Source: Human Rights Watch
Flawed Practices Stoke Communal Tension as Elections Near
(Nairobi) – The Kenyan government has discriminated based on ethnicity
in assisting displaced people from the Rift Valley. The discriminatory
practices are stoking inter-ethnic tensions ahead of the March 2013
elections.
Human Rights Watch research in Kenya’s
Central Rift’s Nakuru county and North Rift’s Uasin Gishu county in
late 2012 revealed significantly preferential treatment for internally
displaced persons (IDPs) from the Kikuyu community of President Mwai
Kibaki over other displaced people in the two counties. The authorities
have not provided satisfactory justification for the differential
treatment.
An estimated 400,000 people of various communities in the Rift Valley
were displaced by inter-ethnic clashes after the last general elections
in 2007. Local government officials, as well as community leaders and
civil society activists, fear the government’s policies have increased
the chance for another round of election-related violence.
“The government is favoring one community over others in the allocation
of homes, land, and money for displaced people and this is causing
anger and frustration in the Rift Valley,” said Leslie Lefkow,
deputy Africa director. “These policies have exacerbated tensions in an
area that is still recovering from serious election-related violence
five years ago, and the tensions could lead to violence again.”
Kenya is due to hold general elections on March 4. In Nakuru county the
most intense competition is between candidates from the Kikuyu
community and those from the other large local community, the Kalenjin.
Uasin Gishu county is predominantly Kalenjin with a significant Kikuyu
population.
Violence in the central and northern Rift Valley between members of the
Kikuyu and Kalenjin communities formed a significant part of the
nationwide upheaval after the December 2007 elections, resulting in
killings, rapes, and the forced displacement of about 650,000 people
from all communities countrywide. The violence led to indictments of
people from both communities by the International Criminal Court,
including two former cabinet ministers – Uhuru Kenyatta and William
Ruto – who are now running together for president and deputy president.
In late 2012 Human Rights Watch spent one week in Nakuru county and one
week in Uasin Gishu county speaking with local government officials,
police, tribal elders, civic groups, and community members from the
Kikuyu and Kalenjin, as well as other local communities. The prevailing
view of interviewees in both counties, including government officials,
was that the national government has been favoring displaced Kikuyu at
the expense of other communities.
The discrimination in Nakuru and Uasin Gishu counties takes two general
forms. First, the government has given priority to displaced Kikuyu
when rebuilding homes and providing new homes, land, or money. Some
Kikuyu families have received more than one new home.
Second, the vast majority of Kalenjin displaced in the 2007-2008
violence, roughly 300,000 people across Kenya, have not been officially
registered by the Ministry for Special Programmes, which has
responsibility for internally displaced people, or received any
government support, Human Rights Watch research indicates.
The government says it is providing equal assistance to internally
displaced people from all communities, but it refuses to collect data on
the ethnic breakdown of people who have received government assistance.
Collecting that data is essential to ensure that the government treats
all communities in a non-discriminatory manner.
Government officials contend that it is difficult to identify displaced
Kalenjin because most of them chose to stay with relatives rather than
go to camps. They say these so-called “integrated IDPs” are difficult to
locate and therefore register and assist.
“The government could have done much more to register and assist the
displaced people who are staying with families – the so-called
‘integrated IDPs’,” Lefkow said. “The claim that they are difficult to
find masks the government’s unwillingness to provide assistance fairly
to all Kenyans.”
The United Nations special rapporteur on internally displaced people,
citing the “de facto exclusion” of roughly 314,000 “integrated IDPs”
from any “assistance, protection or durable solutions,” called on Kenya in
February 2012 to develop “accurate, efficient and disaggregated
data-collection and database/registration systems which are
comprehensive and inclusive of all categories of IDPs.”
Government officials in Nakuru and Uasin Gishu confirmed for Human
Rights Watch that the national government was favoring displaced
Kikuyus, and some said they had advised against the practice.
A senior official in the Ministry of Internal Security told Human
Rights Watch that the Ministry for Special Programmes had ignored
repeated warnings about the dangers of its discriminatory policies.
“There seems to be resistance to any suggestion that this kind of bias should be changed,” the security official said.
An official at the Ministry for Special Programmes was more direct:
“The entire government machinery is Kikuyu and this machinery is
favoring the Kikuyu on the ground,” he said.
Discrimination based on race or ethnic origin in access to rights is
strictly prohibited under international human rights law. The UN
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has stated that,
“Differential treatment based on prohibited grounds will be viewed as
discriminatory unless the justification for differentiation is
reasonable and objective.”
The Kenyan constitution prohibits direct or indirect discrimination
against anyone on any grounds, including ethnic or social origin, and
requires law and other measures to be put in place to ensure equality.
