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How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior at all.

Muthoni Mwangi

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their supplies because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby. What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours. Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and then burning the premises. NEWS EXTRA Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests Story by DANIEL OTIENO Publication Date: 1/17/2008 A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub self-destructed in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of protesting the outcome of the presidential elections. A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye market was razed last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI From being the vibrant gateway of the larger

Eastern African market, Kisumu has been paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda and other countries which rely on Kenya's road network for fuel supplies and for cargo from the port of Mombasa. It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from the debris and regain its lost glory. Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing "a slow, painful realisation that it could be condemned to endless stagnation". Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with authorities estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police. Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146 others had been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical superintendent of the New Nyanza General Hospital. Sought treatment The number could be higher because there were

patients who sought treatment in private hospitals. The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands of people who worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and industries are no more. They were looted and burned. On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe shops were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre, which hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell Tusky's Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa Hotels owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million. But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the amount lost because vital documents on stocks were destroyed. On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new cars that had been on display

were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts from the Crater Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set the showroom on fire. At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt shells of 17 vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by arsonists. Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes as was the Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many. The town's industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every morning in search of jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire. What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours. Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and then burning the premises. But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs were

targeting ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern was more of random looting and burning. However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police bullets. Still, local businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central business district from destruction as happened in Nairobi. Gunshot wounds A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds. "From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the fact that most of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests," said the doctor. Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said over 80 per cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which in his view, were free of the looting

reported in the Central Business District. But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and dismissed claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective. "The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then, we tried our level best to restrain from shooting more people," he said. At the height of the chaos, there were rumours that the shootings were the work of military officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later disputed. Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for businesspeople because they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are lamenting after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The business community, led by the local chapter of the Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry, has asked the Government to exempt them from paying

taxes. They said that they had incurred huge losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire. The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts that some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to help them restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains because many had fled and had vowed never to return. Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings. According to him, many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were damaged extensively. Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital commodities because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by gangs of youths especially in Rift Valley. Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without massive injection of external help. "Donor

support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can help alleviate these problems and save us from collapse," said Mr Deya, the executive director of Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and medium-sized businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and destruction of property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the violence. These include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs. This will adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover outstanding loans. Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra cost paying for armed security to keep away hungry looters. Business losses Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could be hard to come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the past.

"The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each other were eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore the glory of the town and heal the inter-tribal relations," he said. The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town could become crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and the town had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job losses. In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their supplies because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby. Additional reporting by Walter Menya

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How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior at all.

Muthoni Mwangi

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their supplies because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby. What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours. Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and then burning the premises. NEWS EXTRA Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests Story by DANIEL OTIENO Publication Date: 1/17/2008 A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub self-destructed in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of protesting the outcome of the presidential elections. A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye market was razed last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI From being the vibrant gateway of the larger

Eastern African market, Kisumu has been paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda and other countries which rely on Kenya's road network for fuel supplies and for cargo from the port of Mombasa. It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from the debris and regain its lost glory. Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing "a slow, painful realisation that it could be condemned to endless stagnation". Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with authorities estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police. Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146 others had been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical superintendent of the New Nyanza General Hospital. Sought treatment The number could be higher because there were

patients who sought treatment in private hospitals. The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands of people who worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and industries are no more. They were looted and burned. On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe shops were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre, which hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell Tusky's Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa Hotels owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million. But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the amount lost because vital documents on stocks were destroyed. On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new cars that had been on display

were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts from the Crater Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set the showroom on fire. At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt shells of 17 vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by arsonists. Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes as was the Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many. The town's industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every morning in search of jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire. What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours. Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and then burning the premises. But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs were

targeting ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern was more of random looting and burning. However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police bullets. Still, local businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central business district from destruction as happened in Nairobi. Gunshot wounds A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds. "From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the fact that most of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests," said the doctor. Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said over 80 per cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which in his view, were free of the looting

reported in the Central Business District. But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and dismissed claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective. "The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then, we tried our level best to restrain from shooting more people," he said. At the height of the chaos, there were rumours that the shootings were the work of military officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later disputed. Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for businesspeople because they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are lamenting after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The business community, led by the local chapter of the Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry, has asked the Government to exempt them from paying

