.@KarauriR a jovial, flashy former pilot at Kenya Airways, never saw himself as the man who would fly SportPesa from a small struggling company into East Africa’s largest betting firm. - @NationAfrica
.@KarauriR needs no introduction to Kenyans after his public role as the @SportPesa CEO.
A passionate poker player and son of a politician, Karauri first met Guerassim Nikolov, the controversial and principal @SportPesa founder, at a poker table on the first floor of the dimly lit Finix Casino in Hurlingham, Nairobi in 2014.
His meeting with the Bulgarian that night was by sheer chance. The two poker lovers clicked from the word go as they faced off in a competitive poker match at the Casino in Hurlingham.
The strangers quickly developed a bond and their camaraderie grew stronger as they sprang from one poker game to the next. Karauri believes poker, his favourite pastime, has a way of revealing a person’s true character. And on this table, he knew he could trust Nikolov.
With Poker, there are different hands, different cards. You place bets then the best hand wins. Sometimes, you laugh at each other, but at the end of the day, the best hand wins - @KarauriR
From here, they would meet a few more times before firming up the business decision to run a betting company together.
In January 2015, Karauri would officially join @SportPesa .
The decision would pay off four years later, after their fortunes rose following the company’s whirlwind success to become the biggest betting firm in East Africa.
By December 2018, @SportPesa was making revenues of Sh150 billion annually.
Karauri and his team of Bulgarian shareholders have, for months, kept mum on developments at the firm since they became a target of an unrelenting govt crackdown that has ended up with them losing their betting licence in two companies -- Pevans EA and last month, Milestone.
In his first exclusive media interview, Karauri swiftly dismisses claims that some of his Bulgarian partners are criminals and rubbishes allegations that he was dealing with the Mafia.
Gero (Guerassim Nikolov) is a gentleman. I have known him for many years and all of that time he was here, he was married to a lady here in Kenya and they have two children - @KarauriR
Nikolov is the man who was running SportPesa as CEO before Karauri came on board and he passed the baton to him.
I have never seen a very hardworking man like Gero, because taking time off for him was difficult, it is like he can’t do it. We are the ones who have propelled the company to where it is. - @KarauriR
As fate would have it, @KarauriR also first met former MP Dick Wathika in 2014, in the same casino where he met the Bulgarians. It's also in that casino where Wathika would collapse one yr later, on December 19, 2015, and be rushed to Karen Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
When he met them, Karauri realised that Nikolov and Wathika were already bosom buddies, having shared a controversial past in betting for more than a decade.
Seated in his office, @KarauriR demeanour does not betray the big fight from within that is tearing apart the giant company.
.@KarauriR is a pleasant host. If he is arrogant or proud as his critics describe him, then he is very good at hiding it at our meeting. Those who love him admire him for his taste in fine things, his lavish lifestyle and his disarming honesty.
.@KarauriR has a quick wit, is likable and there is no doubt that he is media savvy. His hearty laughter reverberates through the boardroom.He is sharp, a little nervous, but has all the important numbers at his fingertips.
In any case, he is a former pilot who scored top grades at Mang’u High School. He'd have been a mechanical engineer had he not dropped out of engineering school at the University of Nairobi in his third year to take up an offer as a graduate pilot trainee at @KenyaAirways.
He now sits, almost helpless as the vicious boardroom fight among billionaire investors at the company spreads like a cancer, destroying everything in its wake.
.@KarauriR maintains that Kenyans are very far from understanding what really hit the company, and is quick to absolve the company of all accusations levelled against it -- from tax fraud and money laundering to profit shifting.
.@KarauriR is confident that one day the courts will vindicate him and the company will have back its glory.
But betting was nowhere in his horizon, until he met the Bulgarians. When the company was sponsoring the Kenya Football League, boxing championships, English premier league teams and Formula One, he was seen handing out trophies to the teams.
To some, he was Kenya’s celebrity CEO. In Kenya he quickly became famous because of the sheer amount of money @SportPesa put in advertising and, by extension, in the media.
.@KarauriR seemed to enjoy this fame and missed no opportunity to show how well the company was doing, riding in private jets, throwing lavish parties and driving top-of-the-range cars.
Now he says this was merely branding, and he does not own a private jet. In him, the Bulgarian founders found a talented marketer who switched from flying planes to become the public face of @SportPesa.
To get into his office at the Chancery building, you have to pass through a swanky reception furnished with giant seats shaped like gloves and balls. Taking pride of place in his office, on a wall to his right is an autographed Arsenal jersey of Aaron Ramsey.
A tense moment of discomfort passes through the room when we stare at the jersey, perhaps because it is a painful reminder of the glory days of @SportPesa. The only consolation now, perhaps, is the fact that the footballer has since left Arsenal.
Next to it is another autographed memento of Hristo Stoichkov, one of the best footballers of his generation and who is considered the greatest Bulgarian footballer of all time.
Karauri’s story begins in Meru, where he was born. The family moved to Nairobi, where he grew up. He completed secondary education at Mang’u in 1996, from where he joined the University of Nairobi to train as a mechanical engineer.
As I was doing mechanical engineering, the opportunity for Kenya Airways opened up. It was the first time they were doing initial pilot training. So, I dropped out of university in my third year of mechanical engineering and started flying with @KenyaAirways - @KarauriR
.@KarauriR worked at KQ for 11 years. Six years as a co-pilot and five as a captain.
.@KarauriR has been through many storms. As a pilot, he literally flew through storms. And he knows that at the end of every turbulence, there is always tranquility.
At @KenyaAirways, he was among the pioneer class that went for pilot training in Ethiopia.
