Court rules Kenya Railways failed transparency test in SGR project

In Summary

• In November 21, 2014, then High Court Judge  Isaac Lenaola declined an invitation by activist Okiya Omtatah and the Law Society of Kenya to stop the construction of the SGR. 

• The court dismissed their cases in which they claimed that the procurement and construction violated the constitution and the laws of Kenya.

A section of the 120km extension of the SGR from Nairobi to Naivasha passes through a fault line in Mai Mahiu area.
A section of the 120km extension of the SGR from Nairobi to Naivasha passes through a fault line in Mai Mahiu area.
Image: FILE

The Court of Appeal has said Kenya Railways Corporation, as the procuring entity of the Standard Gauge Railway, failed to meet the constitutional threshold of fairness and transparency.

However, Justices Martha Koome, judge Gatembu Kairu and Jamilla Mohammed on Friday said they were not persuaded that the procurement of the SGR was unconstitutional only because it was not taken through a competitive bidding process.

In November 21, 2014, then High Court Judge  Isaac Lenaola declined an invitation by activist Okiya Omtatah and the Law Society of Kenya to stop the construction of the SGR. 

The court dismissed their cases in which they claimed that the procurement and construction violated the constitution and the laws of Kenya.

The same judge found that the documents that had been tendered by Omtatah and LSK as evidence in support of their petitions were inadmissible having been obtained illegally.

Lenaola accordingly ordered those documents to be expunged from the record. 

Being aggrieved with the decision, the two parties appealed.

But the appellate judges upheld Lenaola's decision regarding the documents.

They said they do not have any basis for interfering with the decision of the High Court to expunge the documents in question.

They also observed that claims by Omtatah and LSK that Parliament was bypassed and that environmental considerations were not considered have no merit. “We are also not persuaded as contended by Omtatah and LSK that because the procurement of the SGR was not taken through a competitive bidding process that in itself renders it unconstitutional,” they said

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