Photo: Gwenn Dubourthoumieu/IRIN. Cattle rustling in Kenya’s Turkana district has become big business as demand for meat increases
Source: IRIN
NAIROBI, 27 March 2014 (IRIN) - Cattle raiding in Kenya is often viewed
in the legitimizing context of tradition, climate change and resource
conflict, but increasingly it has much more to do with organized crime
meeting a rising demand for meat, and political violence resulting from a
new devolutionary constitution.
The human cost of raids is immense: hundreds are killed every year and many thousands forcibly displaced.
Two sources within the Anti-Stock Theft Unit, a division of the Kenya
police charged with preventing cattle theft, told IRIN that an estimated
580 people were killed between January 2012 and January 2014 as a
result of cattle raids.
The cattle raids by armed young men involve attacks on rival ethnic
groups or clans. At times, raiders come from neighbouring countries such
as South Sudan and Ethiopia. But while traditional cattle-rustling did
not always involve killing, it is now invariably lethal.
Increasingly, some argue, cattle-raiding is motivated by a competition
for political power and resources: political barons use organized
attacks to drive out their political rivals and extend their business
interests.
“The [2010] constitution heavily devolved power and resources to the
grassroots and this has in turn increased competition for political
power and resources in formerly marginalized areas and, as such, issues
like cattle-rustling have transformed from being cultural to a tool to
perpetuate power and violence,” Betty Budho, a political analyst at the
University of Nairobi, told IRIN.
She added: “I believe in northern Kenya, it would be foolhardy for
anybody to view cattle raids in isolation and forget the political and
economic motivations for it. With devolution, the power struggles
between pastoralists have become common.”
According to the authors of a 2014 report entitled On the margin: Kenya’s pastoralists,
such struggles peaked during the 2013 elections, the first to be held
under the devolutionary constitution, in which significant powers are
decentralized to 47 new counties, under influential governors.
In a country where political allegiance is driven far more by ethnicity
than ideology, “communities competed against each other for
representation, and particularly for the role of governor,” the report
explained.
“A tribe’s local dominance can swing a local election, and in some areas
smaller ones formed alliances such as the Rendille, Gabra and Burji
(REGABU), which was established to counter the dominant Borana in
Marsabit. Whether the outcome is the rule of one dominant tribe at the
exclusion of others, or a coalition of minority tribes ruling over a
dominant one, there is an inherent risk of instability and tension,” it
said.
Marsabit is a remote and historically marginalized district of northern Kenya.
In a 2013 paper entitled Guns, Land, and Votes: Cattle Rustling and the Politics of Boundary(re)making in northern Kenya, Clemens Greiner argued that there is a disguised relationship between politics and cattle raids.
“The erosion of traditional governance structures has led to a power
vacuum that is increasingly filled by political leaders and other power
brokers who grasp the opportunity to renegotiate boundaries and access
to land…
“They have realized that on the national level ethnic mobilization has
played a major role in political struggles, and they carry these
dynamics even into the remotest pastoralist areas, where the struggle
for land is progressively ethnicized. In this context, livestock raiding
emerges as a specific form of violent regulation: a well-adapted,
dangerous, and powerful political weapon,” he said.
According to Josephat Nanok, the governor of the northwestern county of
Turkana where cattle raids are common, “Continuing to treat
[cattle-rustling] like a cultural practice is akin to condoning an
illegal business. It has been highly commercialized and many politicians
are now using it to create support zones for themselves,” he told IRIN.
“The political connection to me, explains the reason such raids occur with more frequency during elections,” Nanok added.
Enoch Mwani, an agricultural economist at the University of Nairobi,
says local pastoralists are no longer the only ones involved in
cattle-rustling.
“Cattle-rustling has always been an activity to replenish herd stock but
it isn’t [just] that any more. Cattle raids in the lawless Horn of
Africa are driven by the desire by those communities to get money to buy
arms, and by business people who want to cash in on a growing urban
population in need of meat,” Mwani said.
“That some still do it as a cultural practice isn’t completely false,
but it isn’t completely true either. Tribal conflicts are common and
communities need arms to protect themselves when the governments fail to
do so, and meat traders provide an easy source of money to buy arms,”
he added.
Commercialized cattle-rustling
Trade in livestock is big business. According to the Global Forum on Agricultural Research, Kenya will have a beef deficit of about 4,500 tons in 2014 due to high local consumption and export demands.
The Kenya Meat Commission estimates that some 500 tons of beef are
exported from Kenya each week to the Middle East (United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia) and Africa (Egypt, Tanzania, Uganda,
Democratic Republic of Congo and Sudan).
“In many areas we do observe an intensifying shift from a `breeding
herd’ [rearing for prestige] to a ‘trading herd’ [rearing for sale] - in
part to take advantage of the growing markets for animals and livestock
products in urban areas as well as export markets,” Jeremy Lind,
pastoral theme convener at the Future Agricultures Consortium and
research fellow at the UK Institute for Development Studies, told IRIN.
“Small-town growth in the dry lands has also influenced changes in
livestock marketing dynamics. Small butchers and micro-dairying
operations have proliferated in many towns in [Kenya and other regional
countries] to meet the demand for meat and milk in these areas from
sedentary herders as well as migrants who have come from other areas.”
The authors of a 2011 paper
on the effects of cattle-rustling and household characteristics on
migration decisions and herd size among pastoralists in Kenya’s western
Baringo District, noted that “there is an emergence of commercialized
cattle-rustling where wealthy businessmen, politicians, traders or local
people pursuing economic objectives finance raids among the pastoral
communities.”
A 2010 study
commissioned by the Kenya Human Rights Commission also echoed this
view, claiming that “the meat-loving urbanite Kenyans are the
unsuspecting accomplices of these unscrupulous businessmen.”
Livestock markets like Karangware, an informal settlement in Nairobi,
are thriving. Transporters from Moyale, a border town near Ethiopia,
come to a slaughterhouse here to offload cattle, sheep and goats.
“We will travel back to Garissa tomorrow by bus to bring more goats. The
demand here in Nairobi is very big. We are making good money from this
business,” Abdi Farah, 24, told IRIN. Farah earns 100 Kenya shillings
(US$1.15) for every animal he brings to the city but, he says,
transporters like him never find out the source of the animals that he
delivers.
“We know some of the livestock is stolen but we just buy because we want
the best price. Stolen cattle are sold much cheaper,” Farah said.
Regional dimension
Hussein Mahmoud, a professor at Pwani University (60km north of Mombasa) and expert on the livestock trade,
notes that in the region, illegal rustling is transnational and stolen
livestock is taken across borders into neighbouring countries.
Cattle raids and trade also have a connection to regional conflicts. A 2008 paper
by Alemmaya Mulugeta, a researcher at the University of Basel, noted:
“In the Horn of Africa’s pastoral peripheries cattle raids have been
intertwined with strongly militarized conflicts such as civil wars and
cross-border disputes.”
There are historical antecedents to cross-border cattle rustling. The
Kenya Human Rights Commission report observes there was “an upsurge of
cattle raids between the Ugandan Karamajong and Turkanas of Kenya”
caused by the sudden availability of weapons after the Karamajong
overran the armoury in Moroto at the fall of Idi Amin’s regime in 1979.
But, the report argued that ongoing internal strife in neighbouring
countries makes getting rid of illegal weapons to reduce deaths from
cattle-rustling an uphill battle. “It is practically impossible to
conduct an effective disarmament exercise without effectively engaging
the neighbouring countries.”