A new law for IDPs, the Internally Displaced Persons Act, and a new national policy for
IDPs, which both came into effect in late 2012, can help with IDP
protection and assistance and should be implemented by the government.
Kenya should also sign and ratify the African Union Convention for the
Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons in Africa (Kampala Convention),
which, among other protections, forbids discrimination in the treatment
of internally displaced people. Thirty-seven of Africa’s 53 states have
signed the convention and 16 states have ratified it.
The government’s failure to arrest and prosecute those
responsible for the 2007-2008 election-related violence has heightened
tensions by leaving the people responsible for past violence free to
repeat their actions. Only three people have been convicted for the
arson, killings, and rapes from that time – all of them Kalenjin from
the Rift Valley. One of the men was acquitted on appeal.
“After the terrible violence around the last elections the government
had an opportunity to make landmark changes in Kenyan politics,” Lefkow
said. “Sadly, it has failed to take those steps and serve all
communities fairly.”
Key findings in Nakuru and Uasin Gishu counties about discrimination against displaced persons follow.
Discrimination Against Displaced Persons in Rift Valley
Human Rights Watch found examples of discriminatory
resettlement assistance across Nakuru and Uasin Gishu counties that
disproportionately benefits members of the Kikuyu community. In Ndefo
area in Njoro constituency of Nakuru county, for instance, according to a
joint civil society and Kenyan government report, the government built
908 housing units for Kikuyu IDPs on one side of a road and 34 on the
other side for Kalenjin, even though all communities in the area were
affected by violence and had similar numbers of displaced people.
In the Kuresoi area of Nakuru county – one of the areas most affected
by the 2007-2008 violence – the government resettled Kikuyu IDPs
displaced from Kuresoi and other areas in and around Sanyo, giving them
new houses and tilling land for them with tractors. In the same area, an
equally large group of Kalenjin displaced from 2007-2008 has received
no government support.
The government has also resettled some Kikuyu IDPs in the middle of
Kalenjin-inhabited areas, such as Sanyo and Banita in Rongai, without
adequately consulting the host communities, local community leaders
said. In both places, Human Rights Watch saw newly built homes and
freshly dug roads for resettled Kikuyu. Local officials and Kalenjin
community leaders said the resettlement had caused great resentment
among local Kalenjin, who said they fear the government is trying to
alter demographics prior to the March elections.
Two government officials in Nakuru county, as well as Kikuyu community
members, told Human Rights Watch that the government also has a practice
of giving internally displaced Kikuyu more than one house per family,
even though the majority of displaced Kalenjin in the county have
received none. A joint assessment report compiled by the
government-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) made
similar observations in 2011.
A displaced Kikuyu who was resettled in Kuresoi told Human Rights Watch
that the government first built her a three-bedroom house in April 2009
and two years later, with the support of an international aid agency, a
second, two-bedroom house.
“I know a number of Kikuyus who have up to three houses,” she said.
“Those Kikuyus whose children were above 18 benefited even more because
all their adult children were also given houses.”
Kalenjin elders and community members in Nakuru and Uasin Gishu
counties told Human Rights Watch that they saw the resettlement of
Kikuyu IDPs in their areas as a strategic effort by the government to
increase Kikuyu votes prior to the elections and generally to shift the
political balance of communities in the region.
In addition to displaced communities from the 2007-2008 electoral
violence, the Central Rift Valley has about 15,000 displaced people who
were forced from the Mau Forest in July 2009, all of them Kalenjin. The
government ordered these people to leave their homes due to concerns
over environmental conservation projects, promising to resettle them
within weeks. As of late 2012 only about 700 of these people had been
resettled.
Increased Tension
Kalenjin elders and community members expressed deep
resentment and anger at their discriminatory treatment, with many saying
that it could provoke violence. At the same time Kikuyu leaders and
community members say they are getting prepared for violence.
“This time we shall not be caught unawares and we shall not be the ones
running away or getting displaced,” a Kikuyu farmer in Kuresoi told
Human Rights Watch.
A senior government official in the Rift Valley told Human Rights Watch
that he frequently hears bellicose claims from both communities. He and
others said that cattle theft is up in the area, which they called an
early warning sign of violence.
In 2007 and earlier, local communities used traditional weapons, such
as machetes, spears, and bows and arrows, to fight each other. Today,
local officials and community leaders told Human Rights Watch that both
Kikuyu and Kalenjin are preparing for possible violence with firearms as
well as those weapons.
In addition to people displaced in the election-related violence of 2007-2008, according to the United Nations, more than 112,000 Kenyans were displaced in 2012 due to communal and resource-based violence.