Kenya Reports
Report #31
February 11, 2008
On Friday Kofi Annan
announced that an agreement has being reached between the two sides
and the details will be available early this week. People
are guardedly hopeful that some accommodation will be reached. But, as
they say, the devil is in the details. (One of my favorite explanations
of the current crisis is from a woman who said, "On Dec 30
Satan came to Kenya.") I would not be surprised that the agreement
when announced might lead to another round of violence as the "hardliners" on
both sides will feel that they have been sold out by the compromises.
Hopefully I am wrong.
The changes are supposed
to be far-reaching. I have some qualms about the fact that 8 negotiators
and their political parties are chartering
the course of the country, meaning that women, youth, the religious community,
NGO's, and the business community are all, as usual, left out. This was
the case with the compromise in Burundi and the result has been a squabbling,
ineffective government. When will the world develop a system where all
parts of society negotiate the conditions for a country's existence and
well-being? I am certain that both political parties will see that their
interests are properly served before those of the other actors in the
country. It is possible that the “compromise” may lead to
a political storm (rather than a violent storm) by those who have not
been consulted. Or perhaps everyone is so tired that they will accept
anything handed to them.
Lumakanda town, this morning (Monday), has been more like a normal day
than any other since Dec 30. Many people are in town going about their
various businesses, the motorcycle taxi drivers are busy, and I can easily
buy a newspaper!
What the Daily Nation (Kenya's largest newspaper with a circulation
of over 1,000,000!) covered today was all those affected by the violence--children
not in school, children in
IDP camps, colleges and other institutions who have lost their staff,
manufacturing businesses that are closed, hospitals and other government
offices which are understaffed as the employees fled, roads that aren't
being built, lost employment, and the other costs of 6 weeks of violence
and stalemate. A Quaker in Nairobi whose wholesale establishment was
looted says he will re-open, but not now. A large-scale farmer I know
says he is cutting back on the acreage of maize (corn) he will plant
next month because he does not know if he will get seeds and fertilizer,
or what price he might have to pay. The cost of travel has almost doubled--for
example, a matatu from Lumakanda to Kakamega has gone from 120/- to 300/-
; and the price increase does not seem like it is going to go down to
where it was before. I have seen people wanting to get a ride in a matatu
asking for the price and, seeing that it is more than they have, not
taking the ride.[Note: /- is the symbol for Kenyan Shilling.]
Okay, I need to report
some good news. There is a place in Kenya called the Laikipia Nature
Conservancy (www.gallmannkenya.org). It is a 100,000
acre preserve next to Lake Baringo in the drier parts of the Rift Valley.
They have a 60 person education center and they have done peacemaking
activities there in the past in addition to their normal purpose of conservation
education. Right now they have 40 youth from the Nairobi slums, many
of whom were involved in destruction, there for a week of "healing".
They needed some help so the United States Institute of Peace [USIP],
which has supported both AGLI and the Conservancy in the past, recommended
us to them. As a result Getry Agizah, Peter Serete, and Martin Oloo,
all young, experienced AVP facilitators, are leading these youth through
the AVP course on esteem,
communication, cooperation, and non-violent conflict resolution each
morning. In the afternoon others lead sessions on art, drama, music,
etc. The three facilitators had problems getting there because the bus
broke down. I asked Getry if she was happy and she reported, "We
are very happy and glad to have the Nairobi youth. Life is simple and
peaceful. Just finished the sessions. We are on the truck going around
the forest (where there is much wildlife)." Likewise we are continuing
the daily listening sessions with employees at the Center for Disease
Control in Kisumu. As the situation in Kisumu has calmed down these trainings
seem to have become routine with the participants being energized at
the end of each day with the training activity that is called "On
the Way Forward."
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