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Stanbic Bank Wins Battle to Auction Jubilee Party’s Former Headquarters

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Court backs Stanbic Bank's Bid to Auction Jubilee Party headquarters

A Nairobi court has given Stanbic Bank the green light to auction the Emani Centre, the former headquarters of the once-powerful Jubilee Party.

The building’s owner, Florence Wairimu Mbugua, is drowning in a loan debt of Sh192 million. She blamed her financial troubles on a mass exit of tenants after the 2022 elections.

Despite repeated pleas for intervention and promises of repayment, the High Court has ruled against her.

Now, the towering office block that once housed Kenya’s ruling party is up for grabs in a public auction.

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Court backs Stanbic Bank's Bid to Auction Jubilee Party headquarters

Court backs Stanbic Bank’s Bid to Auction Jubilee Party headquarters

Stanbic Bank has finally secured court approval to auction the Emani Centre, located in Nairobi, after a long legal tussle with the building’s owner, Florence Wairimu Mbugua.

Mbugua defaulted on a Sh192.2 million loan, which she had taken using the building as collateral. Her hope was that rental income from prime tenants—especially the Jubilee Party—would sustain repayments. However, her finances collapsed after the Jubilee Party and other occupants vacated the premises shortly after the 2022 general election.

She argued that her rental business suffered a major blow and that she was trying to settle the debt by selling another property, Muringa Brothers Limited, which is still under subdivision.

Mbugua’s plea to halt the auction fell flat in court. High Court Judge Peter Mulwa dismissed her application, terming it a repeat of two earlier requests made in 2022 and 2023. Both had already been thrown out.

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Stanbic Bank, represented by its manager for recoveries, Amos Mugambi, presented evidence that this was the third time Mbugua had tried to block the sale of the same property. The court found no new facts in her latest request.

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“All three applications seek injunctive relief, principally restraining the bank from selling the Emani Centre. The core issue in all the applications is the same—whether the bank should be stopped from exercising its statutory power of sale over the property,” Judge Mulwa ruled.

Debt spirals beyond control

Stanbic Bank told the court that Mbugua had failed to make meaningful repayments. The last update, as of April 2024, showed that she still owed Sh192.2 million, with Sh91.3 million in arrears—not including accumulating interest.

Despite several warnings and periods of leniency, the bank said she had not lived up to her obligations. Stanbic stressed that the loan agreement gave it the power to sell the building once a default occurred.

Mbugua, on the other hand, insisted that she was doing everything possible to avoid the auction. She claimed that delays in selling her alternative property were beyond her control and that she had already secured potential buyers.

Still, the court found that this did not excuse her from her loan obligations or justify stopping the auction process. The judge made it clear that no fresh justification had been presented that could overturn the earlier court decisions.

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Jubilee Party Headquarters Now A symbol of political collapse

The Jubilee Party once held power at the highest levels of government. Its former headquarters, the Emani Centre, stood tall as a symbol of its strength.

Today, it stands empty and neglected, echoing the party’s political downfall after the 2022 elections. The party’s sudden exit from the premises triggered a loss of rental income that Mbugua depended on to repay the Stanbic loan.

That exit has now come full circle—helping trigger the property’s forced auction. With the court’s final say, the building is now set to be sold off. Interested buyers are already circling, ready to bid for a piece of what was once a political powerhouse’s nerve center.

As Stanbic Bank proceeds with the auction, the story of Emani Centre is no longer just a financial matter. It’s a potent symbol of how quickly fortunes—both political and economic—can collapse in Kenya.

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