22,409,326 members doing good!
share your passions, stories, inspirations, and more
Sep 22, 2012

This is just a taste of what's to come unless we start finding postive and proactive solutions that work now.


   Kenya’s Water Wars Kill Scores

Reprint |   | Print | |En español
Mandera North, in Kenya’s North Eastern province has also been the scene of recent conflict over water. Credit: Protus Onyango/IPS

Mandera North, in Kenya’s North Eastern province has also been the scene of recent conflict over water. Credit: Protus Onyango/IPS

NAIROBI, Sep 11 2012 (IP - Water scarcity is fuelling deadly inter-ethnic wars that continue to claim lives in Kenya, according to government officials. And if nothing is done to educate communities on how to conserve the valuable resource, the situation will escalate, governance experts and environmentalists warn.

On Sunday, Sep. 9, 38 people were killed in revenge attacks in the Tana River Delta district of Kenya’s Coast province. The deceased include eight children, five women, 16 men, and nine police officers.

The incident occurred as the government announced it would conduct a disarmament exercise in the Tana River Delta following clashes over water and pasture that have left more than 80 people dead.

Coast province police boss Aggrey Adoli told IPS that about 500 raiders from the Pokomo ethnic group attacked the Kilelengwani village, in Tana River Delta, and torched a police camp and several other structures at dawn. On Monday, Sep. 10 the area was inaccessible and police officers were flown in by helicopter to quell the violence.

“This was in retaliation to Thursday’s incident in which 13 Pokomos were killed when raiders from the Orma (ethnic group) struck the Tarassa village in the area,” Adoli said.

The attacks are in retaliation to an Aug. 22 incident over water and resources that resulted in the death of 52 people, including 11 children and 31 women. The attack occurred after cattle owned by the Orma ethnic group strayed onto farmlands belonging to the neighbouring Pokomo community and destroyed their crops. Both communities have a long history of conflict over resources.

But conflict over resources is not confined to this region. Also on Aug. 22, four people were killed in a separate incident in Muradellow village in Mandera North, in North Eastern province. Police said that the conflict occurred at a water point where herders had taken their animals.

In March, 22 people were killed in Mandera, in North Eastern. More than 1,500 people fled their homes as a result of the violence, which occurred in El Golicha village, close to Kenya’s border with Somalia.

North Eastern provincial officer Ernest Munyi, who is also the region’s assistant commissioner of police, told IPS that the attacks were becoming more frequent.

“Clan attacks are common in the region, which has now been witnessing clashes every month since February. The attacks were often sporadic, targeting members of other clans but usually arise from resource competition.

“These are nomadic pastoralists who depend on livestock for survival. They rustle livestock and fight over water and the few grazing fields,” he said.

Political leaders, human rights activists and environmentalists are calling on the government to address the problem urgently.

Mwalimu Mati, the chief executive of Mars Group, an NGO that deals with governance, told IPS that the government must provide equitable resources to end the clashes.

“Resource conflict will be with us for a long (time) because the government policies that promote timber harvesting have resulted in deforestation,” said Mati, who is also a lawyer. Scanty forest cover has resulted in the reduced rainfall here, according to water experts.

Peter Mangich, the director of water services at the Ministry of Water and Irrigation, told IPS that due to the effects of climate change, the country now only received one quarter of its previous rainfall.

“The average annual rainfall is 630 millimeters, which should be four times this figure to be enough. The National Development Plan 2002 to 2008 recognises Kenya as a water-scarce country where the water demand exceeds renewable freshwater sources,” he said.

“Our depleting natural water resources, due to inadequate rainfall and scanty forest cover that stands at three percent, are the problem. The country’s water basins do not reach an equitable area of the country,” he said.

And it is the reason for the increased conflict, according to Dr. Bernard Rop, a former Commissioner of Mines, a geologist and environmentalist.

“As a result of the skewed water distribution between the country’s water basins and within the basins, water use conflicts arise out of demand of water for irrigation, livestock, wildlife and environmental conservation,” Rop told IPS.

“There have been clashes over water and grazing fields in most parts of North Eastern, Turkana, Samburu and Pokot in the Rift Valley and the Coast regions for the last 10 years, resulting in the death of 400 people and the theft of 10,000 livestock,” he said.

Mati pointed out that conflict over resources would spread to other parts of the country that were not water scarce.

“Conflict will not only be in dry areas. Climate change is real and even countries that share the River Nile are quarrelling over it. Let the government adopt other means to solve this problem,” he said.

Mati explained the need for water had resulted in Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Sudan calling for the revocation of a 1959 treaty, brokered by the United Kingdom, that gave Egypt, and to a lesser extent Sudan, historical rights to the river’s resources.

Rop said that Kenya had water readily available, it just had to be tapped. “This country produces 290 megawatts of geothermal energy, the leading in Africa. It has a lot of underground water. If this water is tapped and distributed to the affected areas, conflict will end,” he said.

