---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 4:32 PM
Subject: KENYA: Mau evictees still waiting three years on
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


KENYA: Mau evictees still waiting three years on

NAKURU/NAIROBI, 28 September 2011 (IRIN) - Evicted from their homes in
2009 when the government initiated efforts to restore Kenya's largest
water tower, the Mau Forest Complex, thousands of the affected
families are still without permanent shelter.

 The fact that the country's policy on internally displaced persons
(IDPs) has remained in draft form since 2009 does not give the
evictees hope that their plight will be resolved soon.

 "The first time we were thrown out of Mau Forest in November 2009, we
were promised resettlement in three months, but the time has turned to
years and still nothing," Joseph Maritim, a Mau evictee living at
Tirigoi camp, told IRIN. "We have known no homes for three years now,
yet even our tents are too tattered for chickens to live in, let alone
human beings."

 Even as the Mau evictees remain uncertain about their resettlement,
the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced
Persons, Chaloka Beyani - who recently visited the country - urged
Kenya to urgently address the dire living conditions and human rights
of the Mau and other IDPs in the country, including those displaced by
post-election violence and natural disasters.

 "A comprehensive strategy on internal displacement is essential to
Kenya, which has experienced repeated waves of internal displacement
in the past, provoked by post-election violence but also other
causes," Beyani said on 27 September at a news conference in Nairobi
at the end of his nine-day visit.

 "I encourage the Government of Kenya to adopt the draft policy on
protection and assistance to internally displaced persons, the
necessary implementing legislation which will be essential to give
practical effect to the policy, and to ratify the Kampala Convention
[African Union Convention on Protection and Assistance to Internally
Displaced Persons -
http://www.africa-union.org/root/au/Conferences/2009/october/pa/summit/AU-IDP%20Convention%20-%20Assembly%20-%20Final%20-%2010.23%20pm%2023%20Oct.doc
] at the earliest opportunity."

 As Kenya heads for general elections in 2012, Beyani said, it should
step up efforts to implement durable solutions for IDPs and to involve
them in peace and reconciliation efforts.

 "In my visits to sites of return and resettlement I found that there
was often a lack of basic services, such as sanitation facilities,
which needs to be addressed, while many of those remaining in
displacement after several years face health, shelter and education
challenges which we would only expect to see in an emergency phase,
and require immediate attention," Beyani said.

 IDP strategy

 He said the challenges should be addressed through the adoption of a
comprehensive strategy [
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=86762 ], founded on a
human rights-based approach and international and regional standards
such as the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, the Great
Lakes Protocol for Protection and Assistance to IDPs, and the African
Union Convention on Protection and the Kampala Convention.

 For the Mau evictees, suffering, delays and confusion over
resettlement continue to dominate their lives three years later. While
the need to restore the water tower - whose more than 120,000 hectares
were lost for 20 years - is crucial, authorities seem to have
neglected issues of humanitarian concern of those evicted.

 Ruth Chepkoech, another evictee, said a political motive seemed to
exist for their continued stay in camps.

 "They are waiting for next year [general elections] so that everyone
who wants to become president will promise us resettlement. The
government seems to be deriving pleasure from our suffering," she
said.

 Chepkoech, a mother of six, said her family often went for days
without food as government and relief agencies rarely helped the
evictees. She said the last time they received relief food was in
July. Even then, she said, "the food only lasted two weeks because we
took two meals a day. If we had not skipped lunch, it would have
lasted an even shorter time."

 To survive, most of the Mau evictees - adults and children alike -
seek casual jobs. "With the current inflation, everyone has to work
for his/her own stomach," Chepkoech said.

 According to Noor Hassan Noor, chairman of the Mau Forest Restoration
Interim Coordinating Secretariat, some 6,500 families have been
evicted from the Mau complex, while 23,500 more were likely to be
evicted in the next phase of the complex's restoration.

 Mandate extended

 The restoration of the Mau has been conducted through public-private
partnerships.

 The government recently extended the secretariat's mandate by 18
months, giving it more time to complete the evictions and restore the
Mau.

 However, Noor said: "Even another [extension of] two years will not
be enough; we have only reclaimed 27,000 acres [10,926ha] and have
another 80,000 [32,376ha] to go."

 Asked when those evicted would be resettled, Noor said: "I cannot
tell when every evictee will be resettled, but we are already working
with Chinese experts to fund them to grow bamboo after resettlement."

 The bamboo, he said, would earn the resettled evictees a living and
prevent them from destroying the forest.

 Resettlement promises

 In early 2011, Kenyan Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka, who visited one
of the camps, promised the evictees that they would be resettled
within the year. But nine months down the line, none of the families
has been moved to a new location where they can legally own a piece of
land as promised.

 At a recent political meeting in Nakuru, the provincial capital of
the Rift Valley, Prime Minister Raila Odinga said the evictees would
be resettled within the next two weeks in what observers saw as a bid
to woo the Kalenjin vote - the majority of evictees and the largest
ethnic group in the province.

 "But no one has come to tell us to prepare for resettlement so far,
yet the second week is almost halfway gone since the Prime Minister
made this promise," noted Maritim, who is a spokesman for the
evictees.

 Only time will tell if the evictees will move to homes that the
government has promised.

 "We are working closely with the Ministry of Lands and will see to it
that all evictees are resettled, but I cannot give the exact time that
resettlement will take," Noor said.

 Evictions continue

 However, Noor said a fresh wave of evictions would begin in the next
month and continue until the targeted 107,000ha of lost forest cover
is reclaimed.

 Meanwhile, efforts to safeguard the reclaimed parts of the Mau that
had not been destroyed have been boosted by the Kenya Forest Service
(KFS), which has provided more forest rangers and intensified patrols
in the area.

 But the presence of heavy security within Mau has led to conflict
between locals and forest rangers. Over the past two months, at least
seven rangers have been attacked and badly injured while protecting
the Mau Forest.

 "Some people who were used to destroying forests are not willing to
embrace conservation even when there is a threat of losing Kenya's
most important water tower," Alex Lemarkoko, the KFS deputy
commandant, told IRIN.

 He said KFS had initiated projects involving the youth, some of whom
made a living through illegal logging and burning charcoal.

 The youths are employed as scouts to form part of the Forest Security
team, "but there are people who do not want to work, they think they
have a right to steal from the forests", Lemarkoko said.

 rk-mk/js/mw

[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93843



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