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Executive House Estate Demolition
Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/4/2010 Posts: 1,668 Location: nairobi
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@alma, hehe..its very sad to see that your training as a land valuer did not result into understanding land issues. Thats why you dont practice since its obvious you cant understand land matters. Its saddening to hear a land valuer like you state that its not the govt of kenya but kevevapi as the land owner. FYI, kevevapi=govt of kenya. Point out the untruths in my analysis. From your arguments, i doubt if you ever made it through ADD asa valuer. You must have been discontinued at some point since you seem not to grasp very simple explanations about how the kenyan land regime operates. For the umpteenth time, i repeat, i am not here to advocate for the kevevapi guys. Mine is to analyse the situation as it is from my understanding. Your explanation about land searches is simply laughable. As we speak, thousands of kenyans are at the various land boards presenting SEARCHES to enable the land boards authorize conveyancing. Why aren't the land boards asking these guys to come with all the land history file? Because a land search report still remains the only Valid way to ascertain ownership, not your complete history file copy nonsense. As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/20/2007 Posts: 4,432
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a4 usually one tends to follow advice from professionals. You are quickly making me wonder if that should be the case. I have two choices here. Believe you, or believe Lawyer Paul Ndungu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PUgL1zuQEuo
PS: I'm not a valuer. I think you can now understand why I'm not a valuer. I can't stomach giving wrong information to clients all for a few bucks. Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/4/2010 Posts: 1,668 Location: nairobi
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@alma, in one of your threads, you said you studied land economics at UoN. Ofcourse form your arguments anyone can see you are not a practicing valuer. Now that i have schooled you on how the land regime operates in Kenya, you can only reciprocate by giving well researched arguments not nonsensical regurgitation of the Ndungu report. Everyone , including Einstein can be challenged. As i keep saying, i could also be wrong and if a solid argument that is sensible and plausible comes along, i will go with it. As of now, wielding Ndungu report as if its the alpha and omega wont make it. Most of upperhill was once parastatal land/railways. When this land moved from railways to current private individual owners, was it illegal? the commissioner of lands decided to give person a,b and c land previously belonging to kenya railways/prison etc. Person a,b and c later resold the land to all these multinationals you see in upperhill. Explain to me the difference between upperhill and kevevapi, and dont quote me Ndungu report, i want from your own view. As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/20/2007 Posts: 4,432
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a4 mimi nimewachana na hii mambo. I gave my opinion. Obviously I don't know how land transactions work. I'm not even a qualified valuer. I guess people like me have only two options 1. Believe you or 2. Believe Ndungu I think my decision is very clear on this issue. As Matiba used to say. Let the people decide. Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/4/2010 Posts: 1,668 Location: nairobi
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@alma, hehe..dont loose your arguments this easily..develop some fighting spirit. Make google your friend if you have to. Its not that i would also not like to beleive Ndungu, i would also ask him to substantiate and if his arguments convince me, then am game. On the small matter of you having studied land economics, how far did you go with these studies? FYI this info i have about land is from day to day involvement with land issues in Kenya and around East Africa, not from university training. Architects are trained to deal with technical aspects of building, not land ownership. Land ownership training is a preserve of conveyancing lawyers. As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/9/2008 Posts: 5,389
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a4architect.com wrote:@alma, in one of your threads, you said you studied land economics at UoN. Ofcourse form your arguments anyone can see you are not a practicing valuer. Now that i have schooled you on how the land regime operates in Kenya, you can only reciprocate by giving well researched arguments not nonsensical regurgitation of the Ndungu report. Everyone , including Einstein can be challenged. As i keep saying, i could also be wrong and if a solid argument that is sensible and plausible comes along, i will go with it. As of now, wielding Ndungu report as if its the alpha and omega wont make it.
Most of upperhill was once parastatal land/railways. When this land moved from railways to current private individual owners, was it illegal?
the commissioner of lands decided to give person a,b and c land previously belonging to kenya railways/prison etc. Person a,b and c later resold the land to all these multinationals you see in upperhill. Explain to me the difference between upperhill and kevevapi, and dont quote me Ndungu report, i want from your own view. Then why did the govt evict people from the Mau forest and they had titles from the land commish? Why was KANU chased away from KICC and the 5 acres it stands on and yet the party has a title from land commish?
