Kenya Reports
Report #43
April 21, 2008
Today was
an interesting day as the counselors from the Friends Church Peace
Teams (FCPT) visited the internally displaced people's (IDP) camp
at Turbo. About a week ago, Jodi Richmond of Friends Theological College
did a training at the Lubao Center for about thirty plus Friends who
had some counseling skills. The plan was for them to then go to the Turbo
IDP camp and counsel some of the 4,000 people still at the camp. About
thirty of these counselors (six were experienced AVP facilitators plus
three youth from the IDP camp that we trained as AVP facilitators just
last week) showed up at the Turbo post office and were taken to the IDP
camp. The counselors were divided into four groups--children, youth,
women, and men. While the concept was that each counselor would have
five people in his/her group, the reality was that most groups had about
fifteen. The number of children was overwhelming. They were divided up
into three or four age groups and still there were 100 or more in each
group. The counseling sessions were done out in an open field. People
just stood
or sat down on appropriate ridges or rocks--a few school benches were
brought out. All told, I think that there were at least one thousand
people participating (including the children). The youth and adults talked
in their groups for at least two hours!!!
As part
of the program the FCPT brought some food for distribution. Gladys
and I (with others) had gone there the previous week to make the
last distribution of the relief supplies we had for the Lumakanda people.
We were told that we could no longer give relief directly to the Lumakanda
people. What we brought each time was a very small amount for 4000 people.
Instead we are now to give it to the Red Cross who will distribute it
to a select group--elderly people it was determined. So today the FCPT
relief supplies had to be given to the Red Cross, and so it was done.
During the counseling time, one group of men required me to come speak
to them.
Their concern was that if the food was given to the Red Cross it would
be sold off and not given out in the camps. At another time two men had
told shared the same concern with me. They wanted us to distribute the
food right then and there ourselves because they said that those bringing
the food would not be stealing it.
Will the Turbo IDP's receive the goods the FCPT gave them? We left the
list with George Njoroge, the camp's IDP chairman. I'll ask him and others
when I see them next.
On March
22 The Daily Nation had a four page advertisement placed by the Red
Cross telling
of their work during the crisis including and long
lists of everyone who had contributed. Okay, let us see how the Americans
did--American Red Cross--3,250,000/-, Netherlands Red Cross--147,000,000/-
(45 times more than the Americans), Canadian Red Cross--6,876,228/- (more
than twice). Under "Governments, " they listed USAID--12,543,600/-
and British Government (DFID)--135,000,000/- (11 times more than USAID).
Is American generosity for places in distress really only a myth? Americans,
by this measure, were sure far from generous in the relief
in Kenya!
But then the Red
Cross reports in this advertisement: "This has
enabled humanitarian aid to reach each person in IDP camps countrywide." Yet
all the previous distributions by the Friends Church Peace Team were
made to IDP's who had not been served by the Red Cross. Person after
person reported that the Red Cross trucks passed them by and never helped
them out. The IDP's who are not Kikuyu claim that the Red Cross (at least
in Western Province) only served the Kikuyu and neglected anyone from
other ethnic groups.
As part
of this effort, Kaimosi Hospital rented an ambulance and sent their
head nurse, Irene Gulavi, with some medicines. I wasn't sure if
this was necessary because the Government had a clinic at the camp. How
wrong I was! She had a long line of people waiting for her services and
she was still working away when the rest of us left after 3:00 p.m. This
clearly indicated that the Government clinic was not working properly.
When I asked folks whom I knew, I was told that the Government clinic
had no medicine and so they just wrote a prescription for people to go
buy the medicine. But since the refugees didn't have any money to buy
the medicine, they didn't. So, in the end, I was sure glad that Irene
came.
I talked with a number of the FCPT counselors following their sessions
with the IDPs and I heard the following:
1. The youth were still very bitter and could easily be goaded into
attacking and killing others.
2. The young women in the camp were being solicited by some of the policemen
in the station, and with few other sources of income, some of them were
falling into prostitution.
3. Almost no one wanted to go back to their home communities because
they knew the people who destroyed their houses; they could see their
possessions in the houses of their neighbors. Whenever they visited their
former home, for one reason or another, they were asked why they were
coming back. When I asked some where they wanted to go, they responded
that they wanted the Government to buy land for them in places like Nakuru--which,
in my opinion, was perhaps even worse than the Lugari area!
4. One person asked the FCPT counselor why there were no Nandi (the
local Kalenjin group that did much of the trouble in the area) in our
team. Another asked why the Luhya (the group that most Friends belong
to and most of the counselors were from, and the majority population
in Lugari District) did not help them out when they were attacked. Interesting
questions!
5. Many of the IDP's were very angry with certain Nandi politicians
whom they claimed incited people to force them out of their land, homes,
and businesses.
I think that the day was a real eye-opener for the thirty or so Friends'
counselors. Everyone is supposed to make a report of what they did and
learned and on May 2 there will be a committee meeting to discuss this
and to discern the way forward. Then the following week there will be
another two-day retreat for all the counselors.
I have been asked to be the Chair of the FCPT counseling group!!! I
asked them to get someone else, but they ended up selecting me anyway.
I didn't think I could really refuse since this is the work I am supposed
to be doing.
For me the most poignant time of the day was when we were in the field
and I noticed a small toy compound obviously made by the kids. It was
built solely of dirt, rocks, and twigs! Quite neatly and nicely done--much
more like the home they fled than the IDP camp.
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