Connect with us

Agribusiness

Maize Subsidy Command Centre Closed As Millers Fret Over Dues

Enterprise Team

Published

on

MAIZE SUBSIDY

The Ministry of Agriculture has shut the maize flour subsidy command centre even after the programme was rocked by hoarding claims that saw middlemen pocket millions of shillings as retailers experienced stock outs.

Millers say some invoices arising from the products that they supplied before the programme came to an end a fortnight ago, have not been honored.

Agriculture Principal Secretary Francis Owino on Wednesday said the command centre will be closed today, however, he did not respond on the issue of pending payments.

This comes days after millers revealed that as they offloaded their flour, it was hoarded on such a big scale that it would take up to a month to clear the stocks being held by middlemen that bought the cheap stocks and kept them to make a killing after the end of the subsidy.

In the original agreement that was reached by the ministry before the programme was rolled out in mid-July, the government was to clear millers’ dues within five days, but the timeline was later revised to 24 hours.

The government opened an Escrow account to give millers assurance that they will be paid their dues on time after supplies were made to avoid the recurrence of what happened in 2017 when the State failed to pay processors on time in a similar programme.

Millers are still owed over Ksh2 billion from the 2017 subsidy and had given an undertaking recently that it would clear the arrears by last month.

At least 190 millers out of 320 in the country were enrolled in the subsidy programme that ran for a month.

President Uhuru Kenyatta had in July announced that the Sh100 flour would run indefinitely, however, the agreement between millers and the Ministry of Agriculture indicated that the scheme would end after four weeks.

Millers are now worried that the closure of the command centre could see their payment take longer to be settled.

Kenyan Enterprise is Kenya's most incisive and informative platform to learn about business news, technology, markets, companies, startups, leadership advise, curated business and industry opinion, and affluent lifestyles.

Enterprise Magazine is Owned by The Carlstic Group Ltd. Copyright © 2016—2024. Site Developed and Maintained by Carlstic