We are the only people who went to Addis. After coming back and recounting our hardship to KQ, they shifted the training to South Africa....>>>
<<<... Our conversion was quite difficult at Ethiopia Airline since they used the American system and their exams are much simpler compared to what we come to find in Kenya. - @KarauriR
Nothing can possibly be harder in the life of a pilot trainee than training using a Cessna 122 to fly the Boeing 737. In 10 years, he had been promoted to become a captain and was flying the biggest planes in KQ’s stable then.
That is before he moved to the powerful aviation union where he became the secretary general of the Kenya Airline Pilots Association (Kalpa).
So, why did Karauri leave what looked like a highflying career, to bet on sports gambling? He says before he was convinced to jump ship from KQ, the initial shareholders at SportPesa were just three -- Guerassim Nikolov, Gene Grand and the Dick Wathika.
The rest of the shareholders joined later. Some joined even after the business had started operating. After sitting and seeing the potential, I decided this is something I wanted to risk. So, I sold a small piece of land and decided to put all the money in. - @KarauriR
The combined initial investment was $5M, which works to about Sh543 million at the current exchange rates.
Dick Wathika, Gero, and Gene Grand were very good friends and they had done other business together. The initial shareholders were the three of them, before I joined. Honestly, these were friends who started the company. - @KarauriR
The @SportPesa boss says Wathika was one of the people he negotiated with when he acquired his 6% stake in the company.
In the initial stages in 2014, when they had a misunderstanding with Safaricom on the nature of their business, he says Wathika led a delegation of @SportPesa officials to explain to the telco how it would work.
And it is perhaps at this time that Wathika went for his friend and village mate Paul Ndung’u and convinced him to buy shares in the company. Ndung’u, a tycoon who made his billions at Safaricom as a dealer, would help them get Safaricom on board.
Ndung’u and Karauri do not see eye to eye following a bitter boardroom falling out last year.
Ndung’u and other shareholders joined a little later. In total, the company ended up with 10 board members, seven of whom were shareholders. Ndung’u would become chairman following the death of Wathika after the meeting at Finix Casino.
We interacted a lot with Dick. He was a very strong chairman. We really depended on him for most of the stuff. He really guided us in terms of manoeuvering in the regulatory environment. He had a lot of experience in that, so we were fortunate to have him at that point-Karauri
Before @SportPesa came calling, @KarauriR had tried his hand at a few businesses, the most notable being the Skylux Lounge, a popular club in Nairobi’s Westlands area.
The opportunity was offered to me to come to SportPesa and I realised if you are not part of the operation of that business, sometimes you might miss out on a lot of things. - @KarauriR
But it was a tough task explaining to his family that he was moving from flying planes to gambling.
Very few companies have been shut down by the government due to a tax dispute. In fact, in most instances, once caught, the taxman prefers to go the easy route of working out a repayment schedule.
In case the taxpayer disagrees with the tax bill, there is a tax dispute resolution mechanism and a parallel court process that has the final word on who pays what. But the government did not allow this process to come to an end.
So just what hit @SportPesa and what crimes did the company really commit?
To get the full story, listen to A Country of Gamblers, a podcast on the meteoric rise of SportPesa, its fall and the attempt at resurrection of Kenya's biggest betting company, here on #NationAudio
The following paragraphs have been rated GE, and they are, therefore, suitable for general family reading. - @NationAfrica
However, because they tell the story of a moral policeman who is being accused of not being too moral with term limits and public funds, some sentences may upset taxpayers below the age of 120.
The paragraphs are about @EzekielMutua Nyithya, the man who – since his appointment as CEO of @KFCBarstool in October 2016 – became a moral policeman with something to say on events, adverts, films, songs, pastors, name it.
A Ugandan company that Deputy President William Ruto claimed this week he had helped to get Sh15B loan to set up a factory had its accounts frozen on suspicion of money laundering at around the same time the credit facility was advanced to it. - @NationAfrica
While the information surrounding the money laundering accusations against Dei Pharmaceuticals has remained a tightly guarded secret....
....President Yoweri Museveni waded into the matter on June 4, 2020, accusing State figures in Uganda of undermining his authority by flagging and stopping inflows of billions of shillings to the company’s accounts.
Just hours after he was sent on compulsory leave yesterday morning pending his retirement later this year, @EACCKenya has swung into action, further compounding the woes of the moral policeman.
With his departure effected, the controversial KFCB boss leaves office with his head down, barely two months to the end of his second term.
.@InfoKfcb has appointed Christopher Wambua as its acting chief executive officer effective August 6. - @NationAfrica
Paskal Opiyo, the acting chief manager of corporate services, informed staff of the appointment in an internal memo on Friday.
The appointment follows an investigation into CEO Ezekiel Mutua, over alleged payment of irregular salaries and allowances. @EACCKenya has been investigating Mutua since May 6.
Ethiopia has cleared the way for @SafaricomPLC to introduce its popular M-Pesa in the market of 110M people after deciding to include the mobile phone-based financial services in the telco’s licence offered in May. - @BD_Africa
Ethiopian authorities told @BD_Africa that the @SafaricomPLC licence will be upgraded to include mobile financial service when it completes bidding for its second telecoms operator permit. The bidding will be opened this month.
A consortium led by @SafaricomPLC secured the first licence, which doesn'tt have a permit for mobile financial services like M-Pesa, in May. The consortium will start ops next year when Ethiopian authorities say the telco will have the right to operate mobile financial services.
.@WorldAthletics President Sebastian Coe believes the steeplechase is still very much a Kenyan event despite Morocco’s Soufiane El Bakkali breaking the stranglehold by winning the #OlympicGames gold here last Monday. - @EliasMakori
Kenya has dominated the water jump and barriers race since 1968 when Amos Biwott won the Olympic Games gold in Mexico.