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  • 2022-04-21 (xsd:date)
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  • Fuel shortage crisis in Kenya sparks online disinformation (en)
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  • A fuel crisis in Kenya has further stoked tensions between President Kenyatta Uhuru and his deputy leader William Ruto. Addressing the press on April 4, the latter blamed the government for the shortages, describing them as the works of cartels and state barons. Ruto claimed that fuel in Uganda - which also faced an energy crisis and skyrocketing prices at the start of the year - was still cheaper than in Kenya. A video circulating on TikTok rejected this claim as a lie and alleged that fuel in Uganda in fact cost three times the price in Kenya. But the reality is more complicated: while the average cost for a litre in Uganda is currently more than in Kenya, it is nowhere near triple the cost. On April 6, 2022, a TikTok account shared a video of Ruto’s speech with the caption: Politicians LIE to you because they think you are IGNORANT. Say NO to LIES. The clip shows Ruto at an address two days earlier, asking: How come that fuel in Uganda is cheaper than fuel in Kenya and yet the fuel being sold in Uganda goes through Kenya? A red overlay with the word lie is splashed across the screen. A screenshot of the partly false Facebook post, taken on April 12, 2022 ( Mary KULUNDU) This is followed by a news report showing a Ugandan motorist telling a reporter: Yesterday I was wandering in one of the suburbs around Kampala and I took a litre of petrol at 12, 000 (Ugandan shillings) and I was like what is going on in the country (sic). The use of the word yesterday by the Ugandan motorist gives the impression the large disparity in pricing between the two countries is current. The same TikTok video was shared on Twitter : A screenshot of the partly false tweet, taken on April 12, 2022 ( Mary KULUNDU) AFP Fact Check found that while fuel is more expensive in Uganda – including when Ruto made his speech on April 4 – the claim that it is threefold higher is a gross exaggeration. Old clip A search online shows that the clip of the motorist is from January 2022 when Uganda was experiencing its own fuel shortages because of Covid-19 restrictions. Fuel prices in Uganda skyrocketed after hundreds of truck drivers transporting fuel from Kenya were delayed at the border due to mandatory coronavirus testing. At the time, Uganda’s Prime Minister Robinah Nabbanja announced that a litre of fuel would be capped at 5,000 Ugandan shillings – the equivalent of about 161 Kenyan shillings. Current prices Meanwhile, at the time of Ruto's speech, the average price of a litre of fuel in Kenya was 134 Kenyan shillings, according to the Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (EPRA). Ugandan authorities do not publish weekly averages, but according to data from the Global Petrol Prices website , the same litre of fuel cost 5,100 Ugandan shillings. This is equivalent to 165 Kenyan shillings — 13 percent higher than the price for a litre in Kenya, but not three times more. Prices as of April 19, 2022, were virtually unchanged, with only fuel in Kenya increasing to Sh 144 a litre. Speaking to AFP Fact Check, Uganda's trade minister Harriet Ntabazi described January fuel price hike as temporary. The pump price per litre of petrol is still within the government cap of UGX5000, but some stations sell below that, she said. However, there are reports we are getting that some fuel stations are overcharging consumers and we are investigating the matter with the aim of taking action against errant dealers. Kenya’s fuel crisis Since fuel shortages erupted in early April, the Kenyan government has been locked in a war of words with fuel suppliers, with both sides blaming each other for the crisis. The government pays oil providers to subsidise costs for motorists, but the same suppliers said they were waiting for months of outstanding payments. As a result, they stopped supplying fuel, leading to countrywide scarcity. President Uhuru Kenyatta signed off on a supplementary budget on April 4, 2022, to settle the government's debt with oil marketers. Supply is back to normal, according to the country’s energy ministry . (en)
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