Mangich said that the government is addressing the problem.

“Since last year, we have partnered with NGOs like World Vision to sink boreholes in the affected areas so that residents can have enough water for their livestock and domestic use. We also encourage them to use the water to grow vegetables and maize to complement livestock keeping,” he said.

But Mati said that nomadic pastoralists should be encouraged to engage in other economic activities that are more vialable and suggested that the government encourage urbanisation.

“This will allow many people to live in towns that have social amenities and to farm on land as a group, not as individuals,” he said.

Kenya’s Minister of Educatoin Mutula Kilonzo told IPS that the government needed to implement existing policies regarding access to water.

“The new constitution has very good policies to cater for the dry regions by sinking boreholes and promoting irrigation. Let us implement laws that deal with agriculture and the clashes will end,” he said.

Visibility: Everyone
Posted: Saturday September 22, 2012, 11:21 am
Tags: [add/edit tags]

Group Discussions start a discussion
Comments
Or, log in with your
Facebook account:
Compose your comment and submit:




Author

Michael Kirkby
Author Tools:
Compose New Share
male, age 62, single
Toronto, ON, Canada
MICHAEL'S SHARES
Apr
1
(0 comments  |  discussions )
For those of you who have wondered what a Delaware Corporation is here's a useful website. http://www. delawarebusinessincorpora tors.com
Mar
16
(0 comments  |  discussions )
These days we pick up a packet of frozen prawns from the supermarket almost without thinking. They’re healthy, flavour-some and cheap enough to count as an affordable treat, perhaps on a skewer for a barbecue or daintily arranged for a dinner p...
Feb
9
(0 comments  |  discussions )
Leaders out of their mines 98 QMI Agency First posted:Friday, February 08, 2013 07:41 PM EST| Updated:Friday, February 08, 2013 07:51 PM EST The De Beers Canada Victor Mine, located in northern Ontario is seen in this undated file photo...
Jan
19
(0 comments  |  discussions )
Create a foundation; give it a fancy name and people in naïve idealism; tribal mentality and desire to belong [hip and cool baby] will flock to it. It's what the Ford Foundation and every other foundation built by the likes of the Rockefelle...


SHARES FROM MICHAEL'S NETWORK
May
14
(0 comments  |  discussions )
Systems that delay green pastures of our deeper aspirations, require new-Human eyes to see beyond separation, new-Human ears to hear more of the truth, and new-Human open hearts and minds willing to embrace good and evil as two sides of one spiritual ...
May
9
(1 comments  |  discussions )
R.I.P. Dear Windstar....You are no longer in pain...Wait for me my Bigstar...So we can cross over Rainbow BridgeTogether.
(0 comments  |  discussions )
The largest genocide in human history happened where? Most people would answer Germany, and the Jewish Holocaust. Actually though, the largest genocide happened in the USA, with the native American Indians, with estimates of 19 million to 100 millio...
May
8
(0 comments  |  discussions )
Ever since I saw that horrific pic of the bricks pelting ''Windstar'' the beautiful white horse, I can't get it out of my mind. To think a group of people--or maybe it was an individual!--would actually do something like that totally blows my min...
(0 comments  |  discussions )
Official Nuclear Radiation Study; Tokyo University Hayno, R.S., et al (2013) Internal Radiocesium Contamination of Adults and Children 7 to 20 Months After the Fukushima NPP Accident as Measured by Extensive Whole-Body-Counter Surveys, Proc. Jpn....


MORE MESSAGE
May 21
Message: Are you kidding? by Karen O.
(0 comments  |  discussions ) —  The petition dated 5/21/13 created to stop the GUILT commercials from the A.S.P.C.A......Has the uneducated creator of the petition, ever been to animal shelters?  Have you ever volunteered in one? Have you any idea what homeless animals co... more
Message: Embu Educational Foundation, Kenya by Wendy J.
(0 comments  |  discussions ) — Embu Educational Foundation is a non profit organization, which is in process of registration as a Non Governmental Organisation. Embu, Kenya.We endeavour to finance the post primary education of bright and deserving students hence according the... more
Message: Veganmania Season, Fair Planet Linz by Anna G.
(0 comments  |  discussions ) — The Veganmania Season in Austria and Germany is beginning again. In some cities only one day, in others three day long festivals promoting human- and animalrights and environmentalism. It is becoming more colourful and better-attended every year. A... more
Message: No such thing as 'lonliness' by Patricia G.
(0 comments  |  discussions ) — more
May 20
Message: Volunteer with Xaveri Movement South Africa by Wendy J.
(0 comments  |  0 discussions ) — Xaveri South Africa is a non-formal educational youth movement which plays a complementary role to that of other educational institutes; with a purpose of contributing to the development of African young people in achieving their full physical, intell... more
 
Content and comments expressed here are the opinions of Care2 users and not necessarily that of Care2.com or its affiliates.
Copyright © 2013 Care2.com, inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved