Details of Sang’s emotional downfall and attempted thought

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Pressure is the mother of all competitive environments because success sometimes involves pushing someone out of game. The story of this big official is however complicated by the affairs he allegedly got involved in during his tenure.

An  official, according to two KPC board members, informed Sang that he had to leave office to facilitate investigations into multi-million shillings scandals.

A senior State House official called Deputy President William Ruto’s ally, Kenya Pipeline Managing Director Joe Sang, and told him to resign or face arrest.

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“He was given the two choices and asked to choose one. He chose to resign in the hope that he would not be investigated or arrested,” a board member said.

The State House official did not say whether he had instructions from President Uhuru Kenyatta to issue the ultimatum.

However in other revelations,the Star established that Sang wanted to resign last week after what a close friend described as a “tormentors’ working environment”.

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“I met him at the Intercontinental Hotel last week and I actually did not believe that he was the Sang I had known since days on campus. He appeared thoughtful and weighed down. I couldn’t rule out depression,” he said.

An insider who rose through the ranks to be the company MD, Sang has been at the helm of the state agency since April 2016 when he was confirmed.

He was previously the KPC general manager for Finance Strategy and was tapped by the board from within to drive the company’s vision 2025 strategy.

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Holding a bachelor’s degree in economics and an MBA in strategy, Sang is also a CPA (K) and was at the height of his career before  behind-the-scene manoeuvres forced him out of office.

Kenya Pipeline managing director, Joe Sang, has resigned following reports 21 million litres of fuel valued at more than KSh 2 billion could not be accounted for.

Sang, whose term was expected to expire in April 2019, tendered his resignation letter on the morning of Tuesday, December 4, as investigation into the alleged massive losses at the state corporation kicked off.Image result for imagesof Kenya pipeline

 

A deadly row had erupted between Kenya Pipeline and major oil companies in the country concerning the missing fuel worth billions of shillings.

Kenya Pipeline had claimed the fuel had spilled in the fields over the last two years and that some of it was lost through theft.

The oil companies in October 2018 penned an angry letter to KPC demanding an independent forensic audit on the oil stock statements and loss records. KPC holds fuel on behalf of the oil companies.

Do you think Sang resigned due to depression or the call from State House?

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