Kenya Reports
Report #19
January 16, 2008
Yesterday I ran out of electricity because it has been cloudy for the
last two days and my solar panel did not charge up my battery. It is
cloudy again today, but I am writing this early before the little electricity
I have runs out.
Last night the ODM candidate won the election for Speaker of Parliament
and as soon as it was announced on the radio, we heard shouts of joy
from the neighborhood. Today doesn't look so good. We had no problems
in going to Kakamega (except the Supermarket, where Gladys was shopping,
closed their doors and kept everyone inside when the police were chasing
the youth through town. In Nairobi, Douglas Shikuunzi, my step-son, called
to say that everyone in the central city was told to go home and there
were no matatus so he will have to walk home.
In Eldoret today I have heard from a number of sources that things are
really bad with the youth organizing to attack the police (and vis versa).
Stores have all shut down.
Gladys (my
wife) and I went to Eldoret yesterday with Malesi, Getry, and Shamala
(our partners in Friends for Peace and Community Development).
We went for a listening session with the staff of the Eldoret Prison
with whom we have done a lot of AVP (and where we did two AVP workshops
with the inmates). The group was very diverse (but no Kikuyu). My favorite
image is of one of the guards, who is an AVP facilitator, indicating
how good AVP was with his automatic rifle pointing right to his mouth!
I have become so used to seeing police, guards, etc with guns, I didn't
even much notice this until he spoke about AVP. The situation in Eldoret
was really bad and everyone was affected. One woman, whose husband is
a Kisii (it is not only Kikuyu who are being targeted), was threatened
after she was seen helping some members of her family. Others talked
about most of their neighbors being burned out. The situation in Eldoret
seems quite different from elsewhere (Nairobi, Kisumu, Kakamega). A Kalenjin
said that most of the destruction in Eldoret was done by villagers
from the
countryside. There everyone who is over 25 is required to join in a group
with the old warrior mentality and these are the ones who did the attacking;
such as at the church which was burned down. They can only be stopped
by their elders: if the elders refuse to bless their attacks. This it
seems is what happened to calm down the town. The same person told us
that last time the violence was spontaneous, but now the violence is
being planned
and therefore could be much worse. The Kalenjins consider the area around
Eldoret to be their homeland and everyone else is a "stranger" that
canbe sent back to their home of origin.
We went by Kakamega Friends Church and found that the 65 people who
had fled to the church had left because school was beginning and there
is a nursery school in the Church compound. We were told that not all
of these refugees were Kikuyu. They had been given a small amount of
funds to travel back to their place of origin, but most did not even
know where they came from since they had lived in the area for generations.
We went to Kakamega today. I helped interview new candidates for an
additional AVP position and Gladys went to town with Getry to buy relief
supplies--blankets, cooking oil, Vaseline, tea, and sugar for the IDP's
from Lumakanda who are now in Turbo. The funds for this were supplied
by the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC). When we arrived in
Turbo the police gave us a rough time. The head officer said that the
food had to be inspected by the Health Department to make sure it was
fit for human consumption. Two policewomen at the entrance asked Gladys
why we were helping the Kikuyu when they were the cause of all the problems.
So as Gladys talked with the police, I went and found the camp leaders
who knew us well. One of the leaders and the clerk came and talked with
the police, letting them know that we were their friends, etc. So we
unloaded the goods and the clerk wrote down a list of what we delivered.
It was late in the afternoon and they were pondering whether they could
distribute the goods before night. I suggested that they at least give
out the blankets since it would help keep people warm in the cold night
(due to the cloudiness and rain two days ago). Of course, the goods were
much appreciated.
One of the people we interviewed for the AVP position was a Luo from
Nyanza province. He had many interesting stories. His brother is hiding
two Kikuyu in his house. When youth blocked the road near his town, he
got out of the matatu and talked with the youth and got them to remove
the stones that were blocking the road.
All the
matatus (and there were few of them) and trucks had green branches
on the front and back. According to ODM, those who were going to their
demonstrations (today is the first of three days of national demonstrations)
should be carrying branches and not participate in any kind of violence.
Those branches were a sign of support for ODM so that the matatu or truck
would not be stopped by youth. When the matutu which we had hired to
carry the goods pulled into the IDP camp questions came quickly about
why they had the branches on them. The folks in the IDP camp clearly
did not support ODM. The driver and conductor replied that they had to
do this in order to
move safely down the roads. Such is the ambiguity of the situation.
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