A guest post from Rye Barcott and Emily Reynolds Pierce of the ONE Partner organization Carolina for Kibera.
The recent post-election violence in Kenya has stunned nonprofit organizations fighting to end poverty in the country, including Carolina for Kibera (CFK), an international NGO with institutional roots at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a partner organization of the ONE Campaign. Our work with youth at CFK centers on promoting ethnic reconciliation through sports, fighting gender-based discrimination, and providing primary health care in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, Kenya. The past month in Kibera has been frightening, and we are heartbroken to see the hard work of our young CFK staff and volunteers, as well as that of many other community-based organizations in Kibera, unravel so quickly at the hands of feuding politicians.
People of Kenya’s six major ethnic groups live together in Kibera – east Africa’s largest slum with nearly 1 million residents. Although ethnic divisiveness is no stranger to Kenyan politics, no one anticipated the level of violence that has engulfed Kibera and much of Kenya. Swaths of Kibera have been burned to the ground. Many of our staff and volunteers have had their homes looted and burned. Our office and community medical clinic are located in the thick of the ethnic fighting in the Kibera slum of Nairobi, and are two of the few structures left standing. CFK member Fatuma Roba, 23, is a Digital Diarist for UNICEF Radio and Voices of Youth. Ms. Roba reported on the situation from Kibera for on Jan. 2 and Jan. 11.
We at CFK sensed in mid-January that the situation was likely to get worse before it got better. Security felt tenuous at best. Then yesterday, on Jan. 29, Kenyan parliamentary member Mugabe Were, 39, was gunned down and killed in Kibera. Mr. Were was a member of the opposition party and vocal supporter of CFK. When word of Mr. Were’s death spread throughout the slum, violence erupted yet again.
The violence reminds us that development depends on good governance, local leadership, and effective security. Our own effectiveness, as CFK, also depends on our ability to read and respond to events, and that is why we are currently concentrating on a short-term feeding program and emergency medical assistance to meet the immediate needs of our friends and neighbors in Kibera. Additionally, we are reaching out to local media outlets and radio stations to promote messages of peace in Kenya’s many languages.
CFK fervently calls upon all Kenyan politicians and national leaders across Africa and the globe to put an end to the terror that has left nearly 1,000 people dead and hundreds of thousands more displaced in Kenya. We at CFK support the message of Sen. Barack Obama printed in Kenya’s Daily Nation newspaper on Jan. 23: “Kenya has come too far to throw away decades of progress in a storm of violence.”
There is an urgent need for humanitarian assistance in Kibera and around the country. The displaced Kenyans need food, water, and shelter. We at CFK are committed to providing these basic necessities in collaboration with other ONE Campaign partner organizations like CARE and UNICEF so that the healing process can begin.
Rye Barcott
CFK President + Founder
Emily Reynolds Pierce
CFK Vice President
Photos of Kibera by Bri O’Donnell, January 2008.
January 30, 2008 at 7:41 pm
Where there need to be connection, has there been anything said by Barack Obama about the crisis in Kenya? Does he not have a family connection to the country?
January 30, 2008 at 11:03 pm
Hi Stuart — there should be a link to the op-ed piece that Senator Obama wrote in the Kenyan newspaper earlier this week in the second to last paragraph of our blog post (you may have to click on the “read rest of this entry” in order to see the link. Then, click on “message of Senator Obama”. Senator Obama has been very active in reaching out to the leaders of both political parties in Kenya — Odinga and Kibaki — as well as to Sec. Rice, making phone calls almost daily in between stump speeches.
January 31, 2008 at 10:51 am
I was shocked and saddened to see the tribal violence that engulfed Kenya recently. Kenya has been among the best governed of the African countries and it’s sad and tragic to see that record of progress in danger. Which brings me to my point. If it is true that development success depends largely on good governance (and it does), then how does one help poorly governed countries? Pouring aid resources and effort into countries governed by crooks and bozos is clearly a waste of time and effort. Colonialism (even under the guise of a UN “mandate”) is an international non starter. Simply ignoring the plight of the Darfurs of the world isn’t an option for Christians (OK those on the far right pull it off OK, but they hardly matter in this discussion). What to do? What to do?
February 6, 2008 at 10:49 am
It’s hard to believe that in this times, when most of the world is convinced that peace is the only way to look for a solution, we are seing from the 30 of Deceber this ethnic fight that will be terrible for the future of Kenya and their citizens. What it’s more important, we are watching the begining of a new Darfur, with 300000 refugies that have no were to go, and medical and food problems all over the country. I’ve been following the news since the problem started, and no matter what happens, the number of victims is increasing more and more every day. It’s good to know that diferent organizations are helping the people in Kenya; I think the best way to end this problem is with programmes about meeting the diferent cultures living in Kenya, so they’ll find out that no matter the colour or the traditions, we are all humans with the same rights and we all deserve respect for our culture. Leandro (a latin boy)
December 3, 2008 at 11:02 pm
The topic is quite curious, i must say