Most of the time, I try to stay positive about living in
Kenya. You meet incredible people. There is a remarkable drive, level of entrepreneurship,
and energy for modernizing this country and making it better. The land is
beautiful, and the potential for wonder and adventure is huge.
But then there are times, like earlier this week, where frustration and despair take the forefront.
On January 19, Kenyan police fired teargas at a group of young children in Nairobi, who were protesting a land grab scheme that was taking away their school’s playground. The story made the international press. Here was a situation so egregious and disgraceful that not even the heavy hands of corruption and power could put a lid on it.
According to the news stories, the children returned from Christmas break – prolonged by a two-week strike by underpaid teachers – to find that walls had been erected to block their access to the empty field that constituted their playground. Presumably, some wealthy, private individual (some say a leading politician) had acquired the land to make a parking lot.
source: http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2015/01/19/kenya-police-tear-gas-school-children-playground-protest |
The disputed land is public, as is the primary school that
sits on it. The story of public land getting into private hands through dubious
means is hardly new or unusual here in Kenya. It’s just that this case was a
particularly nasty and obvious example of greed, corruption, and abuse on the
part of the power elite and heavy-handed police force – ills that all too often
come down hardest on the backs of the poorest and most powerless.
Because of its high visibility, this story has a positive
outcome, at least for the time being. After the requisite finger pointing and
gnashing of teeth – not to mention attempts to blame the parents and teachers
for “inciting” the protest – government officials from the president on down condemned
the actions. They suspended the police officer in charge of the tear gas decision
and issued formal apologies. The Land Ministry has officially declared that the
playground belongs to the school and brought in grading machines to make it
more usable.
According to several news venues, including an
NPR report by Gregory Warner, this story is being seen as something of a
triumph for the little guys. Noting that it’s not how these stories usually
end, Warner sites an example of potential positive spillover from this ordeal:
“(…)
In a different part of the city, I saw another victory for the public. I passed
another prime piece of real estate with a private developer's illegal fence
around it. Government bulldozers were destroying the fence, reclaiming public
land, to a surprised and swelling crowd. It seemed that, at least for now, the
school kids in Nairobi had won more than just their own playground.”
But questions remain. How many other land grabbing schemes remain
under the radar of popular outcry. Who is paying for the health and hospital
care of those injured by the teargas? Will the team of 11 lawyers set up by the
Law Society of Kenya to try to prosecute the perpetrators of the
police brutality make any headway?
If the aftermath of the incompetence
and violations displayed by Kenyan military and law enforcement officials
during the Westgate terrorist siege is any indication, truth and fairness will
remain elusive. Secrecy and cover up
will continue to rule the day. And #Occupy Playground will be graded over like
so many uneven clumps of grassy fields.
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