngina. It also has 89 acres and 59 acres in Thika District.
The family is believed to own land in Endebbes, Rumuruti, Nakuru, Naivasha, Nairobi and Thika but its exact acreage is unknown.
THE MOI FAMILY
Retired
president Daniel arap Moi, who ruled Kenya for 24 years, ranks among
the richest Kenyans with an estimated wealth in hundreds of billions of
shillings. In line with the New World Wealth report, the Moi family
easily fits in the centimillionaire category.
The
family has interests in various sectors, including banking where they
hold shares in more than two banks, the oil industry, insurance, hotel
and tourism, maritime and freight, media, manufacturing, airline and
transport. The Moi family is also big in land ownership, real estate and
education.
GEORGE SAITOTI
The
late Prof Saitoti, who was plucked from the University of Nairobi by
President Moi in 1983 was also ranked among the richest politicians in
Kenya.
Prof Saitoti was vice-president for more than
10 years and held ministerial positions in various dockets before he met
his death in a plane crash in June 2012.
He had
business interests in horticulture, hotel and tourism, real estate and
pastoralism. Going by the New World Wealth report, he is an affluent
millionaire and his worth ranges from $30 million to $100 million.
NICHOLAS BIWOTT
A
powerful minister under President Moi, Mr Biwott is a skilled
businessman who built his business empire in various sectors. Ranked as a
centimillionaire ($100 million to $1 billion) by the New Wealth World
report, he has his anchor business as a key shareholder in Kobil, an oil
marketer. He has also invested heavily in energy, mining,
telecommunications, tourism, agriculture, banking and real estate.
JOHN MICHUKI
A
no-nonsense minister and administrator, the late Michuki was one of
the richest Kenyans whose worth is between $30 million and $100 million.
His business interests are in hotels with the Windsor Golf and Country
Club as the flagship. He also owned several commercial buildings in
Nairobi and other real estate assets besides interests in agriculture.
THE ODINGA FAMILY
The Odinga family is also among the wealthiest with political connections.
The
patriach, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, was Kenya’s first vice-president
under Jomo Kenyatta while his son, Raila Odinga, was Prime Minister in
the Grand Coalition government whose tenure ended in March last year.
The family has interests in oil and gas, manufacturing and agriculture.
MWAI KIBAKI
The former President and long-serving MP for Othaya is also among Kenya’s wealthiest politicians.
Besides
large tracts of land, Mr Kibaki is reputed to have investments in
hotels, agriculture especially tea growing, insurance, real estate and
telecommunications. He is also into banking and fashion industry.
SIMEON NYACHAE
The
former chief secretary, Cabinet minister and provincial administrator
has investments in manufacturing through his flagship Sansora Holdings.
He also has interests in agriculture, insurance, transport, banking, and
logistics. He is also said to own ranches in Australia, Zimbabwe and
South Africa.
OTHERS
The wealth of businessman cum politician John Harun Mwau is in the league of billions of shillings.
In
an interview with the Nation about two years ago, Mr Mwau said he had
invested billions in the US. He is one of the major shareholders of
Nakumatt Holdings, a leading supermarket chain in the region.
His
name has also been associated with the troubled Charterhouse Bank. He
has a stake in a number of companies locally and abroad especially in
the Middle East and Asia.
Also in the list of the
wealthy people who have political connections are Mr Joshua Kulei, who
was an aide to President Moi. He has business interests in insurance,
logistics, media and petroleum.
The late Njenga Karume,
whose ties spanned across past political administrations, also had
immense wealth with investments in agriculture, real estate, banking,
hotels and insurance sectors.
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