taxes. They said that they had incurred huge losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire. The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts that some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to help them restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains because many had fled and had vowed never to return. Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings. According to him, many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were damaged extensively. Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital commodities because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by gangs of youths especially in Rift Valley. Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without massive injection of external help. "Donor

support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can help alleviate these problems and save us from collapse," said Mr Deya, the executive director of Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and medium-sized businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and destruction of property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the violence. These include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs. This will adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover outstanding loans. Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra cost paying for armed security to keep away hungry looters. Business losses Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could be hard to come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the past.

"The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each other were eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore the glory of the town and heal the inter-tribal relations," he said. The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town could become crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and the town had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job losses. In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their supplies because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby. Additional reporting by Walter Menya

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There are many stories of lawlessness. From what I hear parts of Rift Valley,

Nyanza and

Western have fallen into total anarchy.

A woman I know very well who has been working as housekeeper for a family in

Nairobi, took

some days off and the opportunity of a lift to go home and take her daughter to

a boarding

school- away from Kawangware. She bought the usual matress, blankets sheets

buckets- the

lot, took her savings, which she had painfully saved for a year and proceeded to

Kapsabet or

soemwhere near there, where she and her brother have bought some few acres of

land from

hard earned money working in households in Nairobi.

On the way the car they were travelling in was stopped hundreds of times and the

driver had

to buy his way through, however being Luhyas they were allowed through.

They got home where the brother has just completed his first simple stone house

having

previously lived in a wooden shack or something like that. Soon after arrival

gangs of

marauding Kalenjin youth starting gathering. The end of the story is that they

burnt the new

house and everything, including the school things and took the money. The woman,

her child

and the rest of the family out there were left with only the clothes they had

on. They have

since been sleeping in the forest. Now the woman is trying to find her way back

to Nairobi.

No boarding school in safe upcountry for the young girl- it is back to

Kawangware and the

day school and all the hazards of being a young girl growing up and attending

school in the

slums.

Why? These people are not Kikuyu 'who have stolen land from the Kalenjin', they

are Luhya

who just happened to have bought Land (as the Kikuyu bought) in Rift Valley and

one might

even say they ar predominantly ODM voters. The reason given was this community

had not

been actively rioting and demonstrating or as is being said in the Rift Valley

'sent their sons to

war'. What war? burning, looting, killing, blocking roads and stopping food from

reaching your

people and goods reaching the neighbouring countries.

This is what has been termed the right of free assembly or?

First it was the Kikuyu, then the Kisii in the Rift Valley, now it is the Luhya.

In Nairobi it is kicking out your neighbours and landlords and ladies burning

their houses or

occupying the vacated houses and even collecting rent.

If the violence was sparked off by elections the continued violence has little

to do with it and

whoever keeps thinking so and talking about peaceful demos is deluding himself.

Muthoni

AIDS treatments

From: MILLICENT NJUGUNA <myl_njuguna@...>

Date sent: Sun, 20 Jan 2008 23:25:56 -0800 (PST)

Subject: Re: Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for

Kisumu after violent

protests

Send reply to: AIDS treatments

How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior at

all.

Muthoni Mwangi

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu

after violent

protests

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies

because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours.

Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the

premises.

NEWS EXTRA

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

Story by DANIEL OTIENO

Publication Date: 1/17/2008

A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub

self-destructed

in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of

protesting the

outcome of the presidential elections.

A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye

market was razed

last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI

From being the vibrant gateway of the larger Eastern African market, Kisumu has

been

paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda and

other

countries which rely on Kenya's road network forfuel supplies and for cargo from

the port of

Mombasa.

It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from the

debris and regain

its lost glory.

Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing " a slow, painful

realisation that it

could be condemned to endless stagnation " .

Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with

authorities

estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police.

Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146

others had

been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical superintendent

of the New

Nyanza General Hospital.

Sought treatment

The number could be higher because there were patients who sought treatment in

private

hospitals.

The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands of

people who

worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and

industries

are no more. They were looted and burned.

