Archive for the Background Category

Another Inconvenient Truth: How Climate Change Initiatives are Impacting Indigenous People

Posted on November 30, 2009 with No Comments

‘Moves to stop global warming are devastating tribal people’, says new report

Sunday, November 22, 2009 at 9:22pm

 

Hydropower dams are being built across the Amazon in the name of combating climate change.
© Survival
Measures to stop global warming risk being as harmful to tribal peoples as climate change itself, according to a new report from Survival.

The report, ‘The most inconvenient truth of all: climate change and indigenous people’, sets out four key ‘mitigation measures’ that threaten tribal people:

1. Biofuels: promoted as an alernative, ‘green’ source of energy to fossil fuels, much of the land allocated to grow them is the ancestral land of tribal people. If biofuels expansion continues as planned, millions of indigenous people worldwide stand to lose their land and livelihoods.

2. Hydro-electric power: A new boom in dam construction in the name of combating climate change is driving thousands of tribal people from their homes.

3. Forest conservation: Kenya’s Ogiek hunter-gatherers are being forced from the forests they have lived in for hundreds of years to ‘reverse the ravages’ of global warming.

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Ever since colonial times there have been attempts to evict the Ogiek from their ancestral forest, usually on the pretext that they are degrading it. But when the Ogiek are removed, their forest is not protected but rather exploited by logging and tea plantations – some owned by government officials. This influx of illegal settlers has been so extreme in recent years that much of the Mau forest is severely degraded. The Kenyan government is trying to evict everyone from the forest, including the Ogiek who have been living there for centuries. If the Ogiek are evicted from their forest home it could spell disaster for the forest and for the Ogiek, who will become ‘conservation refugees’.

 
4. Carbon offsetting: Tribal peoples’ forests now have a monetary value in the booming ‘carbon credits’ market. Indigenous people say this will lead to forced evictions and the ‘theft of our land’.

The report calls for tribal people to be fully involved in decisions that affect them, and for their land ownership rights to be upheld.

Survival Director Stephen Corry said today, ‘This report highlights ‘the most inconvenient truth of all’ – that the world’s tribal people, who have done the least to cause climate change and are most affected by it, are now having their rights violated and land devastated in the name of attempts to stop it. Hiding behind the global push to prevent climate change, governments and companies are mounting a massive land grab. As usual, where money and vast profits are at stake, the world’s indigenous people are being shamefully swept aside.

Full PDF Report: http://assets.survivalinternational.org/documents/132/survival_climate_change_report_english.pdf

Category: Background

Exciting Education Initiative in Baragoi, Samburu

Posted on November 30, 2009 with No Comments

According to an IRIN report oneducation in Samburu, some schools in Samburu are inititating unique solutions to literacy concerns with night school programs. ”Currently under way in Baragoi District, the pastoralist night school initiative targets cattle herder children who are unable to attend day school, ” the report states. 

“The children leave the fields at 4pm and then attend class,” said Emanman. “The students get `uji’ (maize meal porridge) in the evening and are taught until 10pm.”  Some children from these schools have progressed to the formal education system, but the night school initiative is largely designed to teach basic literacy to herders and others, he added.

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Category: Background

IRIN Report on the Consequences of Famine and Insecurity in Samburu

Posted on November 30, 2009 with No Comments

KENYA: In and out of school in Samburu

Photo: Ann Weru/IRIN
Classmates, Nabik Kekichorumongi and Kelly Lanyasunya of Lesidai Primary School have changed schools severally due to insecurity

LESIDAI, 10 November 2009 (IRIN) – Many Kenyan children are in school, but enrolment in the north has been adversely affected by insecurity, food scarcity and traditional attitudes, residents and teachers said.

“I just joined a new school a few weeks ago [20 October],” 14-year-old Kelly Lanyasunya said at Lesidai primary school in Samburu Central District (central-northwestern Kenya). “I got a new uniform and I am making friends but if this area gets insecure, I will have to move to another school.”

