High-voltage electrical pylons on the outskirts of Kenya’s capital Nairobi. Three senior managers at state-controlled electricity distributor Kenya Power were on Wednesday charged with sabotage and negligence over a nationwide power outage earlier this month, court documents showed.
The case is the first time individuals in the east African nation have been charged over a power blackout, said Danstan Omari, a lawyer for the accused.
Kenyan homes and businesses were plunged into darkness on January 11 after a high-voltage transmission line connecting the capital Nairobi to a generation plant broke. Power was restored after several hours.
The firm blamed the outage on the collapse of some towers supporting a high-voltage line, but the police opened an investigation, saying some executives had neglected their duties, leading to the collapse of the towers.
Prosecutors accused the three of sabotage and negligence for failing to maintain the towers which support the high-voltage lines, the charge sheet showed.
They were also accused of failing to take action after damage to the towers was reported to them by members of the public weeks before the blackout.
The three denied the charges and the court freed them on a bond of 1-million shillings (about R133,000) each, and set the hearing of the case for the end of next month, Omari said.
Kenya Power said it could not comment on an ongoing court case.
The company is the country’s sole electricity distributor and the bulk of its power comes from Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen), which is the main producer.
In May 2020, Kenya experienced a similar nationwide outage after a section of a high-voltage power line that transmits power to Nairobi from the Olkaria geothermal power plants, about 75km from the capital, broke.
Last week, President Uhuru Kenyatta said people caught vandalising critical national infrastructure such as power lines were economic saboteurs who should be charged with treason.Kenyatta ordered a temporary ban on the trading and exporting of scrap metal, blaming it for rampant vandalism.— Additional reporting by George Obulutsa Reuters