On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe

shops

were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre,

which

hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell

Tusky's

Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa

Hotels

owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million.

But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the

amount lost

because vital documents on stocks were destroyed.

On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new

cars that had

been on display were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts

from the Crater

Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set

the showroom

on fire.

At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt

shells of 17

vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by arsonists.

Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes

as was the

Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many.

The town's

industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every morning

in search of

jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire.

What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours.

Gangs moved

from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the premises.

But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs were

targeting

ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern was

more of

random looting and burning.

However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police bullets.

Still, local

businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central

business

district from destruction as happened in Nairobi.

Gunshot wounds

A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of

anonymity, said

almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds.

" From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the

fact that most

of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests, " said

the doctor.

Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said over

80 per

cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which in

his view, were

free of the looting reported in the Central Business District.

But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and

dismissed

claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective.

" The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then,

we tried our

level best to restrain from shooting more people, " he said.

At the height of the chaos, there were rumoursthat the shootings were the work

of military

officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later

disputed.

Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for businesspeople

because

they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are

lamenting

after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The business

community, led

by the local chapter of the Kenya NationalChamber of Commerce and Industry, has

asked

the Government to exempt them from paying taxes. They said that they had

incurred huge

losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire.

The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts

that

some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to

help them

restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains because

many had fled

and had vowed never to return.

Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings.

According to him,

many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were

damaged

extensively.

Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital

commodities

because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by

gangs of

youths especially in Rift Valley.

Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without

massive

injection of external help.

" Donor support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can help

alleviate

these problems and save us from collapse, " said Mr Deya, the executive

director of

Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and

medium-sized

businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and

destruction of

property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the

violence. These

include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs.

This will

adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover

outstanding loans.

Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra cost

paying for

armed security to keep away hungry looters.

Business losses

Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could

be hard to

come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the past.

" The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each

other were

eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore

the glory of the

town and heal the inter-tribal relations, " he said.

The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town could

become

crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and

the town

had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job

losses.

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies because of

hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

Additional reporting by Walter Menya

Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

University of Nairobi

College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

P.O. Box 19676-00100

Nairobi (Kenya)

Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

Tel. +254-722-329904

email: mathai@...

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There are many stories of lawlessness. From what I hear parts of Rift Valley,

Nyanza and

Western have fallen into total anarchy.

A woman I know very well who has been working as housekeeper for a family in

Nairobi, took

some days off and the opportunity of a lift to go home and take her daughter to

a boarding

school- away from Kawangware. She bought the usual matress, blankets sheets

buckets- the

lot, took her savings, which she had painfully saved for a year and proceeded to

Kapsabet or

soemwhere near there, where she and her brother have bought some few acres of

land from

hard earned money working in households in Nairobi.

On the way the car they were travelling in was stopped hundreds of times and the

driver had

to buy his way through, however being Luhyas they were allowed through.

They got home where the brother has just completed his first simple stone house

having

previously lived in a wooden shack or something like that. Soon after arrival

gangs of

marauding Kalenjin youth starting gathering. The end of the story is that they

burnt the new

house and everything, including the school things and took the money. The woman,

her child

and the rest of the family out there were left with only the clothes they had

on. They have

since been sleeping in the forest. Now the woman is trying to find her way back

to Nairobi.

No boarding school in safe upcountry for the young girl- it is back to

Kawangware and the

day school and all the hazards of being a young girl growing up and attending

school in the

slums.

Why? These people are not Kikuyu 'who have stolen land from the Kalenjin', they

are Luhya

who just happened to have bought Land (as the Kikuyu bought) in Rift Valley and

one might

even say they ar predominantly ODM voters. The reason given was this community

had not

been actively rioting and demonstrating or as is being said in the Rift Valley

'sent their sons to

war'. What war? burning, looting, killing, blocking roads and stopping food from

reaching your

people and goods reaching the neighbouring countries.

This is what has been termed the right of free assembly or?

First it was the Kikuyu, then the Kisii in the Rift Valley, now it is the Luhya.

In Nairobi it is kicking out your neighbours and landlords and ladies burning

their houses or

occupying the vacated houses and even collecting rent.

