Karuturi Ltd, the Kenyan flower production unit of Karuturi Global, is
in financial collapse and been put under receivership. One of the
world's most infamous landgrabbers is in its deepest trouble yet.
On 11 February 2014, CfC Stanbic Bank in Nairobi took over the Karuturi
farm in Naivasha while management was assigned to The Business Advisory
Group Ltd. The new managers will assess the true financial situation of
the firm, which has stopped paying its workers, suppliers and utility
providers since many months, and settle the company's outstanding debts,
which reportedly exceed US$ 5 million. Until now, the flower farm in
Naivasha was its cash cow, responsible for three-quarters of the
Karuturi empire's annual global earnings.
Bangalore-based Karuturi Global Ltd is one of the largest foreign
agribusiness conglomerates in Africa. In 2007, it began expanding its
operations to Kenya and Ethiopia to take advantage of generous tax
breaks and cheap land, water and labour. It soon became the world's
largest cut rose exporter and acquired over 311,000 ha of fertile land
in southern Ethiopia for food production.
Now, this leading example of foreign direct investment in African
agriculture is on the verge of collapse -- and Africans are paying the
price.
Karuturi's overseas business ventures are causing untold suffering. In
Kenya, the workers have been living in inhumane conditions without pay,
water or electricity since months. In the last six months, their medical
services have been shut down and the school for their children has been
closed.[1] On top of this, Karuturi owes the Kenyan government millions
of US dollars in unpaid taxes that it hid through doctored invoices and
transfer pricing.[2]
In Ethiopia, the Anywaa and other communities that were violently
displaced from their lands without consultation to make way for
Karuturi's farming operations have lost their livelihoods and been
living in exile without proper compensation. Karuturi, however, has been
unable to cultivate more than a small fraction of those lands and local
sources report that the farms have stopped operations. Last month, the
Ethiopian government issued a warning to Karuturi to clarify the
standing of its agricultural investment project or see its permit
withdrawn.
From tax fraud to labour violations, Karuturi must pay for its crimes,
immediately. And the international community must stop supporting such
egregious corporate malfeasance in the name of "foreign investment", or
worse "development".
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