Tag Archives: Kenyan

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The tittle should actually read something like this: Unfair distribution of natural resources, The case of Wildlife Conservation in Laikipia County Unfair distribution of natural resources in laikipia county is generating a negative attitude towards wildlife conservation especially following the … Continue reading

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The Kenyans in Support of the ICC Process Follow the link and sign to support ICC Process in Kenyan. 11730 Total Signatures To:  The Executive, Legislative and Judicial Arms of the Government of Kenya On 22nd December 2010 Kenya’s Members … Continue reading

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By Mwandawiro Mghanga, Chairperson of Social Democratic Party of Kenya. CONSTITUTIONAL REFOMS – FROM AN IMPERIAL PRESIDENT TO A KING The Members of Parliament have betrayed people of Kenya, particularly the majority poor and exploited and the struggle for new … Continue reading

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In March, when the Kenyan police attacked the village of Lerata and Samburu people called out for help but received no response from their government pledged to protect them, they and KARE turned to the human rights organization Cultural Survival, to help get Samburu voices and situation heard. Continue reading

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Save Samburu Posted: 22 Nov 2009 04:56 PM PST by original source, Roxane at Save Samburu . In March, when the Kenyan police attacked the village of Lerata and Samburu people called out for help but received no response from their government pledged to protect them, they and KARE turned to the human rights organization Cultural Survival, to help get Samburu voices and situation heard. Continue reading

CS: Background Information on Human Rights Violations of the Samburu People of Kenya

The report below is lifted from cultural Survival.org

Background Information on Human Rights Violations of the Samburu People of Kenya

Date: 11/19/2009(Cultural Survival submitted this information to the United Nations Human Rights Council)On February 21, 2009, Borana tribal members and Somali raiders (Somalis regularly cross the border to steal cattle, and the Borana are related to the Somali Oromo peoples) stole 300 cows from a Samburu community  in the eastern part of Samburu District. They also kidnapped two children. The Samburu moran (warriors) went in pursuit of their cattle and the children, and when they could not be recovered, impounded 200 Borana cattle in retaliation, to use as a negotiating tool. They then contacted the police and the Borana tribe to notify them that they would release the cattle when their stolen children and cattle were returned, and demanded police help to look for these children. There was no response. The Samburu reported the incident immediately to their Member of Parliament, Raphael Letimelo, who made a statement on a local news station pleading to have the children returned immediately.  The police, however, made no investigation or attempt to find them.

On February 22, a police officer and two Samburu security officers from the nearby village of Archer’s Post used the Kalama Wildlife Conservancy vehicle to search for the cattle and the missing children. (The conservancies, which are run by the Samburu, provide the region’s only security patrols for poaching, but also are used to investigate cattle rustling or other disturbances). The vehicle was ambushed by Borana bandits and the Borana shot the two conservancy officers. The Borana notified a Nairobi official (there is a Borana cabinet minister and a Borana senior civil servant in Meru) that the Samburu had confiscated 200 cows, but did not report why.

Fourteen hours later, the Kenya Government deployed a Special Security Force to Samburu. They did not pursue the Borana or Somali who initiated the first raid or search for the missing children. Instead, they deployed thousands of police from the Regular Police Force, District Administrative Police Force, and General Service Unit, and troops from the Kenyan Army in a well-orchestrated surprise attack on the villages of Kalama and Lerata villages and communities, including Lerata and Kalama, where they opened fire on innocent villagers in bomas (homesteads with enclosures for cattle), schools, clinics, and water holes, and on children herding goats and cattle. The attack included helicopters that strafed unarmed villagers, at least seven bombs dropped on villagers, and aerial discharge of some kind of caustic liquid that severely burned several children.

“At first, the community thought the police were here to help us find our lost children and we ran out to greet them,” stated Sammy Lepurdati. “When they initially started shooting, everyone tried to convince them they were making a mistake, but instead the police kept circling the bomas, firing deliberately at innocent people. It was a nightmare. People were screaming, running in every direction. Those who survived fled to the bush and nearby mountains.”

Ground forces then moved in, beating people with clubs. Police beat over 30 women, children, and elderly people with clubs, according to one witness, who asked to remain anonymous. “My mother was walking to the bore hole with my four-year-old sister and ten-month-old brother who was wrapped on her back, to water our goats and calves,” the 15 year-old reported. “She turned around to take my sister’s hand when police approached her, told her to give over the calves and goats to him and, when she pleaded with him that it was our only source of food, he began beating her with his club. When the baby started crying, he pushed my mother to the ground and began hitting her over and over again on her back until the baby stopped crying. My sister screamed and then he began beating her, too.” All three sustained life-threatening injuries according to the rural dispensary’s nurse practitioner, Edward Letalama.