If the violence was sparked off by elections the continued violence has little

to do with it and

whoever keeps thinking so and talking about peaceful demos is deluding himself.

Muthoni

AIDS treatments

From: MILLICENT NJUGUNA <myl_njuguna@...>

Date sent: Sun, 20 Jan 2008 23:25:56 -0800 (PST)

Subject: Re: Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for

Kisumu after violent

protests

Send reply to: AIDS treatments

How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior at

all.

Muthoni Mwangi

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu

after violent

protests

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies

because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours.

Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the

premises.

NEWS EXTRA

Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

Story by DANIEL OTIENO

Publication Date: 1/17/2008

A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub

self-destructed

in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of

protesting the

outcome of the presidential elections.

A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye

market was razed

last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI

From being the vibrant gateway of the larger Eastern African market, Kisumu has

been

paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda and

other

countries which rely on Kenya's road network forfuel supplies and for cargo from

the port of

Mombasa.

It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from the

debris and regain

its lost glory.

Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing " a slow, painful

realisation that it

could be condemned to endless stagnation " .

Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with

authorities

estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police.

Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146

others had

been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical superintendent

of the New

Nyanza General Hospital.

Sought treatment

The number could be higher because there were patients who sought treatment in

private

hospitals.

The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands of

people who

worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and

industries

are no more. They were looted and burned.

On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe

shops

were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre,

which

hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell

Tusky's

Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa

Hotels

owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million.

But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the

amount lost

because vital documents on stocks were destroyed.

On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new

cars that had

been on display were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts

from the Crater

Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set

the showroom

on fire.

At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt

shells of 17

vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by arsonists.

Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes

as was the

Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many.

The town's

industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every morning

in search of

jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire.

What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within hours.

Gangs moved

from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the premises.

But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs were

targeting

ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern was

more of

random looting and burning.

However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police bullets.

Still, local

businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central

business

district from destruction as happened in Nairobi.

Gunshot wounds

A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of

anonymity, said

almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds.

" From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the

fact that most

of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests, " said

the doctor.

Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said over

80 per

cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which in

his view, were

free of the looting reported in the Central Business District.

But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and

dismissed

claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective.

" The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then,

we tried our

level best to restrain from shooting more people, " he said.

At the height of the chaos, there were rumoursthat the shootings were the work

of military

officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later

disputed.

Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for businesspeople

because

they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are

lamenting

after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The business

community, led

by the local chapter of the Kenya NationalChamber of Commerce and Industry, has

asked

the Government to exempt them from paying taxes. They said that they had

incurred huge

losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire.

The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts

that

some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to

help them

restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains because

many had fled

and had vowed never to return.

Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings.

According to him,

many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were

damaged

extensively.

Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital

commodities

because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by

gangs of

youths especially in Rift Valley.

Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without

massive

injection of external help.

" Donor support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can help

alleviate

these problems and save us from collapse, " said Mr Deya, the executive

director of

Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and

medium-sized

businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and

destruction of

property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the

violence. These

include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs.

This will

adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover

outstanding loans.

Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra cost

paying for

armed security to keep away hungry looters.

Business losses

Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could

be hard to

come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the past.

" The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each

other were

eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore

the glory of the

town and heal the inter-tribal relations, " he said.

The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town could

become

crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and

the town

had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job

losses.

In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies because of

hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

Additional reporting by Walter Menya

Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

University of Nairobi

College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

P.O. Box 19676-00100

Nairobi (Kenya)

Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

Tel. +254-722-329904

email: mathai@...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Muthoni,

And you can imagine how many people have gon through the same.

Hollywood will make alot of money for the WEST.

God help us

..

Hope you have now settled in Kenya.

Wams

On 1/21/08, mathai@... <mathai@...> wrote:

>

> There are many stories of lawlessness. From what I hear parts of Rift Valley,

Nyanza and

> Western have fallen into total anarchy.

> A woman I know very well who has been working as housekeeper for a family in

Nairobi, took

> some days off and the opportunity of a lift to go home and take her daughter

to a boarding

> school- away from Kawangware. She bought the usual matress, blankets sheets

buckets- the

> lot, took her savings, which she had painfully saved for a year and proceeded

to Kapsabet or

> some where near there, where she and her brother have bought some few acres of

land from

> hard earned money working in households in Nairobi.

