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Ex-minister Mbathi
FORMER Cabinet Minister Titus Mbathi is embroiled in a tussle that exposes his illegal occupation of someone’s land and possible conflict of interest.
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| Mr Mbathi: Conflict of interest? |
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| Mr Kaleve shows his Title Deed |
Records show the owner is Mr. Hissles Kaleve, a former Executive House Keeper at State House. According to Kaleve, the ex minister approached him intending to buy the then untitled land and agreed verbally that he could take the land at Sh 1m as all he had was a Letter of Allotment.
Later Mbathi told Kaleve he could not buy the land without a Title Deed, prompting the owner to commence the process of processing it.
During a meeting at KenGen offices, Mbathi offered Sh 100,000 to Mr Kaleve as part payment of the property and to clear the outstanding balance once the title was made available,but Mr.Kaleve declined, insisting that he wanted first to secure the title then proceed to transact the sale as the price would have changed with the title in his hands
Once the title was out, Keleve summoned his family and expressed hi s interest to sale it. But the family rebuffed him and informed him to table his financial needs so that his children could finance them rather than sell a family property. Kaleve then returned to Mr Mbathi to infirm him of the new development and a hot exchange ensued, with Mr Mbathi insisting that children had no say in Mr Kaleve’s land.
Nevertheless, Kaleve now demanded that Mr Mbathi leave the property, which a blossoming crop of trees. He returned and made an new written offer to Mr Mbathi to either buy the property at Sh 5.5m or lease it at Shj 200,000.
According to the letter dated November 11,2010, Kaleve and family wrote to Hon.Titus Mbathi addressing him on the decision they made as a family about the issue of the land purchase .First they decided to give him an offer to buy the land at Sh. 5,500,000/=) ,and second to lease the land at Kshs,200,000 for 6 years but the lease to be broken into two terms renewable contract for 3 years each term and should be fully paid at the beginning of each term at 600,000 per term, which was valid only for the year 2010 only unless he commits in writing. Mbathi tore up the letter leading to a physical encounter between him and Mr Kaleve at the Kengen offices where Mr Mbathi was seemingly transacting personal business. Kaleve left in a huff. Only this time did it dawn upon him that he had to contend with the fact that Mr Mbathi was insisting to buy the now titled property at the initial paltry Sh 1m that Mr Kaleve wanted when the land had no title.
It was at this time that he walked to his lawyers and dispatched a letter stopping Mbathi’s entry into the land as he(Mbathi) had failed to respond to the letter he tore up and that he did not have any written agreement over the alleged transaction.
Mbathi dropped the bombshell when he demanded to be paid Sh 23,873,230 as alleged value of the plantation within the next 14 days or seeks court action.
To get an answer to these questions Mr Mbathi refused to drawn into conversation in that regard and told The Anchor to report on the matter at its own peril as such report would be subjudice. Stay Anchored!


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