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WSWS : News
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Kenya: 15 killed in slum clashes
By David Rowan
14 December 2001
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Violent clashes broke out on December 4 between the people
of the Nubian and Luo tribal groupings in Kibera, one of Kenyas
largest slums. Reports put the number of people killed at 15,
with hundreds injured.
Thousands more people from both communities fled the violence
as rival gangs set fire to homes and attacked people with machetes
and wooden clubs. Kibera, with a population of up to one million
people, covers about four square kilometres and is situated a
few miles from the downtown area of Kenyas capital, Nairobi.
It is estimated that half of Nairobis three million population
live in slums.
Accusations of brutality were also made against the paramilitary
General Service Unit (GSU) that was called into Kibera by the
government to quell the violence. The chairman of the standing
committee on human rights in Kenya, Onesmus Mutungi, said, Claims
of use of brute force, extortion, assault, rape and destruction
of property have been made against the very people mandated to
protect and uphold the rights of citizens. It is reported
that the GSU also fired live ammunition and tear gas.
Tensions have been high in Kibera since October 31, when Kenyan
President Daniel Arap Moi visited the area and announced that
residents were paying too much rent to Nubian landlords and called
for them to be lowered. Following this Energy Minister Raila Odinga,
whose constituency includes Kibera, called on the population to
stop paying rent until it had been reduced by 50 percent.
Odinga, who belongs to the Luo, Kenyas second largest
tribal group that makes up the vast majority of people in Kibera,
told a meeting of angry residents, The government is the
true landlord, the landlords are the tenants and the tenants are
the subtenants... the government will tell the landlords to lower
the rent.
The speeches by Moi and Odinga were followed by a rent strike.
Fighting then broke out when the Nubian landlords came to collect
the rent and residents refused to pay. Both Moi and Odinga used
the genuine grievances and concerns of those living in dire poverty
in Kibera to mount a provocative political stunt aimed at winning
votes from the Luo in the elections due next year. It was also
a crude attempt to distract attention from the responsibility
of the true landlordthe government itselffor
the inhuman conditions that exist in Kibera and other slums.
Odinga is a noted demagogue, who as leader of the National
Development Party stood against Moi in the last elections in Kenya
in 1997. After Mois Kenya African National Union was re-elected,
he dropped all criticisms and accepted the post of energy minister.
The Nubians, who originate from the Sudan, are predominantly
Muslims. The British allowed them to settle on the land in the
1920s, after they had fought for the colonial power in World War
One as part of the Kings African Rifles. Viewed as outsiders by
the authorities in Kenya, they have difficulty in finding work
because they do not have Kenyan identification papers. The government
owns the deeds to the Kibera land and the Nubians, who live in
the slum themselves, rent out the ramshackle corrugated iron dwellings
and mud huts.
The inhabitants of Kibera are mainly rural poor from drought-ravaged
villages who have travelled to Nairobi in search of work and a
more secure life. Kibera is notorious for being one of the worst
slums in Africa. It has no running water, electricity or sanitation.
The one million residents have to share 600 toilets, forcing most
people to use plastic bags, which are then simply thrown away.
Local charities, with the backing of sports celebrities, have
organised a campaign to stop flying toilets, raising
money to build latrines.
Kibera is one of a number of slums that have sprung up around
Nairobi over the last thirty years. Reports state that 86 percent
of the dwellings in Nairobi are made up of corrugated iron, mud,
discarded cartons and polythene sheeting. Government investment
in housing is minimal, with one report stating that allocation
for housing fell 37 percent in 1998/99 alone.
The conflict in Kibera was deliberately fomented as Kenyas
economy has moved into sharp decline. The Kenyan Central Bank
reports that the economy has contracted for the first time since
independence in 1963, with GDP falling by 0.3 percent in the 12
months to November this year. Unemployment currently stands at
50 percent, with most people attempting to live on less than $1
a day. Over two million of Kenyas 30 million inhabitants
have HIV/AIDS and 600,000 children have been orphaned due to the
epidemic. Reports state that 500 to 700 people die each day from
AIDS in Kenya. Life expectancy for men and women is less than
50 years.
An International Monetary Fund delegation was in Kenya as the
violence was taking place. They reported that the governments
commitment to reforms was commendable, but that it
had not gone far enough. The IMF is continuing to withhold the
vast bulk of the $250 million it agreed to give the Kenyan government
in August 2000, until its demands on the restructuring and privatisation
of sections of the economy are speeded up.
Meanwhile the government is continuing to arrest people said
to be on a list compiled by the American FBI, accused of having
links to international terrorist organisations. Over the last
week, there have been at least 20 more arrests, mainly in the
Mombassa region. One of the arrests resulted in violent protests
in the town of Mandera in the north east of the country, during
which a church and a polytechnic were destroyed. The police said
the man arrested was Sheilk Ahmed Salim Swedan, whose name appeared
on the FBI list in connection with the bombing of the US embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania. However, protesters said the police had
arrested the wrong man, who is in fact a respected preacher named
Ahmed Hassan Mursal. Opposition politicians have accused the government
of harassing Muslims in return for development aid from
Washington.
See Also:
Kenya
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