Kenya in June signed a secret Sh139.5B loan deal with a Belarusian and Canadian companies to build mobile clinics and upgrade hospitals in the counties amid fears of a sharp rise in coronavirus cases. - @BD_Africa
The US Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) has disclosed the deal between @KeTreasury and Canadian firm Kallo Inc over the multi-billion shilling deal to upgrade Kenya’s health infrastructure to help contain Covid-19.
The deal was signed in June last year in the wake of rising coronavirus cases that forced the government to impose restrictions, including a daily night curfew, closure of schools and pubs as well as curb of movement in and out of four counties, including Nairobi.
Under the deal, Belarus-based Techno-Investment Module (TIM) provided financing for project labelled the Kallo Integrated Delivery System (KIDS), whose details remain scanty and were not made public in Kenya.
Yesterday, @KeTreasury said it needed more time to respond to the @BD_Africa questions, including whether Parliament was made aware of the debt agreement and if Kenya received the loan.
Kallo Inc says on its website that KIDS provides a comprehensive healthcare infrastructure using both mobile clinics and fixed hospitals supported by a global telehealth system.
On June 26, 2020, the company finalised contracts with the Republic of Kenya and Techno-Investment Module Limited for a project contract and a finance contract. - SEC filings of March 3 indicate.
Under the terms of the agreement, Kenya is seeking to borrow the sum of 1,068,932,543 euros from TIM and the funds are to be used primarily to build phase one of a planned National Healthcare Infrastructure in the Republic of Kenya to be undertaken by Kallo Inc.
The loan is a 20-year facility charged at 2% plus #Libor, which currently stands at negative 0.4%, the filings show.
Kenya was given a three-year grace period freezing payment of part of the loan, whose payments, including principal and interest, were to be done quarterly from 2023.
echno-Investment Module Ltd was expected to pay the Sh139.5B loan directly to Kallo Inc once Kenya issued a guarantee technically called a standby letter of credit.
A standby letter of credit is a legal document that guarantees a bank’s commitment of payment to a supplier in the event the buyer defaults on the agreement.
It helps facilitate international trade between companies that don’t know each other, have different laws and regulations.
The agreement exposes Kenya to legal suits and compensation should it turn down the loan, echoing the controversy over billions of shillings paid out to a firm linked to the Anglo Leasing scam, which involved state contracts worth Sh70B awarded to non-existent firms.
In 2014, @KeTreasury reached a negotiated settlement of the long-running legal dispute with one of the 13 Anglo Leasing companies, clearing the main hurdle that had delayed plans to raise the first Eurobond.
SEC filings show that Canadian firm Kallo Inc is expected to make payments to a firm called Magnitudo for supplies related to Covid-19. @BD_Africa failed to get details of the firm Magnitudo through an Internet search.
Firms are required to make filings with the powerful SEC if their securities are publicly traded in America, raised funds in the US or have shareholders required to file corporate actions with regulators in Washington.
The Canadian firm expects to receive Sh21B from @KeTreasury deal despite the company’s alert that it had never undertaken projects similar to the one being implemented in Kenya. It is not clear from the filing how the remaining Sh118 billion from the loan was to be shared.
Kenya's secret Kes139B loan for Covid19 in June 2020 that has only been exposed after one of the suppliers made their obligatory SEC filings in the USA bit.ly/2OZDquC via @BD_Africa
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Tanzanian President John Magufuli was discharged from Nairobi Hospital while on life support and flown to Dar es Salaam late last week after doctors concluded that he could not be resuscitated, the Nation has established. - @NationAfrica
The President, who was flown to Kenya secretly on March 8 after suffering acute cardiac and respiratory illnesses, was under intubation when a decision was made to fly him back home.
Magufuli’s entry and exit from Kenya was a guarded affair, that only select National Intelligence Service (NIS) officials and members of the National Security Advisory Committee were aware of.
John Pombe Magufuli, the Tanzanian president who has been missing in public since February 27, and who was criticised by the global community as a Covid-19 denier, died of heart complications in Dar es Salaam on Wednesday. He was 61. - @johnKamau1
Vice-President Samia Suluhu made the announcement on TV last evening, and said Mr Magufuli had been admitted to hospital since March 6.
President Magufuli’s death brings to a close weeks of speculation on his whereabouts and health. Crucially, it opens a new chapter for a country that has never changed governments outside of elections.
.@OAG_Kenya Nancy Gathungu wants @NMS_Kenya probed over the irregular withdrawal of Sh32.38M meant to fight Covid-19. - @TheStarKenya
This even as the auditor questioned the whereabouts of Sh180.07 million raised to aid in the fight against the virus as she flagged irregular direct procurement by the agency.
.@NMS_Kenya the entity that took over the key functions of City Hall including health, irregularly withdrew Sh32.38M from the KCB imprest account reportedly for the facilitation of health workers.
Executives of telecoms company @AIRTEL_KE have launched a fight against contempt of court charges which put them at risk of fines or jail terms after the mobile operator was sucked into a dispute between the State and betting firm, @SportPesa - @BD_Africa
The mobile operator is seeking protection against a contempt suit filed by the betting firm which has accused it of failing to unblock gaming pay bill accounts and short codes used by its partner Milestones Games Limited despite a court order to do so.
The dispute kicked off last year after the State-run Betting Control and Licensing Board stopped Milestone from operating under the popular @SportPesa gaming brand, saying the trade name had been appropriated from its rightful owner Pevans East Africa Limited.
The retailer, which is now on its deathbed after suffering uncontrolled financial hemorrhage, had eyes and ears everywhere. It used the intelligence gathered to grow into East Africa’s biggest supermarket chain.
When it was second only to Nakumatt in size and revenue, @TuskysOfficial hired spies to gather intelligence on its rival, and was willing to splash the cash to become the bigger of the two elephants.
MPs committed to enact a law that will compel @CBKKenya to regulate monthly interest rates charged by digital mobile lenders and borrowers’ non-performing loans in honour of fallen Bonchari MP Oroo Oyioka. - @BD_Africa
MPs eulogised Mr Oyioka and the late Garissa Senator Yusuf Haji as devoted legislators who passionately articulated issues of concern without fear. Both Mr Oyioka and Senator Haji died on Monday. Mr Haji chaired the #BBINonsense prior to his death.
Mr Oyioka had sponsored the Central Bank of Kenya (Amendment) Bill, 2020 that is before Parliament for debate.