President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga with the Democratic Republic of Congo President Joseph Kabila at Harambee House office. President Kabila was in Nairobi on March 3,2011 to meet the two leaders over the smuggling of the Sh8 billion worth of gold. FILE / NATION.                

The United Nations has named three Kenyans it says are involved in smuggling gold from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
According to the UN report, the network based in Nairobi carries out deals involving large quantities of gold.
Counterfeit gold is also brokered in Nairobi, the UN added in the report by a team of experts that monitors arms and mineral-trade sanctions against rebel groups in the DRC.
Transactions of both real and fake gold serve as a key source of financing for groups in the DRC, including criminal elements in the Congolese army, that are responsible for millions of civilian deaths in recent years.Kenya recorded no official imports of gold from the DRC in 2010 and 2011, notes the six-member UN panel, which includes a Kenyan arms expert, Mr Nelson Alusala.

The report also thanks the Kenyan government for cooperating in the panel’s wide-ranging investigations.
A Kenyan national, whom the report names, is said to have played an integral role in illegal gold deals.
The panel of experts examines in particular the sale of 2.5 tonnes of gold extracted from mines in Walikale in the DRC, smuggled to Nairobi and then sold in Thailand.
Citing “several gold smugglers” as its sources, the UN panel says the 2.5 tonnes of gold was traded in Nairobi by Jean Claude Mundeke Kabamba, alias “Dako,” a Congolese who pretends to be affiliated with the DRC military.
His alias is included in a list of 15 alleged gold traffickers presented to President Kibaki by DRC President Joseph Kabila last February.
Kenyan authorities subsequently discovered 400 kilogrammes of gold in Mr Kabamba’s home in Nairobi, the UN report recounts. (READ: DRC rebel held in Nairobi over smuggled gold)
Mr Kabamba and two associates were arrested and later released on bail, the report adds.
Mr Paul Kobia, a Kenyan national, is named in the 392-page report on the basis of information from the Kenyan CID as “the key individual behind most of the large gold scams in Nairobi.”
“According to documents found by the Kenya Police through raids on Kobia’s properties,” the report continues, “Kobia had a large number of commissioners working throughout the region selling counterfeit gold.”
Mr Kobia and a Mr Joe Karimi, whose identity is not specified in the report, also run a gold refinery said to be used by “all the main gold smugglers in Nairobi.”