> On the way the car they were travelling in was stopped hundreds of times and

the driver had

> to buy his way through, however being Luhyas they were allowed through.

> They got home where the brother has just completed his first simple stone

house having

> previously lived in a wooden shack or something like that. Soon after arrival

gangs of

> marauding Kalenjin youth starting gathering. The end of the story is that they

burnt the new

> house and everything, including the school things and took the money. The

woman, her child

> and the rest of the family out there were left with only the clothes they had

on. They have

> since been sleeping in the forest. Now the woman is trying to find her way

back to Nairobi.

> No boarding school in safe upcountry for the young girl- it is back to

Kawangware and the

> day school and all the hazards of being a young girl growing up and attending

school in the

> slums.

> Why? These people are not Kikuyu 'who have stolen land from the Kalenjin',

they are Luhya

> who just happened to have bought Land (as the Kikuyu bought) in Rift Valley

and one might

> even say they ar predominantly ODM voters. The reason given was this community

had not

> been actively rioting and demonstrating or as is being said in the Rift Valley

'sent their sons to

> war'. What war? burning, looting, killing, blocking roads and stopping food

from reaching your

> people and goods reaching the neighbouring countries.

> This is what has been termed the right of free assembly or?

> First it was the Kikuyu, then the Kisii in the Rift Valley, now it is the

Luhya.

> In Nairobi it is kicking out your neighbours and landlords and ladies burning

their houses or

> occupying the vacated houses and even collecting rent.

> If the violence was sparked off by elections the continued violence has little

to do with it and

> whoever keeps thinking so and talking about peaceful demos is deluding

himself.

>

> Muthoni

> Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

> University of Nairobi

> College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

> P.O. Box 19676-00100

> Nairobi (Kenya)

>

> Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

> Tel. +254-722-329904

> email: mathai@...

>

>

> AIDS treatments

> From: MILLICENT NJUGUNA <myl_njuguna@...>

> Date sent: Sun, 20 Jan 2008 23:25:56 -0800 (PST)

> Subject: Re: Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for

> Kisumu after violent

> protests

> Send reply to: AIDS treatments

>

> How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

> I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior

at all.

> Muthoni Mwangi

> Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu

after violent

> protests

>

> In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies

> because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

>

> What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within

hours.

> Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the

> premises.

>

> NEWS EXTRA

>

> Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

>

> Story by DANIEL OTIENO

>

> Publication Date: 1/17/2008

> A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub

self-destructed

> in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of

protesting the

> outcome of the presidential elections.

>

> A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye

market was razed

> last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI

>

> From being the vibrant gateway of the larger Eastern African market, Kisumu

has been

> paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda

and other

> countries which rely on Kenya's road network forfuel supplies and for cargo

from the port of

>

> Mombasa.

>

> It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from

the debris and regain

> its lost glory.

>

> Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing " a slow, painful

realisation that it

> could be condemned to endless stagnation " .

>

> Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with

authorities

> estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police.

>

> Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146

others had

> been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical

superintendent of the New

> Nyanza General Hospital.

>

> Sought treatment

>

> The number could be higher because there were patients who sought treatment in

private

> hospitals.

>

> The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands

of people who

> worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and

industries

> are no more. They were looted and burned.

>

> On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe

shops

> were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre,

which

> hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell

Tusky's

> Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa

Hotels

> owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million.

>

> But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the

amount lost

> because vital documents on stocks were destroyed.

>

> On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new

cars that had

> been on display were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts

from the Crater

> Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set

the showroom

> on fire.

>

> At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt

shells of 17

> vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by

arsonists.

>

> Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes

as was the

> Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many.

The town's

> industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every

morning in search of

> jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire.

>

> What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within

hours. Gangs moved

> from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the premises.

>

> But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs

were targeting

> ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern

was more of

> random looting and burning.

>

> However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police

bullets. Still, local

> businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central

business

> district from destruction as happened in Nairobi.

>

> Gunshot wounds

>

> A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of

anonymity, said

> almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds.

