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Kenya hires firm with ties to Donald Trump to bolster relation

Friday June 09 2017
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Kenya's Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed. PHOTO | FILE

The Kenyan government has signed a one-year $1.2 million deal with a Washington lobbying firm with close ties to the Donald Trump team, according to US Justice Department documents.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs entered the agreement with the Sonoran Policy Group (SPG) on May 25, shows a lobbying disclosure form filed on June 6.

Trade

An outline of the pact states that SPG "will provide US congressional and executive branch brand engagement to cement and deepen relations between Kenya and the US government as well as between the people of Kenya and the US".

More specifically, SPG commits to "assisting the Embassy of Kenya achieve its objectives on the issues of tourism, trade, investment and Agoa".

Agoa refers to the African Growth and Opportunity Act, a preferential trade initiative through which Kenya exports hundreds of millions of dollars of textiles duty-free to the US market.

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Trump employees
SPG, headquartered in the state of Arizona, had maintained a comparatively low profile in the US capital until Donald Trump's election last November.

That changed early this year when Stuart Jolly, a former national field director for Mr Trump's White House campaign, was appointed president of SPG.

The firm also employed two other former Trump staffers: Robin Townley and Jacob Daniels.

Mr Townley, a former US Marines intelligence officer, briefly held a Trump White House post as Africa director at the National Security Council.

The CIA rejected Mr Townley's request for a top-level security clearance, forcing him out of the job.

He was subsequently hired by SPG as its vice-president for defence and international affairs.

SPG party

Mr Daniels, now SPG's vice-president of public policy, served on the Trump inaugural committee after working as chief of staff for the Trump campaign in the electorally important state of Michigan.

Politico, a Washington-based web news site, reported in January that SPG was co-hosting an inauguration party that was "expected to draw high-profile Trump backers".

High-end clients
Since enhancing its influence in the months following Mr Trump's victory, SPG has landed a few prominent clients in addition to the Kenyan government.

They include Saudi Arabia's Interior Ministry, New Zealand's Washington embassy, the Office of the President of the Czech Republic and the Korean International Trade Association.

Paul Manafort, once a key Trump associate and now caught up in the controversy over alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US presidential election, had also once worked as a lobbyist for the Kenyan government.

Sex trafficking
He was a principal in a powerful political influence firm that was paid nearly $2 million to help burnish Kenya's image in the US during part of Daniel arap Moi's tenure.

More recently, Kenya had retained another well-placed lobbying group for a three-month campaign aimed at preventing the loss of US aid due to Kenya's poor ranking in State Department monitoring of countries' efforts to combat sex trafficking.

The Kenyan government paid the firm of Squire Patton Boggs $135,000 for lobbying work in that regard in 2015.

Payment plan
The country has to date experienced no reduction in US aid due to its record on prosecuting sex traffickers.

The new agreement with SPG runs through May 25, 2018, with Kenya promising to pay the firm four quarterly installments of $300,000.

The contract was signed by SPG executive chairman and founder Robert Stryk and by David Gacheru, deputy head of mission at Kenya's Washington embassy.

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