Wednesday 9 July 2008

 

The latest culture as recommended by our staff

Liz Anderson

Liz suggests


Rural poor

Wednesday, 26th March 2008

Aidan Hartley on the Wild Life

Your email address:   
Friend's email address:   
   

‘What will you do?’ I asked Gabriel’s brother Javan, who had come to help out with the funeral. ‘We are in trouble,’ he replied. The local chief predicted there would be an inheritance quarrel.

The Barasa family’s story is repeated countless times across western Kenya. When a friend’s grandfather died last year, the funeral programme estimated he accounted for more than 750 descendants. They own a few acres. The impact of joblessness on the countryside has been catastrophic. Returning to Trans Nzoia for the first time in years, I hoped to see once again well-tended fields, farming people in quiet villages, mighty forests, open spaces with wildlife. Instead there is only this: endless avenues of tin shacks, garbage, bicycles and gangs of idle youths. The land cannot cope with all these rural poor. But they are on the land because there are no options in life, even for intelligent and qualified people.

A young woman in Eldoret told me, ‘I am a university graduate and I can’t get any sort of job. The only future for me is to go and sit on the farm with old men and women and dig.’ Others have no farms to return to. They do not have land enough even to build a shack on.

No wonder Kenya exploded in January. In three weeks of travel I saw a huge swathe of damage from arson and looting. Western newspapers explained the clashes in terms of tribal hatreds and election politics. The country, the hacks claim, went up in flames because of rigged polls, or because politicians had planned campaigns of ethnic cleansing. But it’s much scarier than that. Ordinary people burned down their neighbours’ farms and stole their cattle purely out of jealousy. Huge gangs of youths destroyed schools, clinics and fields of crops as if to prove that if they were left behind, then they would destroy life for everybody else, too.

Up the road from the Barasa farm, on Mount Elgon, people were killing each other for a year before the elections. They’re still at it. In a circle of burning huts I found pools of blood where militias supposedly fighting over land had decapitated a group of mothers. In the ashes of one home I was horrified to find myself stumbling on a child’s burning skull. As we left Elgon the army was launching a punitive operation against the militias. But Kenya will not see peace until its leaders find jobs for all the young people. Time is running out, but even now politicians are bickering over allowances, cabinet portfolios and the length of their personal motorcades.

Channel 4’s Unreported World series will broadcast Aidan Hartley’s report on Kenya in April.

More articles from: Aidan Hartley | this section

Subscribe now

Post this entry to:   del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit

Comments

Post a comment


Your comment:*

Your name:*

Your email address:*
(We won't publish this)

*Required information

Please click the button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

mark

March 28th, 2008 2:03pm

A perceptive article, and one that ought to be read by everyone who expects to be alive for more than a couple of years.


In this section

Dear Mary

Mary Killen

Your problems solved

Real Life

Melissa Kite

Outrage permitted

High Life

Taki

Going for gold

Low life

Jeremy Clarke

Sober reflection

The Table

Richard Sennett

Male preserve

Related articles

No child left behind

Ed Balls

The Conservatives think that education is about selecting the lucky few, says Ed Balls. But there is no reason why excellence and opportunity shouldn’t be for all

Lust in a hot climate

Sara Wheeler

Sara Wheeler on Frances Osborne's biography of Idina Sackville

When elephants fight, the grass suffers

Aidan Hartley

Aidan Hartley says that the violence in Kenya reflects the failure of the political class: better paid than their European counterparts in a nation where many live on 50p a day

Downers and uppers

Taki

An act of evil that recalled the atrocities of the SS

Michael Gove

The murder and mayhem in Kenya this week were the result of tribalism and corruption, says Michael Gove, but the West must not lose faith in promoting democracy abroad

Spectator recommends

T-Mobile USB Broadband Stick

Mobile broadband for laptops from just £15 a month. Free USB Stick! With Mobile Broadband, you can access the internet...

A List of Luxury Hotels in Rome

Selected by tablet hotels for their personality and attention to detail.


Spectator classifieds

ROME CENTRE

PORTA METRONIA, ROME Standing high on the top of one of the seven hills of Rome- the Coelian- this unique

City Breaks. ROME and PARIS

ROME and PARIS: over 350 holiday rentals apartments listed: visit  www.romanreference.com  and  www.parisreference.com or call +39 0648 903612.

Jewellery. RUFFS (Estd. 1904).

Goldsmiths by Design Welcome to Ruffs!  You have found a company of Goldsmiths that specialises in the manufacture, amongst other