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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 6:46 PM
Subject: KENYA: Bringing pastoralists in from the cold
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


KENYA: Bringing pastoralists in from the cold

WAJIR/MANDERA, 21 September 2011 (IRIN) - When Kenya set up a ministry
dedicated to developing its vast, arid north in 2008, placing a
veteran humanitarian at its helm, it appeared to send a message that
it was finally serious about reversing decades of marginalization and
the effects of recurrent, inevitable weather shocks.

 Within three years, there have been two major droughts, which each
time have left more than three million people in Kenya's arid and
semi-arid lands (ASALs) in need of emergency aid.

 The refrain has been the same: emphasis on the importance of
development and pro-pastoralist policies, of disaster-prevention
rather than (much more costly) reaction. So why has so little been
achieved?

 It is a question of perception to an extent - maybe expecting too
much, too soon, says former aid worker and renowned livestock expert,
Andrew Catley, who initiated efforts to develop the Livestock
Emergency Guidelines and Standards (LEGS). "You can see the glass as
being half-full or empty; no other country in the region has put
forward a comparable ministry.

 "Kenya has realized the importance of developing arid lands and
pastoralism... The ministry is young - it is grappling but it has a
good team... and they are trying to lobby support."

 The ministry is headed by Mohamed Elmi, who was born into a
pastoralist community and worked with Oxfam in Kenya for a decade. He
readily admits there are gaps in government policy, structural
problems rooted in entrenched prejudices against and consequent
neglect of pastoralist communities, especially when compared with
other economic sectors.

 "I always point out if the coffee industry did not get the support it
did from the government, it would not have survived," Elmi told IRIN.

 While 75 percent of Kenya's livestock are in ASALs, only 10 percent
of livestock officers are based there.

 A livestock marketing board is in the works, but Elmi was unsure when
it would come into being. Yet even without the similar boards or
producer organizations enjoyed by the dairy, tea, coffee and maize
industries, pastoralism accounts for at least 12 percent of Kenya's
GDP, according to government data, which some analysts [
http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/17065IIED.pdf ] say greatly underestimates
the true value of the sector.

 "The value chain of pastoralism has not been accepted at the policy
level," noted Michael Tiampati, national coordinator of the
Pastoralist Development Network of Kenya. The Ministry of Livestock
focuses mainly on dairy, poultry and pig farming.

 "It ignores the fact that the nyama choma [roast meat] industry is
driven primarily by pastoralist livestock," he said, adding that
hides, skins and other products of pastoralism were often left out of
the equation.

 A draft policy drawn up in 2004 on the sustainable development of
ASALs had yet to be approved, he said.

 The policy calls for investment in infrastructure, security, peace
building, conflict management, job creation, the management of natural
resources and drought, land reforms, adaptation to climate change,
science, technology and innovation. It draws linkages between the
geographical conditions of the region and livelihoods.

 Kenya is a meat-deficit country. According to a study cited by the
government's draft Vision 2030 development strategy for northern Kenya
and ASALs, increased production in the North Eastern Province to meet
half the deficit could create as many as 400,000 jobs.

 Drought response

 Elmi said that while Kenya had a well-developed drought management
strategy with a good early warning system, it had not been
institutionalized.

 "We don't have a disaster authority like countries in southern Africa
- where in case of a natural disaster, you can mobilize funds and
coordinate responses almost instantly through the established
structures."

 He has proposed a National Drought Management Authority, to focus on
short- and long-term interventions and response coordination, and a
National Drought Contingency Fund to support it financially.

 Elmi said the government hoped to raise money for contingencies
through the Adaptation Fund set up under the auspices of UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change. Long-term interventions such as building
water dams not only count as disaster risk reduction efforts, but
double up as climate change adaptation strategies.

 "Besides, the frequency and severity of drought periods is already
increasing," he said. "Northern Kenya recorded 28 major droughts in
the last century, four in the past decade."

 Elmi expected the authority to be up and running in a few weeks.

 "He [Elmi] has really had to work hard to push the idea of a drought
authority through," commented Tiampati. "The drought authority is a
legacy he wants to leave behind." It has taken him almost four years.

 Scarred

 The discrimination against pastoralists to an extent is influenced by
northern Kenya's turbulent past. The North Eastern Province is
predominantly Muslim and Somali and its people had sought a merger
with Somalia before Kenya's independence from Britain. Their calls
were ignored by the British and later by the Kenyan government,
leading to the "Shifta [banditry] war" of 1963-1968.

