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Nairobi: Akashas facilitated Armenians activities

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  • Nairobi: Akashas facilitated Armenians activities

    Akashas facilitated Armenians activities
    By MAXWELL MASAVA, EMMANUEL ONYANGO

    Kenya Times, Kenya
    July 19 2006

    THE name of the Akasha family yesterday featured prominently at the
    Kiruki Commission of Inquiry as a witness recounted how its member
    helped the Armenian brothers acquire Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA)
    pin numbers.

    Sammy Mutinda, an accountant who helped the Arturs acquire pin
    numbers narrated that it was a member of the Akashas who went to his
    office in Westlands on behalf of the Artur brothers to request for
    the processing of their pin numbers. The request is claimed to have
    been lodged sometime in October last year.

    He told the Commission that he served the family of Ibrahim Akasha
    as an accountant for many years and he had no reason to doubt their
    foreign friends who were interested in investing in the country.

    According to his testimony, he never met the Arturs and they requested
    for the application forms in absentia.

    The Akasha family is prominently linked to drug trafficking. The elder
    Akasha, Ibrahim, was shot dead in the Netherlands in what was suspected
    to be hitmen probably hired by people linked to drug trafficking
    deals. His son Kamaldin was also murdered in Mombasa a few years later.

    According to the testimony, Akasha went to Mutinda~Rs office situated
    in Westlands and introduced the two--Artur Margaryan and Artur
    Sargasyan--as his friends and business partners in vehicle spare
    parts. He provided two application forms to the Akasha which were
    returned after two weeks.

    The witness narrated to the commission that it was Akasha who paid
    for the application forms after they were returned. The forms had
    been fully filled by the applicants.

    But surprisingly, the two-week period was not explained as officials
    at the Kenya Revenue Authority later narrated that the issuance of
    the pin numbers was done in a day. The applications which were done
    in October 2005 also indicated that the two brothers had signed the
    forms personally, contradicting earlier evidence that they had arrived
    in the country in November of the same year.

    Before they were deported last month, Artur Margaryan often referred
    to one of the Akasha sons as ~Sa big boy with baby brain~T during
    press conferences. Some of the vehicles found within the Arturs Runda
    residence were said to belong to the Akashas.

    Mukinda in his evidence told the commission that he had come to trust
    the Akashas and would be invited by the family to advise them on
    financial matters and guide their accountant on book keeping. That
    was when the family had a garage in Ruaraka.

    ~SMy lords I never handed the pin numbers to them (Arturs) but to
    Akasha who was to forward them,~T said the witness who was being
    guided by his lawyer, Jackson Omwenga. He also exonerated himself
    from the blame saying KRA must be held responsible for the issuance
    of pin numbers.

    Mutinda who gave out the forms without seeing the purported investors
    said he expected the applicants to fill in details before returning.

    He told the commission that he was acting as an agent and would assist
    clients acquire pin numbers from any part of the world. The witness
    even provided his office address to be used by the Artur brothers at
    that time.

    ~SMy lords am happy to recruit tax payers for the government,~T he
    justified his role when pressed by a lawyer, Jane Ondieki, appearing
    for the suspended CID Director Joseph Kamau. The lawyer had accused
    the witness of being the cause of all problems behind Arturs~R presence
    in the country.

    However, duplicate application forms which were brought to the
    Commission by assisting counsel indicated that the two brothers were
    given pin numbers as civil servants. The application forms which
    were denounced by Mutinda and KRA officials were said to have been
    processed and worked on within a day.

    Mutinda claimed that the pin numbers which he assisted the Arturs to
    acquire were genuine and denied having seen the duplicate forms that
    enabled the deported brothers to have two more fake pin numbers.

    Benard Mukenya, an assistant revenue officer in charge of pin number
    issuance said the application forms from the Arturs were presented
    without proper identification as required. They were said to have
    presented two varying applications and in return managed to get two
    sets of pin numbers. In the application forwarded by Mutinda, the
    Arturs ticked themselves as employees of undislosed companies while
    in the fake application, they presented themselves as civil servants.

    The Commission was told that the officer who was in charge of issuing
    the pin numbers to the Arturs has since resigned from service. Tom
    Mboya, the officer who issued the numbers resigned from mid May this
    year, according to testimonies.

    David Mala, an assistant revenue commissioner at the Domestic Tax
    Department told the commission that the numbers they had originally
    given to the Artur brothers were not the same as the other two which
    had been presented before the commission. However, both forms were
    signed by a senior revenue official identified as Andrew Okello.

    ~SMy lords the forms with civil service numbers do not exist in our
    records,~T said Mala as he maintained that KRA records only reflect
    a set of pin numbers defining the two brothers as employees.

    The brothers had also managed to register double pin numbers for
    their companies including Brotherlink International Limited and the
    Kensington Holdings Limited.

    It also emerged from other witnesses of the day that the Armenian
    brothers had lied when they registered companies associated with
    them. The two brothers evaded paying stamp duty according to three
    witnesses who testified yesterday afternoon.

    Ahmed Omar, a chief cashier with National Bank of Kenya disowned a
    stamp duty receipt purported to have been paid and received by teller
    number 11 at the bank~Rs Hill Branch. Omar said the alleged branch has
    no teller number 11 and there was no cashier on that particular day.

    The receipt had no signature as required.

    Another witness, Mr. Joseph Mwangi, an operations manager at Kenya
    Commercial Bank, Moi Avenue branch, said stamp duty for Kensington
    Holdings Limited was never paid through the bank as it had been
    purported.

    In fact City Bank which was portrayed as having received the money
    had been closed a month earlier as opposed to the date on KCB receipts.

    The bank was closed on December 19, 2005 while the payment was
    indicated as having taken place on January 12, 2006.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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