Taking a long-term view, Concern’s deputy regional director, Ciunas Bunworth, says that while much of their effort is going into providing immediate humanitarian aid to the
food and shelter needs of displaced people in the worst affected areas – the slums of Nairobi, towns in the Rift Valley and elsewhere in western Kenya – the longer-term rehabilitation and
recovery needs are still being assessed.“This is a long process, and could take us to the end of 2008 or even into 2009,” she explains.In the meantime, Concern already has a
number of ongoing programmes in Kenya, where it has been working actively since 2002. In its education and HIV and AIDS programmes, it is working with local partner organisations in the Nairobi slums
and in the Kisumu and Nyanza areas, all of which have been affected in the present crisis.“Our initial response has been to support these local partners, who are based in the slums, with
the delivery of food and other basic supplies. We are also advocating greater food supplies from the World Food Programme,” Bunworth continues.Concern has also funded transport to help
people move to safer areas, while it is also working with additional partner organisations in the Rift Valley, with grants for food, shelter and medical needs.Bunworth says that the needs of
people in the Nairobi slums are particularly acute, as more than 60 per cent of the Kenyan capital’s population of about 3.5 million live in these slums. Life expectancy in Kenya is still low,
about 45 years.
Economic activity almost stopped
For many people living in the slums, particularly those depending on getting work on a daily basis, the crisis has made their poverty
even worse, because economic activity in parts of Nairobi has almost stopped. For instance, the tourism industry, a bulwark of the Kenyan economy, has come to a virtual standstill. The flower
industry, an important export staple, is also under threat. Workers can’t get to the flower farms, and sending the flowers by road to the airport for export is now much disrupted and often
dangerous. In the Rift Valley and in Nyanza and Western provinces, the needs are just as great as those in the vast slums of Nairobi.The immediate reponse on the part of Concern has been
multifaceted. It is continuing to supply food and other basics to people in the Nairobi slums, while it is working with the Kenyan Red Cross to distribute food and other essentials in Kisumu, the main
town in Nyanza province. Concern is continuing to monitor the humanitarian support for displaced people in the Kitale diocese.
Community based nutrition programme
It is working with the
Kenyan Ministry of Health to put in place a commmunity-based nutrition programme for the severely malnourished. Concern’s input is to train and assist Kenyan health workers implementing the
programme. Where possible, recovery programmes are being put in place to help displaced people to be reintegrated back into their communities. Says Bunworth: “This has already started, as one of
our Kenyan partners provides counselling services for children affected by the violence, as well as providing Dignity kits for women and girls. These include such essentials as underwear, sanitary
pads, combs and toothbrushes.”A crucial approach is the Community Therapeutic Care programme, which is a revolutionary approach to dealing with severely malnourished children. These
children are helped at home, rather than having them go to specialised nutrition rehabilitation units. The child recovers in his or her own environment, with minimised family disruption.Kenya
has another emerging problem, in the northeast of the country, where a severe drought is affecting people’s livelihoods. People there are still recovering from a serious drought in 2006, when
Concern responded in a major way, including repairs to water sources and supporting an animal feed programme for donkeys, which are essential to daily livelihoods.
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
Children displaced during post-election violence stand in line to receive food at their temporary shelter outside Tigoni police station, near Nairobi, February 4, 2008. Former U.N. chief Kofi Annan brought Kenya's ...