Kenya on the spot over US crime cash

What you need to know:

  • Kenya, Egypt and Colombia received a total of $49 million (Sh4.9 billion) in the four-year period to 2016 through the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL).
  • The US accountability office has now poked holes in its expenditure reports for countries like Kenya.
  • Kenya has been seen as a trafficking hub for hard drugs like heroin and cocaine.

Kenya is on the spot alongside Egypt and Colombia over the use of Sh4.9 billion offered by the US in the fight against transnational crimes like money laundering, wildlife poaching and drugs and arms trafficking.

The US Government Accountability Office (GAO) in its December 2017 report says that data provided on the three countries’ funds expenditure was “incomplete, nonstandard or inaccurate.”

Kenya, Egypt and Colombia received a total of $49 million (Sh4.9 billion) in the four-year period to 2016 through the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL).

“For example, INL did not provide democracy assistance data for Colombia, Egypt and Kenya until we identified these countries as potentially missing based on our comparison on INL data with USAid data,” the US accountability office said in its report to the Senate’s chairman of foreign relations committee.

“The initial data INL provided did not include records of awards for these countries because awards were miscoded when the data were entered; for example, some awards were coded under the broad category of law enforcement rather than under specific programme areas. According to INL officials, this erroneous law enforcement code was used for all of Colombia’s programs and for some programmes in other countries such as Egypt and Kenya.”

The INL combats global crime by offering financial and intelligence-gathering support to several governments’ law enforcement institutions to counter transnational crimes such as money laundering, cybercrime and drugs and arms trafficking.

But the US accountability office has now poked holes in its expenditure reports for countries like Kenya.

Kenya has been seen as a trafficking hub for hard drugs like heroin and cocaine following a series of hauls worth millions of dollars that have been impounded in its territorial waters.

In 2014, for instance, an Australian Navy patrol boat seized heroin valued at $290 million (Sh29.2 billion) off Kenya’s Coast, followed by another Sh1 billion haul impounded and destroyed in the same year.

A year later, Kenya Navy patrol vessels nabbed a luxury yacht in the Indian Ocean with heroin with a street value of Sh20 million.

Kenya’s security organs have recently been keen to boost their military firepower and intelligence to combat emerging threats like terrorism, arms smuggling and drugs trafficking.