>

> " From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the

fact that most

> of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests, " said

the doctor.

>

> Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said

over 80 per

> cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which

in his view, were

> free of the looting reported in the Central Business District.

>

> But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and

dismissed

> claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective.

>

> " The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then,

we tried our

> level best to restrain from shooting more people, " he said.

>

> At the height of the chaos, there were rumoursthat the shootings were the work

of military

> officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later

disputed.

>

> Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for

businesspeople because

> they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are

lamenting

> after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The

business community, led

> by the local chapter of the Kenya NationalChamber of Commerce and Industry,

has asked

>

> the Government to exempt them from paying taxes. They said that they had

incurred huge

> losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire.

>

> The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts

that

> some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to

help them

> restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains

because many had fled

> and had vowed never to return.

>

> Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings.

According to him,

> many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were

damaged

> extensively.

>

> Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital

commodities

> because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by

gangs of

> youths especially in Rift Valley.

>

> Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without

massive

> injection of external help.

>

> " Donor support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can

help alleviate

> these problems and save us from collapse, " said Mr Deya, the executive

director of

> Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and

medium-sized

> businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and

destruction of

> property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the

violence. These

> include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs.

This will

> adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover

outstanding loans.

>

> Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra

cost paying for

> armed security to keep away hungry looters.

>

> Business losses

>

> Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could

be hard to

> come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the

past.

>

> " The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each

other were

> eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore

the glory of the

> town and heal the inter-tribal relations, " he said.

>

> The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town

could become

> crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and

the town

> had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job

losses.

>

> In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies because of

> hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

>

> Additional reporting by Walter Menya

>

> Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

>

>

>

> Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

> University of Nairobi

> College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

> P.O. Box 19676-00100

> Nairobi (Kenya)

>

> Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

> Tel. +254-722-329904

> email: mathai@...

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Muthoni,

And you can imagine how many people have gon through the same.

Hollywood will make alot of money for the WEST.

God help us

..

Hope you have now settled in Kenya.

Wams

On 1/21/08, mathai@... <mathai@...> wrote:

>

> There are many stories of lawlessness. From what I hear parts of Rift Valley,

Nyanza and

> Western have fallen into total anarchy.

> A woman I know very well who has been working as housekeeper for a family in

Nairobi, took

> some days off and the opportunity of a lift to go home and take her daughter

to a boarding

> school- away from Kawangware. She bought the usual matress, blankets sheets

buckets- the

> lot, took her savings, which she had painfully saved for a year and proceeded

to Kapsabet or

> some where near there, where she and her brother have bought some few acres of

land from

> hard earned money working in households in Nairobi.

> On the way the car they were travelling in was stopped hundreds of times and

the driver had

> to buy his way through, however being Luhyas they were allowed through.

> They got home where the brother has just completed his first simple stone

house having

> previously lived in a wooden shack or something like that. Soon after arrival

gangs of

> marauding Kalenjin youth starting gathering. The end of the story is that they

burnt the new

> house and everything, including the school things and took the money. The

woman, her child

> and the rest of the family out there were left with only the clothes they had

on. They have

> since been sleeping in the forest. Now the woman is trying to find her way

back to Nairobi.

> No boarding school in safe upcountry for the young girl- it is back to

Kawangware and the

> day school and all the hazards of being a young girl growing up and attending

school in the

> slums.

> Why? These people are not Kikuyu 'who have stolen land from the Kalenjin',

they are Luhya

> who just happened to have bought Land (as the Kikuyu bought) in Rift Valley

and one might

> even say they ar predominantly ODM voters. The reason given was this community

had not

> been actively rioting and demonstrating or as is being said in the Rift Valley

'sent their sons to

> war'. What war? burning, looting, killing, blocking roads and stopping food

from reaching your

> people and goods reaching the neighbouring countries.

> This is what has been termed the right of free assembly or?

> First it was the Kikuyu, then the Kisii in the Rift Valley, now it is the

Luhya.

> In Nairobi it is kicking out your neighbours and landlords and ladies burning

their houses or

> occupying the vacated houses and even collecting rent.

