High Court freezes Parklands property linked to Mandera Governor Adan Khalif
Mandera Governor Mohamed Adan Khalif during a past meeting. PHOTO | COURTESY
Audio By Vocalize
Mandera Governor Mohamed Adan Khalif has suffered a setback
after the High Court in Nairobi issued preservation orders barring any dealings
on a contested parcel of land linked to him in Parklands.
Justice Theresa Murigi, while certifying an application by the
Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) as urgent, ordered that L.R No.
209/12673 (currently L.R No. 209/21526) be preserved for a period of six months
pending investigations and hearing of the case.
The court prohibited the Governor, his agents, servants or any
other person from entering, encroaching, excavating, constructing, developing,
occupying, selling, transferring, charging, wasting or in any other way dealing
with the property.
The matter is scheduled for inter partes hearing on March 5,
2026.
In the same ruling delivered on February 2, 2026, the court
also issued similar preservation orders over three other parcels L.R No.
209/12670, 209/12671 and 209/12672 restraining the respective respondents from
interfering with the properties for six months under Section 56(3) of the
Anti-Corruption and Economic Crimes Act.
According to court documents, the EACC is investigating
alleged unlawful alienation of public land originally reserved for public
utility in the Parklands area, adjacent to North Highridge Primary School.
The commission states that the land was initially set aside
for a social hall and formed part of public land linked to the school.
However, investigations indicate that in July 1995, letters of
allotment were purportedly issued to private individuals based on an unapproved
and unregistered Part Development Plan.
The EACC further alleges that the then Commissioner of Lands
unlawfully and corruptly facilitated the alienation and issuance of grants over
the parcels, despite the land being reserved for public use and without
presidential authority as required under the repealed Government Lands Act.
Court filings indicate that the disputed parcel L.R No.
209/12673 was transferred multiple times before being resurveyed in 2020 and
registered as L.R No. 209/21526. It was allegedly transferred to Mohamed Adan
Khalif on February 5, 2021.
The commission argues that ongoing investigations have not
disclosed any material showing that the parcels were lawfully allocated or that
their use was properly changed from public utility to residential.
EACC maintains that preservation orders are necessary to
safeguard the properties pending completion of investigations and possible
recovery proceedings.


Leave a Comment