Adani Whistleblower Amenya Releases Another Exposé
Nelson Amenya, the whistleblower who previously exposed the controversial JKIA-Adani Group deal, is back in the spotlight—this time with serious concerns about the future of Kipini Conservancy.
On Thursday evening, Amenya used his social media pages to warn that the owner of the conservancy may be preparing to sell the land to the highest bidder.
Kipini Conservancy, located in Kenya’s Tana Delta, is home to endangered wildlife such as elephants, leopards, lions, and sea turtles. Once a cattle ranch, the land was abandoned after being infested with tsetse flies. It was later transformed into a protected area for wildlife.
In his latest claims, Amenya said one of the conservancy’s owners has repeatedly tried to sell the land to a government agency. He revealed that the chairperson of the conservancy initially attempted to offload the property for Ksh64 billion, but the deal failed after a family member went to court to block the sale.
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“Kipini was meant to be a model for conservation, but instead it’s become a story of greed and betrayal,” Amenya wrote.
He also alleged that the push to sell the land is linked to interests in gas and oil exploration in the area, which stretches across Tana River and Lamu counties.
“Kipini Conservancy is officially set aside for tourism and wildlife conservation in the Lamu County Spatial Plan. But now, its future is being secretly negotiated away,” he said.
“This isn’t just a land row. It’s a fight to protect one of Kenya’s last wild coastal landscapes. Losing Kipini would mean losing a key part of East Africa’s ecological and cultural history,” he added.
Amenya has called on Tourism Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Miano and Chief Justice Martha Koome to step in and stop the sale, urging them to safeguard the conservancy’s future.
Adani Whistleblower Amenya Releases Another Exposé