Kenya Reports
Report #34
February 24, 2008
The team lead by Kofi Annan was supposed to release the details of the
power-sharing agreement between the two sides on Friday. That didn't
happen. It seems like the Kibaki/PNU side is again procrastinating (they
feel that time is on their side). So the Raila/ODM side has called for
mass action on Wednesday (Feb. 27). Rather than just demonstrations,
as in the past (which were broken up violently by the police), ODM is
calling for what I would describe as a general strike. No one is to go
to work; roads will be blocked, etc. Due to the recent history of violence
this action will be extremely effective--everyone will be afraid to travel
or to go to work. Everyone will stay home and the country will shut down.
On Wednesday we were planning to go to Nairobi for our flight to the
US on Thursday. If the action is not called off by Monday, we will travel
to Nairobi on Tuesday. See how effective this threat is!
Yesterday Gladys and I went to Kakamega for a meeting with CAPP (essentially
peace committee members) and AVP members from the various yearly meetings.
During this meeting a woman from Chwele Yearly Meeting, which is right
below the fighting on Mt. Elgon, told us that the previous night a
member of one of the Quaker meetings was attacked by the Sabaot Land
Defense Force (SLDF) which is responsible for much of the destruction
and death on the mountain. His head was cut off and has not yet been
found. (Note: Is it more "civilized" to attack people, say
in Iraq, with heavy weapons so the body parts are all over the place?)
Most of the Sabaot, who live higher up on the slopes of the
mountain, have been displaced, so the SLDF is now moving further down
the hill to steal cattle and goods killing people in the process. This
area is very heavily populated by Quakers--every mile or two is another
Quaker school. As the violence increases--and the current political
crisis has been a great "cover" for increased attacks and
ethnic cleanings in the area--the Quakers there will be more and more
affected. Will the larger Quaker community in Kenya and the world take
note of this and respond?
Yesterday we also bought goods in Kakamega for the internally displaced
Lumakanda people who are now at the police station in nearby Turbo.
We picked up four members of the Church including the pastor, James
Majeta. As usual we delivered the food. There has not been significant
rain in this area for almost four months. The IDP camp is at the top
of a hill on fields that grew corn last year. The place is totally
dry. The soil is very loose. The wind blows much of the time, sometimes
very hard, and the dust blows everywhere. In an hour my hair (like
everyone else's there) was covered with dust. They told me that a cow
dies almost every day because there is not sufficient grass to feed
them. As I looked at the cows I could see that many were thin with
ribs showing. Although some of the people have moved back to their
houses (see the comments about Silas Njoroge below) and some have returned
to Central Province (the Kikuyu "ancestral home"), those
who remain do not have homes to return to and perhaps do not even know
where their "ancestral home" is.)
Here I will tell a story. You have to figure out the moral of the story.
Gladys has a distant relative who works in Nairobi; but his wife and
children live near us. These people are therefore Luhya, the dominant
group in Lugari District. They are the ones who supply us each morning
and evening with milk for our tea (and other uses). There are two older
sons, Anthony, 21, and Nivan, 20. Both have completed secondary school
and, as even they themselves say, are part of the "idle youth" who
have nothing to do. About two weeks ago Nivan brought the evening milk
about 6:00 pm. He went to the road, saw his brother and another friend,
and they decided to walk over to Anthony's girlfriend's house. As they
walked near the hospital and police station, there was a group of three
Kikuyu boys following them. One of them came up to Nivan and started
to attack him. The attacker then pulled out a machete and tried to
strike him on the head. Nivan put up his left arm to ward off the blow
and the machete cut through one of his arm bones and half way through
the second. They rushed Nivan to the nearby hospital. About 8:00 pm
the hospital called and told us to come and see him. This we did. By
the time we reached the hospital he had been stitched up, given an
antibiotic, and was doing fairly well considering the circumstances.
Gladys paid the hospital bill. (It cost a little over $5. What would
this have cost in the US?). Neither Anthony nor Nivan knew the attacker,
but they did know the boys he was with. At this point it looked like
this was an ethnic attack with a Kikuyu attacking a Luhya.
So then we went to the police station to report the incident. As soon
as we arrived, the policeman said this was a case of a love triangle.
If this is correct, then this is not one ethnic group attacking another,
but "ethnic love" as two boys are fighting over the same
girl (who is a Luhya). The only problem with this interpretation is
that the girl is Anthony's girlfriend, yet Nivan is the one who was
attacked. Moreover, as Anthony said to me, "If I had a rival,
I didn't know it." So you can decide, "Is this ethnic hatred
or ethnic love?" As I have said before, if one investigated the
details of many of these incidents, the results would not be too clear.
Last Monday Gladys called the Anthony and Nivan's Mom and asked her
to send them up with the evening milk. We talked with them more about
the incident--Nivan is recovered well enough. ("I don't want to
be a cripple," he sometimes says. Then other times he talks about
how lucky he was to put up his arm to ward off the blow since he probably
would have been killed.) The attacker has fled Lumakanda area and no
one knows where he is. One of the other Kikuyu boys had been put in
jail but he was released since he hadn’t actually done anything
that was a chargeable offense. We discussed with them the idea of doing
AVP with the youth. Would they be able to assemble a group of 20 youth,
male and female, of various ethnic backgrounds to have a workshop?
They said they could so we arranged for five or six of them to come
back on Friday to meet with us and Getry, the AVP coordinator; and
they came. Five youth (2 female, 3 male; 4 Luhya and 1 Luo) came to
discuss the situation with Getry. The result is that on March 3, Getry
and two other facilitators will begin an AVP workshop with them which
will include Luhya, Nandi (local Kalenjin group), Luo, and Kikuyu.
They said they have known each other since they were kids in school.
But another interesting thought came out of the discussion. Getry had
introduced the idea that the youth were being blamed for all the violence.
Anthony responded that on Dec 30 (the evening the election results
were announced and the violence started) many adults were telling the
youth to attack the Kikuyu. In particular, the adults said to attack
Silas Njoroge whose house was looted but not burned -- perhaps because
it is close to the town and the police station. (He has now returned
to his house.) If the youth killed someone, they were told they could
come back for a reward. Anthony said, and the others agreed, that there
was a lot of peer pressure to join in the attacks and the youth really
faulted the older people for promoting this.
Ray Downing, a doctor at Webuye Hospital, (who formerly worked at the
Quaker Lugulu Hospital up the mountain from Webuye) asked the question, "Why
don't we study those areas (such as Webuye and Bungoma) where there
was no violence?" In other words, rather than focusing only on
the bad areas, why don't we try to understand the good areas? At one
point I replied that I thought the Webuye/Bungoma area had not erupted
into violence because the people there voted for Kibaki rather than
Raila. (This voting was really anti-Raila, who they didn't like, rather
than pro-Kibaki. Nonetheless, it got Kibaki the votes he needed. Ray
Downing replied that the older people in the area voted for Kibaki,
but that the younger people voted for Raila. Later I was in a meeting
where two parents said they had voted for Kibaki while their children
had voted for Raila and that this had brought great tension into the
family.
This led me to realize that it is the elders (Bush, Cheney, et alter)
who send the youth to war in Iraq. It is the Kalenjin elders who send
their warriors to attack the Kikuyu and the church which was burned
down in Eldoret. It was the elders here in Lumakanda who encouraged
the youth to attack the local Kikuyu. Where the elders did not encourage
the youth, or perhaps discouraged the youth from attacking, the youth
were not violent. If this interpretation is correct, then it is the
older people who are responsible for the violence, death, and chaos
in Kenya and not the youth who physically did the damage.
I guess this is enough thoughts for one day.
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