Like her classmate, Nabik Kekichorumongi, is forced to change schools whenever bandits attack the surrounding villages.

Stephen Leparachwo, head teacher at Lolkunono primary school in Samburu Central, said Lesidai primary school often receives parents bringing their children from Pura, a neighbouring area affected by banditry.

“When they come, some are even without food… The bandits follow the fleeing residents [and their cattle], not giving the children a chance to read,” he said.

To read to full report: http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=86968

Category: Background

Posted on November 29, 2009 with No Comments

Leaders claim killing of residents an eviction plot by Pokot raiders

 

Published on 18/09/2000

By James Munyeki

Samburu leaders have claimed the killing of 35 people on Tuesday was part of a plot to evict residents from a 6,000-acre ranch. The land was bought in 2000 from the Government and each shareholder was allocated 50 acres, according to Samburu County Council Chairman Julius Leshinkiro.

Speaking during the mass burial of the victims, leaders alleged the Pokot were planning to evict them from the land to graze on it.

Samburu Anglican Church archbishop Jacob Lesuda said the raiders were not interested in stealing cattle, but wanted to cause deaths.

“Anyone claiming to own the land should do so legally. We have legal documents to claim the land ownership,” he noted.

To read more: http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/news/InsidePage.php?id=1144024228&cid=159&

 

Category: Background

Kanyor koon ara Samburui! Proud to Be Samburu!

Posted on November 29, 2009 with No Comments

Category: Background

Kenyan cattle rustlers kill 32 in gunfight

Posted on November 29, 2009 with 1 Comment

Kenyan cattle rustlers kill 32 in gunfight

By  JAMES KARIUKIPosted Tuesday, September 15 2009 at 22:30

In Summary

  • Well-organised raiders pin down APs with fierce fire as another squad raids village
  • Combined force combs bush for attackers as security bosses fly in

The area is also prone to banditry on the roads and prominent personalities, motorists and passengers have become common targets.

Earlier in the year, the then Rift Valley PC Hassan Farah established a permanent security buffer zone separating the Samburu and Pokot, resulting in some truce.

The drought has forced the two communities to head in opposite directions in search of pasture, with the Samburu going to Mount Kenya.

Insecurity has seen the Samburu families residing at PND Farm move towards Rumuruti and have since created a camp where 2,800 people live. Mr Omariba, Samburu West DC Joseph Mathenge and Laikipia West DC Ombaso Sagero visited the scene of the attack.

Also killed were 40 head of cattle, 20 goats and 30 sheep.

Reporters on the ground said they saw bodies strewn everywhere as three district commissioners coordinated a security operation after the attack.

 

Samburu West Pokot raid

 

 
A survivor of the attack receives treatment at Maralal hospital in Samburu District. Photo/EVANS ONYIEGO

 

To read the full story:

http://www.nation.co.ke/News/-/1056/658672/-/item/1/-/xt9b6z/-/index.html

 KARE Samburu has provided 30 video Flip cameras to give the Samburu a Voice. Anyone serious about documenting these incidents and recording testimonies should contact us for equipment. We will provide as many as necessary. Congratulations, Evans, for getting your photos published on the front page of the Nation today and making people aware of these conflicts.

Comments:

Ole Koissaba: It may be difficult to count the dead, leave alone the people living because the inhuman and unjustified state sponsored violence against Isampur is systemic and strategically planned to disposes, impoverish annihilate and still everlasting fear for purposes of political domination, land alienation and making them perpetual dependents of the See Moreneighboring communities . The Pokots were armed in 2007 and the next thing was a raid where 70 Samburu were moored down by police and Pokot fire, then planned displacement in Laikipia West due to political reasons by the likes of GG Kariuki, and Oldonyiro by the war lord Kuti courtesy of support from Muthaura and blessings from statehouse. This led to the massacre in February 2009. From then countless children, women and men have continued to lose their precious lives in the hands of the government that the people pay taxes for protection or government supported militia.This is not short of ethnic cleansing and genocide.Can people that believe in the sanctity of life raise to the occassion

 

Lepriei I am still shocked by the photo on the front page of the Daily Nation.  That innocent poor kid shot mercilessly….It’s so sad. Anyway, I think the idea of video cameras will be a big help. Keep up with the good work you are doing for our people.

