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Kenya: Fear overshadows desire to return home
18 Jan 2008 19:49:00 GMT
By George Arende/Action by Churches Together International
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
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Alice Mwikali washes dishes at the Moi Air Force Base camp after serving her family with breakfast. Her family was displaced by the recent Kenyan post-election violence.
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Alice Mwikali washes dishes at the Moi Air Force Base camp after serving her family with breakfast. Her family was displaced by the recent Kenyan post-election violence.
Photo: George Arende/ACT
January 17, 2008

Nairobi -- Ann Owino is one among tens of thousands of Kenyans forced from their homes by post-election violence. She wants to return home to the Kiambiu slum with her two children, but fears doing so in the midst of the ongoing turmoil.

The memory of the horrifying night when Ms. Owino fled the slum is still fresh in her mind. "People were burning houses, beating and cutting," she said. "They killed men ... raped women and girls."

Her husband was not spared in the violence and was taken to the hospital, while his family now depends on support and food assistance from humanitarian organizations.

Some residents of the Kiambiu slums sought refuge at an overcrowded camp outside the slum chief's office. Ms. Owino managed to secure a space in what she described as unbearable conditions.

She now calls the camp home.

Fleeing the violence in the Mathare slums, 346 families also formed a makeshift camp outside the Moi Air Force Base. Nancy Wanjiru is a Mathare resident and mother of four children. Her story first hit the local television news with shocking images of her husband who was severely cut on the head and left for dead.

Ms. Wanjiru recalled how unknown people forcibly entered her house, pushing through the iron sheet wall. Her husband tried to restrain the huge crowd, but they eventually overpowered him. They beat him, cutting him with machetes, and threw him into the Nairobi River to die.

Neighbors helped Ms. Wanjiru pull her husband, who had survived the attack, from the polluted river and rushed him to the hospital.

After what happened to her husband, Ms. Wanjiru said she is afraid for her life, but is willing to return home once security can be better established.

As the crisis in Kenya continues, Church World Service has provided food support to 1,500 displaced families from the Kiambiu and Mathare slums through its local partner, the Kenya Evangelical Lutheran Church. The families of both Ms. Owino and Ms. Wanjiru have been supported through the food distribution of cooking oil, corn flour, salt, vegetables, etc.

Reflecting on her situation in the overcrowded makeshift camp, Ms. Owino is grateful to have found a place to lay her head. She said, "I am lucky... At night people here sleep while standing."

George Arende is the communications coordinator for the Kenyan Evangelical Lutheran Church, an implementing partner of Church World Service

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Media Contact: Lesley Crosson, CWS/New York, 212-870-2676; lcrosson@churchworldservice.org Jan Dragin, 781-925-1526; jdragin@gis.net

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Opposition supporters burn vehicles and block the road during a protest in Kisumu, western Kenya, as a police officer shot dead an opposition legislator on January 31, 2008, the second killed ...



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