The police then used their helicopters to round up the Samburus’ cattle. Forty trucks arrived to transport the cattle; others were herded by foot and helicopter to Archer’s post and impounded. They were later sold in Nairobi. The profits were kept by the police officers who had confiscated them. More than 2,000 cattle were confiscated in the initial attacks.

The two children, 7 and 8, were found, dead and hanging from a tree with their throats cut and their bodies skinned.

In the two days after the initial attacks, as the assault spread to other villages, the police refused to conduct a proper investigation, take statements from witnesses, negotiate a cease-fire, or come to any agreements with local officers, who included Member of Parliament Raphael Letimelo, 16 regional councilors, two local councilors, and County Council officers. All local wildlife conservancy communication and anti-poaching equipment was seized from Namunyak, Westgate, Sera Lipi, and Kalama Wildlife Conservancies, all in the same region. Altogether in these attacks more than 6,000 head of cattle were confiscated, removed, and sold, with a value of more than US$5 million.

The MP Raphael Letimelo was twice told in front of witnesses that he would be shot and executed immediately if he continued to speak against the attacks. He then returned to Nairobi to seek assistance from the president’s office. President Kibaki closed his telephone, refused to discuss the situation, or to allow an appointment to be arranged with MP Letimelo, and when Letimelo tried to see the President without an appointment, he was twice told that the president had left through a side door. Letimelo also spoke with the Internal Security Minister George Saitoti, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, Human Rights Watch, the US Embassy, and many others, with little result.

Government officials claimed that the operation was in response to the Samburu cattle raid, a claim that would seem unlikely given the scale and organization of the response, as well as its timing. Military documents provided by an army lieutenant indicate instead that the attacks had been planned months ahead of time and that the aim was to drive the Samburu off their land and end their way of life. The helicopters were requisitioned weeks in advance.

On March 7, two human rights workers, Oscar Kamau Kingara and John Paul Oulu, who had recently returned from an investigation into the attacks, were executed in Nairobi hours before they were to make public announcements about the Samburu situation.

On March 11, in response to a request for a hearing by MP Letimelo, a Nairobi court ordered a ceasefire. The police remained in the area, honoring the ceasefire only insofar as they used clubs to beat people instead of using firearms. They also looted local businesses and raped village women.

On June 6, Borana and Somali bandits approached Samburu herdsmen from the village of Kipsing and tried to take their cattle. When the Samburu resisted, the bandits contacted the police in Isiolo to assist them. The Somali, Borana, and police then attacked the village. In the fighting that ensued, the Samburu moran shot and killed 5 raiders, 6 police, and seriously wounded 19 other police. Following this incident, Raphael Letimelo said he received threats from government officials of possible mass executions and removal of Indigenous Peoples from their traditional homelands throughout the Samburu District. Neither of those things happened, however.

On June 15, 400 Kenyan National Police were permanently stationed in Archer’s Post and began Operation Walk and Shoot, in which they harassed community members and randomly shot into the community from a distance.

Through the month of July there were a series of attacks by Borana and Somali bandits on Samburu and Turkana villages. (The bandits said they were attacking the Turkana because they supported the Samburu.) The attacks included beheadings, shooting people in their sleep, and, on July 13, the kidnapping of two more children, 8 and 9, who were again found hanging from a tree with their throats cut and their bodies skinned. The extreme nature of these attacks (and the repetition of the murdered children) suggests that they were intended to provoke the Samburu into an equally extreme response that could, in turn, be used to justify an extreme government response.

The Samburu did not respond in kind, but instead sent a petition for redress to the Internal Security Minister. They received no response.

On August 15, three hundred uniformed troops attacked Samburu communities, killing two and injuring several others and confiscating more cattle. It is not clear whether these were Kenyan military, police, or others. On August 20 mercenary troops from Somalia and the Oromo Liberation Front entered Kenya to attack Samburu communities and those of any other pastoralist groups that supported the Samburu. Through the month of September there were multiple attacks by these forces, against both Samburu and the related Pokot pastoralists, who also supported the Samburu.

On September 5, hired forces attacked the village of Losesia, killing two Samburu, injuring several others, and confiscating almost 4,000 head of cattle and 2,600 goats. On September 15, OLF forces killed 30 Pokot and injured 16 more near the village of Naibor. The Member of Parliament for the Isiolo District said that he had funded the OLF, and Prime Minister Odinga, referring to the ongoing attacks by Borana and Somalis,  admitted that the government had been supplying arms to Borana and Somalis along the border who were then killing Samburu.

The confiscation of cattle has robbed Samburu of their food source, and famine has set in, exacerbated by the drought. Hundreds of Samburu have died of starvation as a result. The government has taken no steps to alleviate the famine, nor has it offered the Samburu restitution. On the contrary, it seems bent on increasing the assault on Samburu communities.

On October 12, the Kenyan government announced that it had awarded a $26 million lease to a Chinese firm to drill for oil in the center of Samburu territory, suggesting a motivation for the all the aggression against the Samburu. It is the first of eighteen contracts the government is negotiating with Chinese firms for oil.

