The deal with Jersey, a self-governing island in the English Channel, was hailed as “a victory for the people of Kenya” by its High Commissioner in the UK, Manoah Esipisu. The entangled web of connections that eventually ended in this deal first emerged following a divorce case.
Back in 2006, Samuel Gichuru, the wealthy boss of Kenya’s power company, and his wife Salome Njeri were divorced.
When it came to splitting up their assets, Ms. Njeri felt she was not getting her fair share.
She alleged some of her husband’s assets were being hidden from the proceedings and, in court, listed details of accounts she said belonged to Mr. Gichuru in Jersey, which is often associated with secretive offshore banking and a low-tax environment.
That sparked a nine-year investigation by the Jersey authorities across 12 jurisdictions.
As part of that investigation, in 2011, they accused Mr. Gichuru and former Finance Minister Chris Okemo of taking kickbacks from multinationals that were sent to a Jersey-registered company.
The Jersey authorities issued arrest warrants for both men and have been waiting for their extradition from Kenya ever since.
The economic crimes they were accused of included a deal with a Finnish firm to construct a power station near Mombasa, Kenya’s second-largest city, and taking millions of pounds in kickbacks from British, Norwegian, and German engineering firms, as well as a US communications giant.
Despite repeated attempts to contact them by the BBC, both men and their lawyers would not comment on the allegations leveled against them.
However, in 2016, the Jersey-registered company Windward Trading Limited pleaded guilty to four counts of money laundering in a Jersey court.
The court ruled that the company, whose ultimate owner was Mr. Gichuru, should be stripped of more than $4.9m (£3.6m) in assets for money laundering. Is the majority of this money that allegedly came from corrupt activities in Kenya between 1999 and 2002 that is now being returned to the country.
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