> If the violence was sparked off by elections the continued violence has little

to do with it and

> whoever keeps thinking so and talking about peaceful demos is deluding

himself.

>

> Muthoni

> Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

> University of Nairobi

> College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

> P.O. Box 19676-00100

> Nairobi (Kenya)

>

> Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

> Tel. +254-722-329904

> email: mathai@...

>

>

> AIDS treatments

> From: MILLICENT NJUGUNA <myl_njuguna@...>

> Date sent: Sun, 20 Jan 2008 23:25:56 -0800 (PST)

> Subject: Re: Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for

> Kisumu after violent

> protests

> Send reply to: AIDS treatments

>

> How does that behavior account for mass action against injustice?

> I think the goverment and the law enforcers should not tolerate such behavior

at all.

> Muthoni Mwangi

> Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu

after violent

> protests

>

> In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies

> because of hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

>

> What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within

hours.

> Gangs moved from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the

> premises.

>

> NEWS EXTRA

>

> Road to recovery likely to be long and hard for Kisumu after violent protests

>

> Story by DANIEL OTIENO

>

> Publication Date: 1/17/2008

> A town that had established itself as a regional economic and commercial hub

self-destructed

> in an orgy of violence as gangs went on the rampage under the pretext of

protesting the

> outcome of the presidential elections.

>

> A building set ablaze by rioters in Kisumu Town in retaliation after Kibuye

market was razed

> last week. Photos/JACOB OWITI

>

> From being the vibrant gateway of the larger Eastern African market, Kisumu

has been

> paralysed by violence, and the aftershocks are being felt in Rwanda, Uganda

and other

> countries which rely on Kenya's road network forfuel supplies and for cargo

from the port of

>

> Mombasa.

>

> It will take years for the town on the shores of Lake to rise from

the debris and regain

> its lost glory.

>

> Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said the town was facing " a slow, painful

realisation that it

> could be condemned to endless stagnation " .

>

> Death, blood and tears have been haunting the town since December 30, with

authorities

> estimating that about 50 people could have been shot dead by the police.

>

> Hospitals in the town have over 60 patients nursing gunshot wounds, while 146

others had

> been treated and discharged, said Dr nna Otieno, the medical

superintendent of the New

> Nyanza General Hospital.

>

> Sought treatment

>

> The number could be higher because there were patients who sought treatment in

private

> hospitals.

>

> The debris of the destroyed buildings mirror the tattered hopes of thousands

of people who

> worked in the town but now face joblessness. Supermarkets, bars, churches and

industries

> are no more. They were looted and burned.

>

> On Oginga Odinga Street, two branches of Ukwala Supermarket and two Bata shoe

shops

> were looted and burned by youths. Port Florence Hospital and the Swan Centre,

which

> hosted several shopping outlets, were not spared either. The same fate befell

Tusky's

> Supermarket and two branches of Kimwa Hotels on Jomo Kenyatta highway. Kimwa

Hotels

> owner, Mr Miriti Muthara, said he incurred loses estimated at Sh40 million.

>

> But managers at both Ukwala and Tusky's said it was difficult to establish the

amount lost

> because vital documents on stocks were destroyed.

>

> On Obote Road, shells of burnt-out vehicles stand at intervals. Not even new

cars that had

> been on display were spared by the arsonists; Looters also stole spare parts

from the Crater

> Automobiles showroom which had six cars at the time. After stealing, they set

the showroom

> on fire.

>

> At the Lake South Water Board, the car park is littered with burnt

shells of 17

> vehicles which stand near the office block that was also destroyed by

arsonists.

>

> Stalls from where estate residents bought groceries were also reduced to ashes

as was the

> Kibuye open air market, which feeds the town and provides employment to many.

The town's

> industrial area, where hundreds of casual workers used to line up every

morning in search of

> jobs, now looks like it had been attacked by mortar fire.

>

> What started as a street protest degenerated into massive looting within

hours. Gangs moved

> from shop to shop, emptying stocks and thenburning the premises.

>

> But unlike post-election violence in the Rift Valley, where marauding gangs

were targeting

> ethnic communities they accused of not voting for ODM, in Kisumu the pattern

was more of

> random looting and burning.