 Diyad Hujale, an official with a Wajir-based NGO, Arid Lands
Development Focus, said the scars of the emergency laws imposed on the
province remain.

 Attempts were made to resettle the pastoralist community. "It is
still a question of changing the mind-set of the people and to see
Somalis as part of Kenya and bring much-needed investment in."

 A 2007 paper produced for the Inter-Governmental Authority on
Development and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization states,
"While [economic] liberalization [in Kenya] has brought many changes,
democratization has not whisked away the patrimonialism and ethnic
favoritism that have so stifled the chances for significant policy
changes in the past."

 Elmi added: "The language [to describe pastoralists and pastoralism]
can be hurtful," he said. "It has been difficult. But the situation is
improving. We have a new constitution [2010] in place, [which offers
opportunities to secure the rights to resources and protect land
rights for pastoralists]."

 The previous constitution allowed individual investors to ignore the
collective rights of pastoralists under customary law to acquire their
land. Nearly 15 percent of the land in semi-arid areas has been taken
for national parks and reserves.

 A change in perception will require a strong advocacy campaign. The
government's draft policy makes a case for convincing the rest of
Kenya of the benefits of developing ASALs.

 "With countries such as Ethiopia, Sudan and Somalia as the region's
neighbours, it could become the bridgehead to a regional economy of
more than 100 million people," said Elmi. The government was
prioritizing the development of transport corridors linking Kenya to
key markets in Ethiopia, Sudan and Somalia and beyond to the Middle
East through the northern ASALs. "In 10, 15 years, northern Kenya will
be a different place," he said.

 The government's draft policy also emphasizes that the million-dollar
ecotourism industry, a substantial foreign-exchange earner, is 90
percent based in ASALs.

 But in the popular imagination, the draft policy acknowledges,
northern Kenya is viewed as unsafe, violent and inaccessible, which
has deterred investment.

 Poor record

 North Eastern Province has Kenya's worst human development scores,
according to the government. It is the country's poorest: only about
34 percent of households have access to water, with most depending on
unprotected wells and springs. The national average for water access
is 57 percent.

 Regional disparities in access to essential services are glaring.
Neighbouring Central Province has 190 doctors - one doctor for every
21,000 people - while North Eastern has only nine - one doctor for
every 121,000 people. For 60 percent of students in northern Kenya
there is no school within 6km. Only one district, Isiolo in
neighbouring Eastern Province, is connected to the national
electricity grid.

 Elmi said it was difficult to convince donors, who fund aid agencies,
to invest in long-term developmental projects.

 Leading pastoral expert Peter Little said one of the problems was
that "governments and development agencies often hold similar
stereotypes" about ASALs as "food aid" sink holes and humanitarian
disaster areas, with the goal being "to replace pastoralism rather
than trying to strengthen the livestock sector".

 Half the population in two of the three districts in North Eastern
Province - Mandera and Wajir - once again need emergency food aid,
according to the latest report from the Kenya Food Security Steering
Group (KFSSG), which includes the government, UN agencies and NGOs.

 The numbers of hungry in Wajir are as high as they were during the
last drought in 2008-2009. Michael Adams, an official with the
international NGO, Care, said: "The truth is we are human beings - we
cannot watch people dying - so most of the aid and money has been
focused on short-term interventions, such as food aid."

 The KFFSG listed most of the funds it needed for food interventions -
$205 million out of $370 million. Agriculture and livestock have been
allocated a paltry $9.7 million and $11.8 million, respectively.

 Adams also cited lack of access and poor infrastructure that
prevented NGOs from setting up long-term projects deeper in the
province. "It is much easier to monitor projects which are accessible,
which is why NGOs tend to concentrate on towns and settlements."

 The tarmac road from Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, ends in Garissa
district, while dirt tracks serve as the main arteries in the
province.

 Time seems to have stood still for pastoralists in Mandera. "My
father struggled with the droughts, which is why I could not complete
my schooling - nothing has changed, I am still here and in the same
position as my father, but I don't want my children to grow up like
me," said Shukri Hussain, a 30-year-old pastoralist in Mandera's
Bolowle village.

 jk/am/mw[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93786



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