 

Lempere: Its barely a week old when 3 lives lost and more than 5,000 animals taken in Loosesia, and then 32 lives and 10,000 animals lost in Kanampio. Are Samburu’s on the extinct trend? What law is of essence in Samburu? Are we in Kenya and under whose leadership? Do we have a claim of any of our rights?
 

Category: Background

Posted on November 28, 2009 with No Comments

Kenyan police chief fired amid abuse claims

By Associated Press September 9, 2009
 
images 2NAIROBI – President Mwai Kibaki fired Kenya’s police commissioner yesterday, sending the chief of a force accused of having committed executions and rapes to head the postal service. Human rights activists welcomed the move but said more steps are needed to reform a corrupt and dangerous force.

Six years ago, Mohammed Hussein Ali was brought in to clean up the force but did little to tackle a culture of corruption and abuse during his tenure.

The United Nations alleged the police commissioner even ran death squads, after the bodies of hundreds of young men were found dumped at morgues and other sites during a crackdown on a banned gang. Most had been executed with a gunshot to the head, their hands often tied behind their backs. Many were last seen in police custody.

Human Rights Watch and the state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights say police also looted and raped and killed Kenyans during riots that followed the contested December 2007 elections, in which more than 1,000 people died.

To read full story: http://www.boston.com/news/world/africa/articles/2009/09/09/kenyan_police_chief_fired_amid_abuse_claims/

Category: Background

Land and Pastoralists

Posted on November 28, 2009 with No Comments

Land and Pastoralists

Author: Little, Peter D.

CSQ Issue: 8.1 (Spring 1984) Nomads: Stopped in Their Tracks?

No issue is more critical to the future well-being of Kenya’s pastoral populations than secure land tenure. Herders’ access, particularly during dry months, to grazing land and water resources is the essence of any pastoral existence. Pastoralists’ concern with security of land tenure overrides other development considerations – provision of technical assistance in the areas of animal health, marketing, cooperatives, and water development. Only when the land tenure issue is boldly addressed will sustained development take place in Kenya’s rangelands. This essay briefly describes and analyzes the history of the pastoral lands crisis in Kenya, the social and ecological effects of insecure tenure, and contemporary efforts toward redressing the pastoral land issue in Kenya.

To read more: http://www.culturalsurvival.org/ourpublications/csq/article/land-and-pastoralists

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Comments: Once, Maasai land, roughly 1 million acres that once served as the cushion for droughts like this one, but it was coerced from the Maasai to make way for white settlement in British East Africa at the turn of the 20th century. This land, part of what is known today as the White Highlands, has been the root of contention between the Maasai and the Kenyan government since independence in 1963. “The Maasai experienced the biggest colonial land rip-off in all of Africa,” said William Ole Ntimama, Maasai Minister of Parliament for Narok North.

With the stroke of a pen on June 15, 1895, Maasai land became part of British East Africa. Using force, intimidation, and coercion, colonial officials succeeded in signing two agreements with Maasai representatives, the first in 1904 and the second in 1911. The 1904 agreement removed the Maasai from the most fertile lands in all of Kenya, paving the way for white farmers and agribusinesses.  Samburu is understocked and sparsely populated. Their land has been receding over time. In Samburu, the average family owns 4 cows. Very few have large herds.  September 9

Reuben Lemadada This is true. We do not have enough cows..the few we have do not benefit us enough to survive…we have vast land that do not benefit us except a few business pple…everything seems odd. What can be done to elevate the pastrol community from poverty?  Over 50% of their land has been placed into conservancies with darn little compensation for it! Less than .01 % of revenue returns to the people. This is outrageous.