>

> However, it was also only in Kisumu that looters were felled by police

bullets. Still, local

> businessmen have accused the police of not doing enough to secure the central

business

> district from destruction as happened in Nairobi.

>

> Gunshot wounds

>

> A senior medical officer at the provincial hospital, who spoke on condition of

anonymity, said

> almost all the deaths recorded in Kisumu were from gunshot wounds.

>

> " From a medical perspective, we think there was a shoot to kill order from the

fact that most

> of those admitted either had bullets lodged in their abdomens or chests, " said

the doctor.

>

> Mr Aggrey Mwamu, the Law Society of Kenya West Kenya branch chairman, said

over 80 per

> cent of the deaths recorded in the town occurred in residential areas, which

in his view, were

> free of the looting reported in the Central Business District.

>

> But Kisumu police boss Simon Kiragu denied accusations of high handedness and

dismissed

> claims by the lawyer and the doctor as subjective.

>

> " The police reacted depending on the magnitude of the violence, but even then,

we tried our

> level best to restrain from shooting more people, " he said.

>

> At the height of the chaos, there were rumoursthat the shootings were the work

of military

> officers from Uganda, an allegation that police spokesman Kiraithe later

disputed.

>

> Before the violence broke out, Kisumu was an attractive town for

businesspeople because

> they enjoyed good returns from their investments. But now, many of them are

lamenting

> after suffering huge losses at the hands of looters and arsonists. The

business community, led

> by the local chapter of the Kenya NationalChamber of Commerce and Industry,

has asked

>

> the Government to exempt them from paying taxes. They said that they had

incurred huge

> losses and their books of accounts had been destroyed by fire.

>

> The chairman of the Kisumu chamber branch, Mr Jerry Ochanda, expressed doubts

that

> some businesses could be revived. According to him, grants would be needed to

help them

> restock but even then the question of investor confidence still remains

because many had fled

> and had vowed never to return.

>

> Mr Ochanda said the losses incurred could run into billions of shillings.

According to him,

> many of the burnt buildings will have to be brought down because they were

damaged

> extensively.

>

> Besides this, Kisumu has been struggling to get its routine supplies of vital

commodities

> because major roads leading to the town still had illegal roadblocks manned by

gangs of

> youths especially in Rift Valley.

>

> Many businessmen and professionals doubt that Kisumu can recover soon without

massive

> injection of external help.

>

> " Donor support to micro-finance institutions and other affected groups can

help alleviate

> these problems and save us from collapse, " said Mr Deya, the executive

director of

> Adok Timo, a micro-finance institution. Mr Deya estimated that small and

medium-sized

> businesses lost Sh50 million due to missed business opportunities and

destruction of

> property. Close to 80 per cent of the such businesses were affected by the

violence. These

> include 184 shops which were looted and burnt leading to a loss of 5,000 jobs.

This will

> adversely affect micro-finance institutions which are unlikely to recover

outstanding loans.

>

> Some business premises that have started operations have to incur the extra

cost paying for

> armed security to keep away hungry looters.

>

> Business losses

>

> Besides the business losses, Anglican Bishop Francis Abiero said healing could

be hard to

> come by because politics shattered the harmony communities enjoyed in the

past.

>

> " The country is bleeding and the confidence and trust communities had in each

other were

> eroded by the aftermath of the elections. It will take a long time to restore

the glory of the

> town and heal the inter-tribal relations, " he said.

>

> The Kisumu police boss has also expressed fears that the once secure town

could become

> crime-prone because major shops and business activities had been grounded and

the town

> had experienced a high exodus of investors. These could lead to further job

losses.

>

> In the estates, it has become difficult for shoppers to carry home their

supplies because of

> hungry criminal gangs who steal from passersby.

>

> Additional reporting by Walter Menya

>

> Looking for last minute shopping deals? Find them fast with Search.

>

>

>

> Dr. Muthoni A. Mathai

> University of Nairobi

> College of Health Sciences: Department of Psychiatry

> P.O. Box 19676-00100

> Nairobi (Kenya)

>

> Private: P.O. Box 19804-00202 Nairobi(Kenya)

> Tel. +254-722-329904

> email: mathai@...

>

>

>

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