STEPS UP SURVEILLANCE

KRA intensifies surveillance at Kenya-Tanzania border over scrap metal smuggling

Taveta border station KRA manager says they have seized trucks transporting scrap batteries

In Summary
  • On Saturday, the officials intercepted a truck exporting scrap batteries to Tanzania without a single document from the authorities.
  • Two drivers were jailed last year for transporting scrap batteries to Tanzania and the trucks were confiscated by the state as the law stipulates.
A billboard gives direction to the Kenya Revenue Authority offices at the Kenya-Tanzania border of Namanga
A billboard gives direction to the Kenya Revenue Authority offices at the Kenya-Tanzania border of Namanga
Image: FILE

Kenya Revenue Authority officials have stepped up surveillance along the Kenya-Tanzania border to arrest traders exporting scrap metals.

This follows reports that some police officers have been colluding with unscrupulous traders to smuggle the materials.

In the last few weeks, KRA intercepted several trucks exporting scrap batteries to Tanzania where the material is said to be in high demand.

Kenya has illegalised any form of scrap metal business. The law has imposed severe penalties on the offenders with trucks and the materials confiscated by the state.

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The Taveta border station KRA manager John Kiilu told the journalists that his officers have seized a number of trucks along the Nairobi-Mombasa Highway transporting scrap batteries to Tanzania.

“We have intercepted trucks with scrap batteries destined for Tanzania, we are interrogating the drivers to establish the origin and whether they have any documentation to carry out the business,” Kiilu said.

On Saturday, the officials intercepted a truck exporting scrap batteries to Tanzania without a single document from the authorities.

The driver of the truck is likely to be charged with the offence on Monday according to Kiilu.

The government in May this year issued strict regulations that require licenced scrap metal dealers to transport their cargo between the prescribed 6.30 am and 6.30 pm schedule, but transporters have not heeded.

With the new regulations in place, the state lifted a January 20, 2022 ban that retired President Uhuru Kenyatta imposed on scrap metal business following a surge in vandalism of critical national assets including power transformers.

The new rules impose a Sh10 million fine or a three-year jail term to anyone found operating without a license.

Repeat offenders are liable to a fine not exceeding Sh20 million or imprisonment for not more than five years. The export of scrap metal under the new rules remains restricted.

The multi-agency team comprises officers from the National Environment Management Authority (Nema) and the Kenya Revenue Authority among others.

Joseph Kopejo, the Nema director in charge of Kajiado, said the authority is undertaking investigations to establish whether the transporter of the detained scrap batteries had the necessary licences issued by the authority.

“We have taken over the matter and we want to establish whether the transporter has a licence from us which is a requirement under the law,” Kopejo said.

Last year, Nema director General Mamo Mamo said that the authority, in partnership with other relevant government agencies, had adopted an intelligence-based enforcement approach, where they gather intelligence before striking.

"This approach has really worked and has truly borne fruit, with arrests of the offenders dealing with hazardous waste along our porous borders," Mamo said.

Last year, then KRA deputy commissioner in charge of the western region Pamela Ahago said despite the business being outlawed, some traders were still exporting scrap automotive batteries using the porous border points.

Two drivers were jailed last year for transporting scrap batteries to Tanzania and the trucks were confiscated by the state as the law stipulates.

The two drivers were convicted and fined Sh300,000 and their trucks were forfeited to the state in line with the provisions of the Scrap Metal Act.

Kenya banned the export of scrap metals, which includes spent-lead-acid–batteries (SLABs), through the law enacted in 2015.

The East African region has two lead-acid battery manufacturers, namely Associated Battery Manufacturers (ABM) and Uganda Batteries Limited (UBL) who produce about 30 per cent of the East African market requirement.

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