Category: Background

RECOGNIZING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ HUMAN RIGHTS

Posted on November 28, 2009 with No Comments

RECOGNIZING INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ HUMAN RIGHTS

By Ellen L. Lutz

The world’s indigenous peoples have a serious human rights problem: The nations of the world refuse to recognize that indigenous peoples have human rights.

All too frequently, indigenous lands become favored battle zone because fighting forces see them as “vacant,” or they regard the land’s resources as being up for grabs.

To Read more, visit Cultural Survival’s Voices: http://www.culturalsurvival.org/files/5-1_EN.pdf

Category: Background

Kenya: Dozens Killed in Clashes over Land, Water

Posted on November 28, 2009 with No Comments

Kenya: Dozens Killed in Clashes over Land, Water
Gettleman, The New York Times, 8 September 2009
 
Drought has exacerbated land disputes between and among land-based peoples in northern Kenya. This year has been particularly severe, with the loss of livestock and wildlife, as well as intertribal clashes leaving dozens of people dead. HLRN has compiled here a series of media reports, documents and expert analysis to inform HIC Members and others of the most recent developments and the important background leading up to them—HLRN.Lush Land Dries up, Withering Kenya’s Hopes

 LOKORI, Kenya—The sun somehow feels closer here, more intense, more personal. As Philip Lolua waits under a tree for a scoop of food, heat waves dance up from the desert floor, blurring the dead animal carcasses sprawled in front of him.

So much of his green pasture land has turned to dust. His once mighty herd of goats, sheep and camels have died of thirst. He says his 3-year-old son recently died of hunger. And Mr. Lolua does not look to be far from death himself. He comes to help us, I will die here, right here,” he said, emphatically patting the earth with a cracked, ancient-looking hand.

A devastating drought is sweeping across Kenya, killing livestock, crops and children. It is stirring up tensions in the ramshackle slums where the water taps have run dry, and spawning ethnic conflict in the hinterland as communities fight over the last remaining pieces of fertile grazing land.

The twin hearts of Kenya’s economy, agriculture and tourism, are especially imperiled. The fabled game animals that safari-goers fly thousands of miles to see are keeling over from hunger and the picturesque savanna is now littered with an unusually large number of sun-bleached bones.

Ethiopia. Sudan. Somalia. Maybe even Niger and Chad. These countries have become almost synonymous with drought and famine. But Kenya? This nation is one of the most developed in Africa, home to a typically robust economy, countless United Nations offices and thousands of aid workers.

The aid community here has been predicting a disaster for months, saying that the rains had failed once again and that this could be the worst drought in more than a decade. But the Kenyan government, paralyzed by infighting and political maneuvering, seemed to shrug off the warnings.

Some government officials have even been implicated in a scandal to illegally sell off thousands of tons of the nation’s grain reserves as a famine was looming.

So far, a huge, international aid operation to avert mass hunger has not kicked in, or at least not to the degree needed. The United Nations World Food Program recently said that nearly four million Kenyans — about a tenth of the population — urgently needed food.

“Red lights are flashing across the country,” the agency said.

But donor nations have been slow to respond, and a United Nations-led emergency appeal for $576 million is less than half financed. Part of the reason may be the growing disappointment with Kenya’s leaders. They have been poked and prodded by Western ambassadors — and their own citizens — to overhaul the justice system, the police force and the electoral commission. The outcry followed a widely discredited election in 2007 that set off a wave of violence, claiming more than 1,000 lives.

 But Kenyan politicians seem more preoccupied with positioning themselves for the next election in 2012 than with cleaning up the mess from the last one. Few reforms have been accomplished and corruption continues to flourish, as the grain scandal currently under investigation has made painfully clear.

