|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Kenya hit by floods
By David Rowan
31 May 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Widespread flooding throughout Kenya has displaced up to 60,000
people. The official number of those killed, mainly from landslides,
has so far been estimated at 50.
According to reports, a total of 175,000 people have been affected
by flooding that has hit seven of Kenyas eight provinces,
stretching across the country from the shores of Lake Victoria
in the Nyanza Province in the West, to the Coast Province in the
East.
One of the factors contributing to the flooding has been the
above normal level of rainfall. The seasonal rains that affect
Kenya from April to June have been unusually heavy in many parts
of the country and a number of riverbanks have burst.
A BBC report stated that at least 30,000 people were forced
to abandon their homes to escape the swollen Tana River in the
east of the country, and described how whole villages had been
washed away. One reporter saw desperate villagers stranded and
surrounded by water, some pleading for the government to use helicopters
to airlift people from the area and to bring in aid. They told
the reporter that they felt the government would send help to
them because helicopters were used to ferry cabinet ministers
around, even when there were no emergencies.
There is a shortage of fresh water for drinking and cooking.
Latrines and wells have been submerged and the threat of cholera
and typhoid has increased. Even as some rivers began to subside,
there remained a heightened danger of starvation and disease.
Abbal Gullet of the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS) raised fears
about the long-term impact of the floods. He was concerned over,
the food security and health of the populations whose crops
have been destroyed and are now more exposed to malaria and waterborne
diseases.
The Orma people, who live and raise cattle on the low-lying
pastures next to the Tana River, have been badly affected, losing
their homes and livestock. Small plots belonging to subsistence
farmers have also been destroyed, leaving them with little or
no food.
Reports state that KRCS made an appeal on May 10 for about
$1.1 million to assist the flood victims, but had thus far received
no donor pledges. The $31,700 allocated to the KRCS from its head
organisation, the International Federation of the Red Cross, had
been quickly used up on aid. KRCS said there was urgent need for
jerry cans, mosquito nets, medical kits and water purification
tablets, as well as food to help those displaced and forced to
live outdoors.
Most of the deaths have occurred on the slopes of Mount Kenya
and have been caused by landslides. In one village, five members
of the same family were crushed to death by a wall of mud as they
slept in their home. Another landslide killed seven people in
the village of Giumpu. A survivor of one of the landslides, Jamlick
Kamau, described his harrowing experience. He told reporters how
he, woke up to find one room of my house had been demolished
and washed downhill by mud. He then heard cries for help
from the direction of his uncles house, but when he reached
it the house had been swept away.
Although the heavy rains and erratic weather patterns have
been a contributing factor in the devastating floods, the situation
has been exacerbated by policies pursued by the government of
President Daniel Arap Moi and has created a paradoxical situation
where one part of Kenya can be devastated by floods and the other
by drought.
Over the past few years the government of Kenya has been embroiled
in controversy over deforestation of the country. In 1998 the
government authorised the destruction of forests around Mount
Kenya, which lies 200 kilometres northeast of the capital Nairobi.
The government pushed forward its programme, despite the concerns
of environmental groups who warned that the widespread deforestation
was leading to drought and desertification in some parts of the
country and in other parts to flooding, due to the destruction
of natural water catchment areas.
In 1999 alone, selective logging cleared 200,000 hectares of
forest. The Kenya Forest Working Group issued a statement, noting
that in comparison only 160,000 acres of forest had been cleared
between 1963 and the late 1990s, indicating a huge increase in
deforestation for commercial reasons.
In 2001 the government authorised the clearing of a further
167,000 hectares of forest in the Mount Kenya, Rift Valley and
Western Kenya areas. Government land was bought at the cheapest
rates possible and then sold on to land developers at exorbitant
prices. Large tracts of the land were handed out to government
supporters. The government also attempted to give the forest clearances
a populist gloss, downplaying the fact that peasants had been
forced off their ancestral land and into squatter settlements
by corporate developers. Using the language of land reform,
the government claimed that the cleared land would be allocated
to landless peasants. A spokesperson for the East African Wildlife
organisation refuted this: In many cases in the past excised
forest land has been allocated to people who are not landless
or squatters.
The Action for Endangered Species organisation has stripped
Kenya of the global conservation award it was given in 2001. However
the responsibility for the destruction of forests, now estimated
to average 3,000 hectares per year, does not just lie with the
corrupt Kenyan regime. Behind the governments policy is
the pressure to earn hard currency to pay off debts to Western
banks. One quarter of Kenyas annual exports are paid in
debt servicing, four times the amount Kenya receives in donor
aid. The floods show just one of the ways in which this indebtedness
is taking a cruel toll in human life.
See Also:
Kenya: 15 killed in
slum clashes
[14 December 2001]
Kenya: School fire
kills at least 59 students
[30 March 2001]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |