Kenya Reports
Report #11:
January 7, 2008
This afternoon the committee appointed by Lumakanda Friends Church met
at our house
to discern the way forward. They decided that they would go tomorrow
morning as a
delegation to Lumakanda School to meet with the leaders of the camp and
the Red Cross
people. They will find out what would be the most suitable need that
could be fulfilled
given our resources. We have 31,200/- ($472) from Friends in Bristol,
England, and the
Sunday collection at the Church, which translates to only 12/- (18 cents)
per person so we
will have to focus on something doable. They will figure out what is
best and then Gladys
and I will go to Webuye on Wednesday and buy what is suggested. Then
the Church
members will go to camp, have a prayer meeting with the people in the
camp, and give
the donation to the Red Cross to distribute. Then we may do a similar
thing the following
week as way opens. Gladys is part of the delegation, but I am not.
Alfred Machayo dropped off the children's clothes, toothbrushes, and
some medicines
which will be part of the donation. Malesi sent a letter of introduction
from Friends for
Peace and Community Development and two T-shirts, saying on the front, "Friends
in"
and "Peace" on the back. Folks on the delegation will wear
them.
In Kakamega, Friends for Peace and Community Development (Malesi, Janet,
Getry,
Peter, and others) are going to meet with the boda-boda (bicycle taxi
drivers) who formed
one of the main body of looters in that town. We will see what this brings.
When I was on my afternoon walk, I passed a young man, probably in his
twenties, not
very well dressed, who was trying to hawk a video. Of course I turned
him down, but five
paces on I realized that this was looted goods and he was probably one
of the looters.
Yesterday evening, when I went to the School, I learned that most of
the Red Cross
workers had gone to Turbo for the food distribution that day. Turbo is
the next town on
our way to Eldoret and it was very hard hit by the violence. This is
where it has been
unsafe to pass for many days. I heard that the looters had cut down the
big eucalyptus
trees growing by the side of the road in order to block the road. Today
I learned that the
Red Cross workers had come back very late. They told me that instead
of 15,000 IDP at
Turbo, there were now closer to 20,000. Many were very "bitter" (the
best translation I
have for what was told to me in Swahili). I have also been told that
this is the case at
Lumakanda School. The food brought by the Red Cross was insufficient
considering
the large number of people in the camp.
I have been told that there is an IDP camp near Kitale with 21,000 people.
While the
paper said that there were 18,200 IDPs in Lugari District, the Red Cross
worker, a
woman full of the facts, told me there were almost 35,000 IDPs in Lugari
District. The
media has upped the estimate of those killed to 500 and the number of
displaced to 500,000. I hate to say it, but I told them so!!! (i.e.,
the numbers reported were too low).
School was supposed to begin today, but was postponed until next week.
What will happen to the IDPs at Lumakanda School when school starts?
I can no longer get BBC on my radio. I wonder if it has been jammed.
Prices in town for food have gone up 25% to 50%: except for meat. The
town used to
slaughter a cow every day, but now we are on the fourth day of the same
cow so we are
not buying. The point is that neither is anyone else so the price has
not gone up.
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