Thousands of
Kenyans could be consuming sugar that was never meant for household use as
weak regulatory systems and greed by cartels expose Kenyans to danger, a lobby
group has voiced concerns.
The alarm has been
raised by the National Integrity Alliance following revelations surrounding the
importation of 27,839 metric tonnes of industrial raw cane sugar allegedly
diverted into the local retail market.
NIA said the
latest revelations point to systemic regulatory collapse, political protection,
and criminal profiteering at the expense of public health.
The sugar
consignment of industrial raw cane sugar imported from Durban, South Africa and
valued at approximately Sh1.5 billion, was allegedly brought into the country by
Mombasa Sugar Refinery Limited under a customs code reserved for industrial
sugar.
“Kebs has not been given statutory independence or enhanced enforcement powers. No
dedicated food safety task force with prosecutorial referral authority has been
established. The same institutions that failed in 2023 have failed again in
2026, and the same categories of perpetrators have exploited the same
institutional gaps to harm the same population,” NIA said in a statement.
That
classification attracts a preferential 10 percent duty rate, significantly
lower than taxes charged on sugar intended for direct human consumption.
According to NIA,
the sugar was then diverted, repackaged, and sold in the local market as
ordinary consumer sugar.
The coalition
warned that consumers had no practical way of distinguishing industrial sugar
from table sugar without laboratory testing, meaning thousands of families may
have unknowingly purchased potentially unsafe products.
“This is not just
fraud. It is a direct assault on Kenyans’ constitutional rights,” the alliance
said, citing violations of the right to health, food safety, consumer
protection, and human dignity.
NIA said credible
reports indicate the operation involved a well-organised network with links to
senior levels of government, raising fears that sugar cartels continue to enjoy
protection from enforcement agencies.
The statement also
tore into the Kenya Sugar Board, saying the regulator has been crippled since
2023 after a court injunction blocked appointments to its board.
Without a quorum,
the board has allegedly been unable to make binding decisions or properly
oversee imports — creating fertile ground for fraud.
“At the time this
scandal unfolded, the key regulator was effectively paralysed,” NIA said.
It said
recommendations made by Parliament after that crisis were never implemented,
allowing the same loopholes to be exploited again.
The coalition
wants the Directorate of Criminal Investigations to immediately investigate
directors of Mombasa Sugar Refinery Limited and Kibos Sugar over their alleged
role in the importation and diversion of industrial sugar.
NIA is also
seeking the suspension of all public officials linked to the scandal to pave the way for investigations.
Further, the
alliance has urged the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission to open a
corruption probe into claims of political protection for sugar cartels.
It also wants all
sugar tied to the suspect consignment immediately withdrawn from the market,
while Kenya Bureau of Standards officials who approved or failed to stop unsafe
products face personal liability.