All of these acts violate provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.

NOTE:  We are currently receiving reports of further air and land attacks on the Samburu by hundreds of Kenyan police troops during the week of November 16.

Please keep visiting www.culturalsurvival.org for updates and for more actions you can take.

Source: cultural Survival.org

Open Letter to Mr. Secretary-General, Commonwealth

Dear Mr. Kamalesh Sharma

Commonwealth Secretary-General
asksharma@commonwealth.int
and info@commonwealth.int

Kamlesh Shaman. Commonwealth Secretary General

Kamlesh Shaman. Commonwealth Secretary General

Please bring to the immediate attention of the Commonwealth ministers an ongoing humanitarian and human rights crisis in Kenya.

The Samburu Indigenous People are being systematically killed, terrorized and deprived of their livelihood in an apparent effort to remove them from their lands so that Chinese companies can conduct oil explorations there.

I urge you to undertake immediate investigation of alleged acts of mass murder, torture, terror and theft of Samburu cattle (their primary food source) by Kenyan military and police forces and by mercenaries in their employ.

These atrocities have been reported to Kenyan government authorities to no avail. The international community, and particularly the Commonwealth nations, must act to prevent genocide of the Samburu people.

Thank you for your immediate attention to this issue of grave concern.

Sincerely,

Saidimu Ole Ngais

http://diasporakenyan.se

dk@diasporakenyan.se

Stockholm, Sweden, November 20th 2009.

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Beginning in February of this year, the Kenyan government has carried out massive and well-organized attacks on Samburu villages by combined police and military forces and the use of government-funded mercenaries from Somalia. Please send a message today, urging the Commonwealth to demand an immediate end to the campaign of terror being waged against the Samburu people, and an independent investigation and prosecution for these atrocities. Continue reading

The Samburu suffering did not start yesterday!

The Samburu indegenous people of Kenya are being exploited daily. They lack proper representation on all areas. We ask you for any help to create a fair and equal Kenyan society. Support us in our struggle.

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Do you think we have a strong case against the Kenyan government in relation to the ongoing Samburu Massacre in Kenya? Are you a (philosopher) interested in helping other people to demand legislation of moral obligation of a government who seem to intimidate her own indigenous people? Continue reading

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Report from Save Samburu: Small News but Positive The report below is a an aupdate from Save Samburu following the Samburu suffering to due to repeated attacks from all sides. Save Samburu Small News but Positive Posted: 24 Oct 2009 07:48 PM PDT Last month the Samburu people of Losesia lost 3000 heads of cattle atop the loss of friends and relatives themselves. Continue reading

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In the raids between the months of February along June, July to September, the government of Kenya has witnessed profound attacks to the Samburu people by neighbouring armed ethnic groups. Can you explain to the Maa people why the government facilitated the killings in Samburu and what the government is doing in terms of compensation and apologizing to the Samburu people? Continue reading

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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) meets with Kenya Prime Minister Raila Amollo Odinga (L) in Chengdu, southwest China’s Sichuan Province, Oct. 16, 2009. (Xinhua/Li Xueren) Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao and his Kenyan counterpart Raila Odinga pledged in Chengdu Friday to further bilateral and Chinese-African cooperation.(Read more) Continue reading

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NAIROBI (Dow Jones)-Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga will hold talks with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on bilateral relations between the two countries, the office of the Kenyan Prime Minister Press Service said in a press release Friday. Continue reading

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As we’ve been reporting over the past several months, since February there have been ongoing government assaults on the Samburu people and allied tribes by the Kenyan government, with many people killed and almost all Samburu cattle confiscated. Continue reading

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Personally, I feel a sense of fairness and a need to say that President Barack Obama, having been able to organize the grass root movement to vote for CHANGE, indeed, he has shown the likelihood of promoting peace in the world. Continue reading

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All religions are equal “as soon as we lose the moral basis we cease to be Religious” (No room for hypocrites!) A lifelong Hindu he was murdered after he ended British Colonial Rule in India in 1947using his non violent code by two Hindu Zealots 6I years ago. Continue reading

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Event: Cirklar fr frndring – Dialogue Circles of change “Kampen fr demokrati och rttvisa i Kenya – The struggle for democracy and social justice in Kenya” What: Informationsmte Start Time: Thursday, October 8 at 6:00pm End Time: Thursday, October 8 at 7:30pm Where: ABF-huset Sveavgen 41  Before the the outbreak of political and ethnic violence in january 2008, Kenya was seen as a stable country, as an economic and democratic promise at the heart of a conflict-ridden and impoverished region. Continue reading

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He tells how he lost his brother before his eyes: It was him that his brother was running to save, after a cow hit by a hand grenade had fallen on Sanigo, only for his brother to fell under hail of bullets from these bloody killers. Continue reading