Since 1964 • Murang’a County

A cooperative rooted in integrity, built for generations

From humble beginnings, Samuru Gituto Farmers Cooperative Society has grown into a member-first movement focused on sustainable coffee farming, fair value for farmers, and meaningful community impact.

4,500+

Active members

1964

Year founded

1,700

Acres at peak

Murang’a

Our home county

Our Journey

From formation to renewal

A concise history of our growth, challenges, and transformation—told with honesty and optimism.

1964 — Formation

Founded by coffee farmers to secure fair markets and shared prosperity through a member-owned cooperative.

Peak years

Expanded operations with over 1,700 acres of fertile coffee plantations, becoming a pillar of livelihoods in Murang’a.

2006–2019 — Legal & leadership headwinds

The Society faced leadership wrangles and irregular land sales. Members, together with a qualified legal team, pursued redress to safeguard assets and governance. (See public rulings & reports)

2019 — Breakthrough ruling

The Court of Appeal ordered that illegally sold parcels be reverted to the Society—paving the way for reconstruction and a return to regular AGMs.

2023–Present — Stabilisation & growth

With strengthened governance, renewed member participation and ongoing property recovery, the Society is implementing sustainable farming and value-add programs.

Historic view of Samuru Gituto farms
Members at a field day
Coffee cherries and processing

Mission • Vision • Values

What guides our work

Vision

To be a sustainable, trusted cooperative that uplifts farmers, strengthens families, and builds a prosperous legacy across generations.

Mission

Empower members through fair coffee marketing, training, and value addition; protect the Society’s assets; and invest in community wellbeing.

Values
  • Integrity & accountability
  • Member empowerment
  • Sustainability & stewardship
  • Transparency & fairness
  • Community-first mindset
Coffee estates and facilities

Assets & Footprint

Farms, facilities & community spaces

We own and manage multiple properties across Murang’a County. While some parcels were affected by irregular transfers in the past, ongoing legal processes and member action have supported recovery and protection of cooperative assets.

Coffee farms
Fertile acreage under revitalisation, focusing on productivity & quality.
Processing
Investing in milling partnerships & value-add for better farmer returns.
Community land
Spaces for meetings, training and member services.
Recovered parcels
Rulings in favour of the Society have supported asset recovery.

Leadership

Member-first governance

We’ve strengthened structures to ensure stability: regular AGMs, independent audits, improved record-keeping and transparent reporting. This framework keeps leadership accountable to members and safeguards assets for the long term.

  • Annual General Meetings with clear resolutions.
  • Asset protection & title verification program.
  • Compliance with cooperative and land laws.
  • Professional legal support on ongoing matters.
AGM session
Board briefing
Outcome: Stability has improved as members elect visionary leaders committed to reclaiming Society assets and driving sustainable growth.

Impact

Sustainability & member value

Training & extension

Seasonal clinics on pruning, integrated pest management, and cherry quality—delivered with partners to boost yields.

Market access

Aggregated produce, efficient logistics and transparent marketing to improve farm-gate returns for members.

Community programs

Education support, youth mentorship and livelihoods initiatives that strengthen families across Murang’a.

Questions

Frequently asked

Historical irregular sales and leadership wrangles affected some parcels. Through the courts and member action, the Society obtained rulings supporting the reversion of illegally transferred land and continues to protect assets.

We’ve reinforced member participation via regular AGMs, transparent reporting, stronger internal controls and external legal counsel on sensitive matters.

Specific parcels and facilities are under revitalisation and, where applicable, legal verification to safeguard member interests.

Disclosures

Public information

This website has publicly available information and member communications. Court proceedings and outcomes are matters of public record. For official documents, visit relevant registries or contact the Society.
Media & legal references
  • 2019 Court of Appeal ruling supporting reversion of parcels.
  • Subsequent filings in Environment & Land Court regarding titles & enforcement.
  • Coverage of AGMs and cooperative revitalisation efforts.

Be part of the next chapter

Join a stable, forward-looking cooperative that puts farmers first—protecting assets, growing value and investing in community.

Get in touch