---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 9:33 AM
Subject: KENYA: Disasters continue to happen
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


KENYA: Disasters continue to happen

NAIROBI, 21 September 2011 (IRIN) - To illustrate the lack of disaster
preparedness across East Africa, a cartoon in a weekly newspaper
lists, tongue in cheek, the six chapters of the region's disaster
preparedness and management blueprint. These range from visits by
political dignitaries to the scene of disaster, declaration of days of
mourning, calls for foreign aid, rhetoric, promises to take action,
the blame game and finally, business as usual.

 The situation in Kenya, especially concerning man-made disasters,
seems to follow this script. IRIN looks at some potential "disasters
waiting to happen", as well as recent incidents, focusing on the
impact, immediate action taken and whether or not lessons learnt have
resulted in better preparedness:

 1. Railway line destruction across Kibera slum in Nairobi: In the
event of a train crash, the impact would be deadly given the numbers
of people living in the slum (said to be Africa's largest, with up to
200,000 people, according to the latest census) and the fact that
structures have been built so close to the railway line.

 2. Construction under electric power lines or close to petroleum
pipelines: Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu are some of Kenya's main cities
with such buildings, mostly in densely populated, low-income areas. In
Kisumu city, the village of Usoma is located a few metres from the
Kisumu Pipeline Depot.

 3. Construction of residential buildings and other structures close
to airports, such as Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, as well as
airports and airstrips in towns such as Eldoret, Kitale (in the Rift
Valley) and Kakamega (in Western Province). On 13 September, Internal
Security Minister Orwa Ojode, speaking about the situation around
JKIA, said: "This is a disaster in waiting. The government cannot take
any more of such laxity and resistance to relocation. We must move
with speed and save Kenyans from avoidable death traps."

 4. Siphoning of fuel from oil tanker vehicles involved in accidents:
Despite an incident in the Rift Valley in February 2009 when more than
100 people died, the danger posed by traffic accidents involving
vehicles carrying petroleum products remains. Immediately after the
Salgaa incident, the Kenyan president directed the establishment of
special off-road parking bays for truckers but this has not yet been
effected.

 5. Floods: So far, incidents of flooding reported in 2011 have not
caused serious damage but weather experts and disaster preparedness
officials have warned that parts of the country, especially the
drought-affected northwest as well as Upper Eastern, could experience
floods during the coming rainy season (October-November). In mid-2010,
more than 60 people died and thousands more were displaced following
floods and mudslides across the country, according to the Kenya Red
Cross Society.

 Recent incidents

 5. Fire: More than 100 people were killed, dozens injured and
thousands displaced on 12 September following a fire caused by a fuel
leak from a Kenya Pipeline Company petrol pipeline. Prime Minister
Raila Odinga, Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka, among other officials,
visited the scene the same day. Those displaced are staying at a
social hall pending relocation. The government has announced it will
find alternative accommodation for them. At present, disaster response
in Kenya is ad-hoc although the government did draft a National Policy
for Disaster Management in Kenya in March 2009, and a National
Disaster Response Plan.

 According to the Kenya National Disaster Operational Centre, 110 fire
incidents have occurred this year, up from 70 between October and
December 2010. Most of this year's incidents have been in urban slums.

 6. Road accidents: In September alone, at least 50 deaths occurred in
traffic accidents. The latest incident on 19 September involved a
Mandera-bound bus that crashed, killing 13 passengers and injured 34
others. In August, 23 people died in an accident in Mbooni, Eastern
Province. Such accidents continue, despite the government having put
in place regulations aimed at controlling the speed and conduct of
public transport buses and other vehicles (matatus), most of which are
involved in the accidents.

 7. Illicit alcohol: More than 30 people died in September after
consuming contaminated illegal liquor in Nyahururu, Ruiru and Kiambu
areas of Central Province. In a recent statement, Police Commissioner
Mathew Iteere said this month had been the worst since he started his
tenure in 2009, with more than 250 deaths reported countrywide in
various incidents.

 8. Sub-standard construction: Multi-storey buildings in Nairobi and
other towns across the country have collapsed while still under
construction owing to poor building standards, causing death and
injuries. On 18 September, four people died when a half-finished
building collapsed in Vihiga town in western Kenya. On 16 June, four
people died and several others were injured when a two-storey building
collapsed in Nairobi.

 js/mw

[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93771



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