The father of all problems

From Source
Documents in my possession show how Kenyatta and members of his extended family embarked on a land grabbing spree after independence.

The documents which cover 1974 to 1977 include letters from the then Lands Minister Mr Angaine, Chief Land Valuer Mr Dermott Kydd, British Ministry of Overseas Development and the victims’ testimonies.

They also show Kenyatta’s love for free things with one letter claiming he ordered dairy cows from a farm in Molo to be driven to his Gatundu farm.

Of interest was the Sukari ranch which was described as " 30,000 acres extending from Nairobi City boundaries in the general direction of Ruiru, Kahawa and Gatundu."

Until early 1974 this land was owned by French Scophin Company. However after the owners left, it was earmarked for the future expansion of Nairobi.

A cabinet paper was therefore prepared that the government should buy this land to prevent future speculation. But how this land ended up being Kenyatta’s nobody knew.

The manner in which Kenyatta acquired the land became a subject of some rude remarks by some MPs while Kenyatta was in the chamber during the swearing in of parliament in 1974.

In the first week of December 1974, James Njenga the Director of Settlement who was the man tasked with buying land for the settlement of Africans using British funds , telephoned Mr Kydd the Chief Valuer and informed him that he should give a site unseen valuation because Kenyatta wanted to sell part of the land to Settlement .

It was very suspicious that Kenyatta wanted to sell the land he had only owned for three months. Secondly he wanted to sell the land to the Settlement which involved the land owners being paid using British funds meant for the settlement of landless Africans.

Mr Kydd refused Njenga’s request and insisted that he had to see the farm first before offering any valuation. Kydd also querried the feasibility of effecting much settlement on the barren land and poor soil of the ranch. Kenyatta’s intent was to retain the productive part and sell the barren part to the British for the settlement of Africans.

Njenga who was annoyed by the response banged the phone, and Kydd went to report the incident to the Director of Lands Mr O’Loughlin. No sooner had Kydd arrived in Loughlin’s office than Mr Angaine the Minister for Lands telephoned Mr Loughlin demanding that he should order Kydd to give a valuation so that Settlement headed by Njenga could buy Kenyatta’s farm immediately using funds set aside for the settlement of Africans.

Both O’Laughlin and Kydd refused, and it was left that Angaine would speak to Kenyatta about it. The only valuation Kydd could give Angaine was that of 1972 when the farm was owned by Scophin Company which was around sic “K £ 250,000”. Angaine, however, rejected this saying he couldn’t tell Kenyatta that his land was that cheap.

Following the conversation Angaine went to see Kenyatta and subsequently both Kydd and Loughlin were summoned to State House Nairobi on Dec 18, 1974, at 1pm.

Kenyatta refused to shake Kydd’s hand instead barked insults at him asking him why he had given his farm a low value . Kenyatta then turned into a bully twice ordering the two to their cars and back.

After the bullying session Kenyatta ordered Kydd to go to his farm and generate a price for every acre. He demanded that this price had to be arranged in a manner that enabled him to dispose off 20,000 acres of barren/unproductive land to Settlement.

Kydd arrived at the ranch at around 2.30 and found Angaine already waiting for him. Angaine apologised at the way things had happened at State House and said that he had been ordered by Kenyatta to confirm that he (Kydd) had arrived at the farm.

Kydd spent the evening until dark in the ranch and typed his report late in the night.

In Kydd’s on estimate Kenyatta was to make a kill of Kshs 4,000,000 from the 20,000 acres of barren land he was to dispose off. Selling the land acquired in a questionable manner and demanding to be paid using funds set aside for the settlement of the landless Africans was indeed corruption.

But this was not the only case of corruption involving the Kenyatta’s. In January 1977 Ari Grammaticas who owned Governor’s camp and 500 acres of tea plantation in Thika had his farm forcefully taken over by Mama Ngina Kenyatta. Although the farm was valued at Ksh 1000,000 Mama Ngina only paid. Kshs 200,000.

However, Grammaticas who decided to move Switzerland after the take over vowed not to take it lying down. She sued Mama Ngina through a firm owned by Dingle Foot. The involvement of Dingle Foot who was a prominent lawyer forced Mama Ngina to back down, and through her agents she offered to pay Grammaticas more money.

Others mentioned in the forceful and illegal acquisition of land were Kenyatta’s brother James Muigai, his son Peter Kenyatta, grandson Michael Njoroge, his Nephews who included Dr Njoroge Mungai, Beth mugo and many others.

Other huge tracts of land acquired by Kenyatta and his family are also mentioned and details given.

Ngengi angalau alikuwa ananyakua mashamba, babu yangu alikuwa akiendesha mabasi jinja., kampala sijui mbale. Yes there is nothing wrong with honest work, no i am not stupid. Sisemi kitu

we all know this.

So sasa kama babake alinyakua tusiulize wenye wanaiba leo? That’s some funny logic.

If some white man’s son builds a Starbucks on what was formerly Navaho land, does that mean Navaho descendants can steal from anyone in Starbucks because their land was stolen?

Hata wakipayuka, Ojamoong’ and his type must/will be stopped.

It’s a dick country.

Gosh,look at your reasoning… Am still baffled

everybody who served in the 1963 cabinet ni land grabber. Angaine was organizing it all for them

I wasn’t going to reply to you on account of the assfucking sissiness so eloquently articulated by “gosh” and a version of " mwangalie".

But this is important. I’m not saying that the Kenyattas and the JMs are saints, but I cannot conveniently pull the bad report of their theiving ways and purport I can be let to do wrong and not be punished because they did something similar.

Uhuru Kenyatta and his family wishes the land issue to go away but it will never go away because we’re a growing population. What they should do is give up some of that idle land to landless Kenyans.
The Kenyatta family only has to look at South Africa to see where we’re headed.

Do you remember the matriach’s reaction when IDP’s suggested that

I don’t. Share a link if you can find it

ama wauze but they cant be sitting on prime land at the expense of kenyans who are ready to develop it, case in point hio shamba ya ruiru/kamakis. Miti wakapande aberdare forest. chieth:meffi:

I’m searching for it, she stormed out of a meeting with IDPs after someone suggested she donates part of her vast land for ressetlement. She was very angry

In South Africa an idea of expropriation of lands from individuals who own too much of it without compensation is gaining momentum. It’s not going to be long before it comes here.

Everyone in power during that time was a land grabber, once the white man left he left unoccupied land and those unpower allocated himself (and i know you would have done the same). So it was land that belonges to all of us and to no one in particular. But now it is time they sell any idle land like everyone else, or utilse. So it is not like kenyatta was a bad guy that chased people from their land and grabbed as they want us to believe. After all, after every war spoils of war go with generals

The generals got nothing, the Baimungi’s, mwariama’s, kimathi’s were outlaws even under kenyatta

True. Modern kikuyus seems like they didnt research about the after math of mau mau and distribution of land under Kenyatta. That’s why by the touch of a button, they pull the “kiti ni yetu” point

His name was Harvester maybe that’s why

Lots of records show massive looting of land then. I have seen and read official government records showing Charles Njonjo hiving prime beach plots at the coast. He would write and say Kenyatta ordered.

I read somewhere that Moi identified a settler’s house that he wanted and went to Angaine for help, when thw title deed came out to his surprise he was allocated 800acres. Kenya ni nchi ya mfirano, taxpayers paid back loans from worldbank that were part of the resettlement of peasants