 “At a time like this, we need donor confidence,” said Nicholas Wasunna, a humanitarian adviser for the aid group World Vision. But he said that donors might be put off by “the politics of what’s happening in the country.” The arid lands of northern Kenya have been the hardest hit. In some villages, it has not rained in years. But the drought has become a problem nationwide.

 In Baringo, in the Rift Valley, people are eating cactus because corn and wheat have gotten so expensive. In Nyeri, in central Kenya, some have turned to pig feed. In Nairobi, the capital, even the fanciest neighborhoods often go without running water for a week. And it is dark too. Kenya relies on hydropower for electricity, so less rainfall means less power. The Kenyan government has begun to respond, organizing some highly publicized food deliveries to famine-prone areas. But many Kenyan officials almost seem in denial.

 Chaunga Mwachaunga is the acting district officer in Lokori, an especially parched town in northern Kenya. He bristled when presented with reports that dozens of children in his area had recently died of hunger. “Hunger? How do we know they died of hunger?” he said. “I know there’s not enough food for people, but we can be sure that nobody will die of hunger while the Kenyan government is here. Show me the death certificates.”

It is hard to find any death certificates when there are few hospitals.

Entering this area is like stepping back in time.

 Lokori is home to the Turkana, who cling tightly to their traditions. The women wear wreaths of beads and shave their hair into Mohawks. The men scar their backs in puffy patterns and wear disc-like bracelets that double as razors. They live in gumdrop-shaped huts scattered across the sandy plateau and herd animals to survive.

 Even in a good year, life here is extremely precarious. But this year malnutrition rates among the Turkana have soared way past emergency thresholds.

 Turkana children, dressed in little more than a sheet, are hiking 20 miles for a gallon of water. Turkana men are abandoning families, simply vanishing into the desert because they cannot face the shame of being unable to feed their children. Many people here now have nothing to eat but the chalky, bitter fruits that grow wild in the desert. They smash them open with rocks to get at the barely edible part inside.

World Vision is distributing emergency rations to the worst-off areas–in Samburu West. The other day, Mr. Lolua, who said he lost his 3-year-old son in June, waited with a group of men under a thorn tree for a scoop of porridge.

 Another whisper of a man named Ekitela was so skinny and his hands shook so much he could barely hold the cup he had been given.

 “I’m not as old as I look,” he said. “It’s just I don’t have any food.” He then started choking on the porridge, which was the color and texture of sand, and was rescued by a capful of water from his granddaughter.

 Perhaps equally worrisome is the rising ethnic conflict. The Turkana call their neighbors, the Pokot, ”the enemy” and said intense clashes recently broke out because of the shrinking amount of grazing land. One Turkana woman said “the enemy” had killed her son, stolen all her animals and driven her off her land.

 Meteorologists predict rains will be coming by October, and they may even bring the other extreme from present conditions. Another El Niño cycle is forecast, which after years of drought and earth baked to a rock-hard crust could bring the opposite problem: floods.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/08/world/africa/08kenya.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

 

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Comments:

Lugard Lenaiyasa Two  days ago I watched a show, Investigation Earth by Jeff Corwin in Samburu. It was neat to see such a famous biologist right in my home area with our own lion biologist, Tina Ramme, who has been working with the Samburu moran and leaders in her Wildlife Warriors Program for several years. I am a big fan of Jeff Corwin, if anybody wants to see the show, look it up on internet, it should be playing again soon. Keep up the good work of saving the Samburu lions, Tina!

Michael P. Lalampaa You alone has performed better than us, ordinary folks, elites and leaders, even the equivalence of 300 Spartans. For your weapon is far superior to the villain’s.

Evans Onyiego : I am from Baragoi, in Samburu North District, under Samburu West Constituency. The government promised food for the children over the holidays, but the food is still in Maralala under the Cereal Board, while the children continue to suffer. Kindly Brothers and Sisters, make some Noise –someone is intentionally sabutaging the who;e process at the expense of the poor children. Remember…when you hear this and keep quiet, then you support the opressor.

 

 

Category: Background