Monday, 17 September 2012
ROSES FROM MY GARDEN: WANTED: A MARSHAL PLAN FORKANGEMA CONSTITUENCY‘’By...
ROSES FROM MY GARDEN: WANTED: A MARSHAL PLAN FORKANGEMA CONSTITUENCY‘’By...: WANTED: A MARSHAL PLAN FOR KANGEMA CONSTITUENCY ‘’ By some mysterious happenstance, Kangema may have the highest concentration of billion...
WANTED: A MARSHAL PLAN FOR
KANGEMA CONSTITUENCY
‘’By some mysterious
happenstance, Kangema may have the highest concentration of
billionaires of any constituency in Kenya outside Muthaiga and
Parklands.’’
Gitau Warigi,Sunday Nation,February
26,2012.
Growing up in the mountainous hills of
Murang’a in the 80’s, my most vivid memories include chasing
after tough Chevrolet pickups trucks laden with coffee cherry headed
to the local factory. One of my dreams was to own one one day. This
was because every little hamlet had several of them, bought mostly
during the coffee boom years of the late Seventies. The villages and
market centers were abuzz with activities revolving around coffee,
and villages lanes were always full of busy people. The coffee
benches could as have well been paved with gold.
Fast forward to the current times. Most
of the former bustling market centers are poor images of their former
selves, with derelict buildings long gone into disrepair. Lanky dazed
young men laze about, looking forlornly at the passing newcomers,
hoping one of them will toss them a coin for their next high. Despite
being hardly out of their youth, their faces are full of bruises
earned from many liquor brawls, and thus look like a road map to
every dirty shebeen in the area. These sad images are replicated in
almost all the shopping centers in the District.
So, when did the rain start beating the
people of Kangema, and Murang’a in general? Needless to say, people
from the County are famed for their entrepreneurial spirit,
especially in the informal sector. It’s an open secret that most of
the buildings and business in the older parts of Nairobi, are owned
by people from Murang’a.Infact,Nyakamakima,that hub of business in
the River Road area, is a small village in Kangema but the name was
transported to Nairobi as most of the businesses are owned by people
from that area. The region has also produced some of the best
entrepreneurs in Kenya, something that Nation journalist Gitau Warigi
alluded to in the above lines picked from an article in which he was
eulogizing the Hon John Njoroge Michuki, the late illustrious MP for
Kangema.
Despite the affluence commanded by
people from the Murang’a in the metro, the County lags behind in
most of the social-economic indicators. The rural folk only come to
enjoy the largesse of their well-endowed kin during Christmas when
they invade the rural homes in their intimidating gizmos. Poverty
levels are alarmingly high. Youth unemployment and runway alcoholism
are some of the major problems affecting the area.
Kangema and the County in general, is a
replete with contrasts. While one part of its populace is busy
setting new business trends in Nairobi and other towns, the other is
living in abject poverty back in the villages. While some feast on
dainties, others are dirt poor, living on conditions that may make
their lives, to borrow from Thomas Hobbes,’nasty, brutish and
short’. Little wonder that the jigger menace is a real problem in
the area. While some of the best sons are leading business magnates
in the country, others are into organized crime groups like Mungiki
which is rampant in the area.So,why does this region suffer this
contradictions? Why does it express this Dr.Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
personality?
One doesn’t need to be a nuclear
physicist to get to the root cause of the problems afflicting this
region. For a start,the collapse of the rural economy that was based
on coffee and tea farming has been one of the enduring
problems.True,coffee farming may not go back to the lucrative coffee
boom years but the leaders of the region need to come up with ways of
reviving it. Tea may not be doing as bad, but sadly it’s not
widespread as coffee to have a large impact in the area’s economy.
Farming in the area has been left to aging pensioners who do not have
the energy to pursue it productively. This is because most of the
youth have migrated to the urban centers to look for greener pastures
or worse are too drunk to bother about it.However,if it has returns,
the runaway rural to urban migration will be checked.
Murang’a County has also been
mentioned in the same breath with rampant alcoholism and high levels
of crime. Various efforts steered by the Provincial Administration
and the clergy have been made to curtail this with little or no
fruits. The people of the region need to address the dysfunctions in
the society that produce young men who thirst more for liquor than
water. It’s not enough to go around pouring these liquor from every
shebeen for tomorrow more will crop up.
Almost have a decade after
independence, most of the people here live in abject poverty and the
villages are full of people trying to break from the bonds of mass
misery. Its a crying shame that some cannot afford the most basic
wants, and Jawaharlal Nehru’s ‘unholy trinity’ of poverty,
ignorance and disease stalks most of the locals. Come every election
time, the region is awash with money as the contestants dish freebies
to the impoverished locals to sway their voting.
True, flinging a coin to a beggar is a
compassionate act but it has never removed beggars from the streets.
To end this culture, the rural folk have to be empowered. It’s the
system that produces beggars that needs restructuring.The tycoons in
from Nairobi won’t achieve much by throwing money around every
election time as this perpetuates a cycle of dependence. The rural
folk need efforts to help themselves, not freebies. Efforts must be
made to tap the regions entrepreneurial spirit even in the rural areas
so that jobs can be created for the large hordes of angry unemployed
youths roaming the village paths.
Thus, it can be argued that the major
problems afflicting Kangema are unemployment, failing rural
agriculture, crime and alcoholism and the gaping chasms between the
rich and the poor. The society needs a leader who will will galvanize
the people of the region around this burning issues of the day. A
leader who will not chart some agenda for the constituency not from a
posh Nairobi hotel, but involve locals from even the remotest hamlets
hidden in the chilly hills of Tutho near Aberdares.
Its only by doing this that Kangema
Constituency will come up with its home-grown Marshall Plan to set
its development agenda.
Gilbert Mwangi
Freelance Writer
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