Kenya Reports
Report #18:
January 14, 2008
I didn't really write an update yesterday because it was Sunday and
I was resting
(well, sort of resting). My "Hoodwinked" article seems to have
drawn considerable
attention and may get published.
When we went to church yesterday, we found about one hundred 200 pound
bags of
maize (corn) in the back. After church, I asked George, the owner, why
they were
there. He replied that he had a big farm on the other side of the road
where the
Kalenjin are the dominate ethnic group. He feels he is the next target. "When
they
finish with the Kikuyu, they will then come for me." He has moved
out all his furniture
and taken it to the homes of his relatives nearby. This is another small
indication that
the violence is not essentially political, but a chance to plunder and
loot. Today I
heard two reports of cows being stolen. In the past this rarely happened
in Lumakanda.
This morning, Gladys (my wife), and I went to Turbo where the Lumakanda
IDP's have
been transferred. I had heard that Turbo had experienced a rough time
during the
violence; but it is another thing to actually see an entire block of
shops burned out.
Many other shops in the town were destroyed. Some were wooden and burned
up
completely. After viewing the destruction we climbed the hill to the
police station and
found our "refugees."
They were most happy
to see us. "You have followed us here," was
a common comment.
The women, in particular, were very pleased and welcoming to Gladys who
had been part
of the contingent that had brought them the first allotment of food.
The refugees have
been placed in a just-harvested corn field so there isn't even any grass.
For the first
night(s) they were sleeping on the ground in the open. Now, men were
building eucalyptus pole houses with plastic tops and sides. A few had
found iron sheets (perhaps salvaged from their burnt shops or houses)
which make a more substantial wall. The wind is blowing very hard, almost
constantly, so the plastic tarps were flapping loudly. I would
think this din would make it hard to sleep at night; I guess they will
get used to it.
The people in the camp told us that they had not received anything since
they arrived
from Lumakanda two days before. Not surprisingly, blankets were their
first request.
They had clearly enjoyed the rice we delivered previously. Predictably
it had run out
since there were only two 50 kilo (110 pound) bags. The American Friends
Service
Committee (AFSC) has sent us a small grant for the Lumakanda IDP's. We
hope to go to
Eldoret tomorrow to buy more relief supplies; but then one never knows.
Parliament begins sessions tomorrow and both sides plan on sitting on
the Government side of the building so this might lead to a crisis there.
There are three days of demonstrations scheduled for Wednesday, Thursday,
and Friday. Desmond Tutu raised hopes which were dashed; John Kufour,
the African Union president, raised hopes which were dashed. Now Kofi
Annan is scheduled to arrive tomorrow along with a few other eminent
Africans. People are not getting up their hopes again.
Human Rights Watch
has issued a strong statement against the Kenyan Government for using
excessive force ("shoot to kill" policy)
during the crackdowns, restricting the media, and the illegal ban against
demonstrations.
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