KENYA: Slum-dwellers priced into hunger
Source: IRIN
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NAIROBI, 27 May 2009 (IRIN) - Millions of people who live in Kenya's sprawling slums are among those worst hit by the food price crisis, yet they
receive far less humanitarian attention than other demographic groups, according to officials, who pointed in particular to the plight of malnourished children in such settlements. "While there
are also very serious food crises elsewhere in Kenya - for example, in the north - they at least get some attention from governments and donors, whereas the crisis in the cities is often completely
forgotten or ignored," Alun McDonald, the regional media and communications officer of Oxfam GB, told IRIN. "In Kibera [Nairobi's largest slum] alone, there are over 5,000 children under five
years old who are suffering from malnutrition more than 1,000 of them suffering from severe cases," McDonald said. "Severe child malnutrition should not be happening in a modern capital city." Food insecurity has been exacerbated by drought, rising food and non-food prices and poor harvests. "In the past 12 months... essential foods such as maize more than doubled in price... Oils and
vegetables are also much more expensive now than they were a year ago," he said. The price of maize has risen by up to 130 percent in Nairobi and 85 percent in Mombasa over the past year. Cooking
fuel prices have risen by 30-50 percent and the cost of water by 90-155 percent, according to the UN World Food Programme (WFP). "It's not just food that is more expensive - people cannot afford
as much water now, which means children use dirty water and get sick more easily... It is getting much more expensive just to survive," he said. School feeding According to Gabrielle Menezes,
WFP information officer, high food prices have affected the urban population considerably, "as these are people who depend on markets to buy food, and do not really grow their own". WFP is feeding
145,500 urban children under the School Feeding Programme, which covers 195 schools in the Nairobi slums and the coastal town of Mombasa. "In response to high food prices, WFP began feeding in the
Mombasa slums at the beginning of this year," Menezes said. "School feeding becomes even more important at times of crisis, as people resort to drastic coping measures, pulling children out of
school to beg or work," she said. She noted that subsistence farmers in the southeastern and coastal areas were also hard hit by the failure of the October-December 2008 short rains. "They
experienced almost total crop loss, and many families will need food assistance," she said, adding that WFP was providing general food distributions to 2.5 million people in the country. According
to Sylvia Khamati, acting head of the health department at the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS), the need for proper nutrition in Kenya is huge. "Generally, most children are malnourished, it does not
matter in what setting they are," she said. In March, the Kenya Food Security Steering Group called for food price controls, provision of food aid and the creation of employment opportunities to
stop more Kenyans going hungry. Khamati said attention should be paid to special needs groups such as children younger than five and pregnant women. "When there is a food crisis there is more
focus on supplementary and therapeutic feeding as the goal is to save life. But this is expensive compared with providing nutrition education on integration of readily available local foods for a
healthy diet," she said. According to Oxfam's McDonald, hundreds of thousands of people in Nairobi already live in serious poverty and are just surviving. "They simply can't afford to pay any more
for food," he said. "But the urban crisis is not just about poverty - it is also about governance," he said. "Citizens need to have affordable access to basic services such as water and
healthcare. "Given the political tensions in Kenya at the moment, having hundreds of thousands of increasingly poor and hungry families could well lead to further instability on the streets of
Nairobi - and potentially other cities." aw/am/mw© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.IRINnews.org










