Gov’t to waive Sh6b in interest to unlock thousands of title deeds
Emmanuel Masha and Shani Rhai
The Ministry of Lands plans to waive over Sh6 billion interest on unpaid settlement fees to help land allottees collect unclaimed title deeds nationwide, Cabinet Secretary, Alice Wahome, has disclosed.
Speaking during the opening of the Malindi Land Registry, Ms Wahome said she had already prepared a Cabinet memo and sent it to the Attorney General and the Treasury Cabinet Secretary on the issue.
“I have sent a request to the Treasury CS. We have also discussed with the President, so that if it is agreeable, we waive the interest on the fees,” she said adding, “I have a pending Cabinet memo, which I have sent to the AG and the CS Treasury,” she said.
The CS was responding to requests by Kilifi leaders who said thousands of local residents had been unable to collect their title deeds due to the huge debts owed to the Settlement Fund Trust (SFT) and called for a waiver on the interests to enable them to pay up.
The leaders, who included Malindi Governor, Gideon Mung’aro, National Assembly Deputy Majority Leader, Owen Baya (Kilifi North), Kaloleni and Malindi MPs, Paul Katana and Amina Mnyazi, and former Magarini MP, Harrison Kombe, said the fees had hindered the residents from collecting their titles.
Mrs. Wahome acknowledged that thousands of title deeds lay uncollected in various land registries across the country, with 33,000 documents lying unclaimed at the new Malindi Lands Registry.
She asked beneficiaries of settlement schemes to promptly pay the ‘small fees’ and collect their ownership documents, saying title deeds should be kept in safe custody by holders for the security of their land.
Mrs. Wahome announced, at the same time, that she had given instructions to Ministry officials to close all settlement schemes that have been outstanding since 1960 and issue title deeds to beneficiaries, so that discharge is made available.
She asked foreigners holding title deeds on freehold and 999-year leases, to surrender them and be issued with 99 leases in accordance with government policy, arising from the Kenya Constitution 2010.
Wahome said some 7,000 new title deeds had been processed for various settlement schemes and adjudication sections in Kilifi County and that she would soon return to the coastal county, to issue them to beneficiaries.
She added that more than 170,000 land transaction documents had been transferred to the new Malindi Lands Registry that is expected to serve Malindi and Magarini Sub-Counties.
The CS said adjudication work is currently ongoing in several areas of Kilifi County, including Kibokoni, Chakama Phase III, Adu/Kamale, Pumwani Phase III, and Wakala.
To handle the increasing demand, Wahome announced the planned establishment of three new land control boards to supplement the current two in Kilifi County.
Kilifi Governor Gideon Mung’aro called on land officers to collaborate with residents to resolve disputes and ensure smooth processing of land documents. He emphasized that cooperation between officials and communities is vital in addressing land injustices and preventing future conflicts.