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/4/2010 Posts: 1,668 Location: nairobi
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@jaggernaut, 1, Mau forest is FOREST land hence being utilised for the common good in maintaining bio diversity so that you and me can breath fresh air and get rain. 2. I have no idea about KICC, its owners etc. Am only using common sense and what i read in the media on these issues eg its common sense that Mau area is forest land and its common sense that forest land is important for ecological balance/rain/clean air. Also, its commonsense that the kevevapi area was idle and unultilised in that it was not forest etc hence was put to better use. Its also common sense that previous use of kevevapi land, to manufacture vaccines, does not have to be carried so near the cbd. Its even more common sense that ministry of agric owns thousands of other idle lands around nairobi which it can use. On KICC maybe you can point me to some useful links then i can get updated. From what i read in the papers on KICC, i know Govt architects were involved in the design so there is a likelihood that govt funded the projects hence the ownership issue. Dr Architect Mutiso , who was involved with kicc design, was by then the chief architect at ministry of public works. i have realy answered/explained so many questions regarding this keveveapi that one would be forgiven to think i have a stake at the land. My main aim is to encourage constructive debate and in the process, enable more kenyans understand land issues in kenya for a better more informed kenyan populace in matters real estate. Its usually tiring to keep explaining basic land / real estate principles to people all the time . As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 4/1/2009 Posts: 1,885
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a4architect.com wrote:@jaggernaut,
1, Mau forest is FOREST land hence being utilised for the common good in maintaining bio diversity so that you and me can breath fresh air and get rain.
2. I have no idea about KICC, its owners etc.
Am only using common sense and what i read in the media on these issues eg its common sense that Mau area is forest land and its common sense that forest land is important for ecological balance/rain/clean air.
Also, its commonsense that the kevevapi area was idle and unultilised in that it was not forest etc hence was put to better use.
Its also common sense that previous use of kevevapi land, to manufacture vaccines, does not have to be carried so near the cbd.
Its even more common sense that ministry of agric owns thousands of other idle lands around nairobi which it can use.
On KICC maybe you can point me to some useful links then i can get updated.
From what i read in the papers on KICC, i know Govt architects were involved in the design so there is a likelihood that govt funded the projects hence the ownership issue.
Dr Architect Mutiso , who was involved with kicc design, was by then the chief architect at ministry of public works. how does the highlighted part reconcile with your argument that 'houses ought to be only demolished if the land was part of a private land which was designed for public use and not if it was merely government land in which case there should be no demolition' (hope i got that right)? and on the now intended use of the land by kevevapi why are you so sure that the use and location wont be of benefit to the citizens? have you had access to say the reason (feasibility study etc) why they had earmarked it for the same? and are you sure that they have not since then earmarked it for some other use?
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 1/4/2010 Posts: 1,668 Location: nairobi
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@mkenyan, Mau land is useful to all of us for rain,air etc. Kevevapi land at the point of alienation was just idle. This makes the difference on the two. Govt allocates land to private citizens eg 1,400 acre donholm land all the way from muthurwa to donholm or karen land thousands of acres aloocated to Karen blixen. When this land becomes property of private citizens, and these citizens decide to subdivide the land further, city council comes in and says x% of the land is to be set aside for public utility eg schools, police station etc. Karen police station and karen dispensary land were once paet of Karen Blixen's private land. Most of the schools in donholm along jogoo road were once porperty of donholm rpivate farm. These % set aside are what is usually seen in the media as GRABBED land. This land has been set aside for a particular use eg land set aside for school to serve donholm. If @mkenyan grabs the land and builds flats, the people living in the area have no recourse other than demolishing the flats to build a school. If karen blixen gave out land for a hospital then @mkenyan comes to build flats, then the flats should be brought down as in the recent case below in karen. http://nairobinews.natio...grabbing-land-in-karen/
 On the intended use of kevevapi, am basing my arguments on what i see in the media. I cant know of what kevevapi wants to do with the land. I can only guess. kevevapi are licenced to deal with agric use so logically, i can only assume they will want to demolish the houses and continue with agric use. From this usage, unless CS agric divulges to us on what he intends to reuse the land for, i cant tell. As Iron Sharpens Iron, So one Man Sharpens Another.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/20/2007 Posts: 4,432
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This argument about kevevapi not good enough to develop their land is the same argument that Amos Kimunya will have in court Apparently he thout that any ministry of agricultural land is for planting maize and potatoes and keeping goats. Unfortunately for him he Quote:is accused of failing to disclose personal interest, breach of trust, failing to protect public property and illegally disposing of public land.
βIn the first count, Amos Kimunya and Lillian Wangiri Njenga, you face the charge of abuse of office contrary to section 46 and section 48 (1) of the Anti Corruption and Economic Crimes Act 2003,β stated Chief Magistrate Doreen Mulekyo while reading out the charges.
His two co-accused were also freed on similar bail terms.
The charges relate to the irregular allocation of a 25-acre piece of land in Nyandarua when Kimunya was Lands Minister to M/s Midlands Limited, where he was a director and shareholder.
Kimunya, and Wangiri β who was the Director of Lands Adjudication and Settlement at the time β are accused of using their offices to improperly confer a benefit to Midlands Limited a private company by allocating them public land valued at Sh60 million while knowing that the same land was not available for alienation. http://www.capitalfm.co.ke/news/2014/03/kimunya-denies-charges-freed-on-sh1mn-cash-bail/Jose: If I make it through this thug life, I'll see you one day. The Lord is the only way to stop the hurt.
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