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Фото автораНика Давыдова

High rise buildings without lifts going down


NAIROBI, Kenya Jun 20 – If you live or work in a building with five  storeys and above and has no lifts, you have been warned that City Council  bulldozers will bring it down.

That was the unsettling warning  Local Government Minister Musalia Mudavadi sent out to all Kenyans on Monday  when he toured the site of a building that collapsed while under construction in  Lang’ata on Sunday.

“We will not spare any building regardless of where  it is. Council authorities are under instruction to start enforcing this order  after carrying out an audit of all buildings of that nature,” the Minister who  is also one of the country’s Deputy Prime Ministers said.

“All buildings  that are more than five floors up must have a lift, that is clearly stipulated  and contractors putting up such buildings know that. All such structures that  have violated this rule will have to be brought down,” he added.

Mr  Mudavadi told reporters he had ordered an audit of all buildings in Nairobi and  other parts of the country to pave way for the demolition.

“It is a  process, although the buildings were put up illegally we will not commit another  illegality to solve an illegality. We will follow the law and this includes  issuing proper notices to owners,” he said.

The Minister said estates in  the city’s Eastlands area and Githurai are most notorious.

“But we are  not saying those are the only areas which are going to be targeted,” he  added.

Asked how such buildings ended up being constructed without the  intervention of the council authorities, the Minister blamed the anomaly on what  he termed as “shortage of manpower at the councils and compromised integrity  amongst some of the existing officials.”

“We don’t deny the fact that  authorities are to blame partly on this menace, but Kenyans are to blame too.  Some of these issues are driven by greed and the increasing demand for houses.  We will take action on our officers including diplomacy action and dismissals,”  he said.

He cited an example of the house that collapsed in Pipeline  estate in Nairobi last week, killing four people.

He said the six-storey  building was not approved by the council yet it had gone up to six floors.

“This is similar to what happened here (Lang’ata). It is an issue of  collusion where the council inspectors in the respective estates have been  colluding with owners of buildings to get money so as to put up illegal  structures,” he said.

The owner of the building at Lang’ata was not  present when Mr Mudavadi and other top council officials visited the area.

The Minister said the city map has shown that the house was put up on a road  reserve.

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