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1800 Kibera families to move to modern houses

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Posted Sunday, July 26 2009 at 18:02

About 1,800 households living in Kibera slum in Nairobi will from August 18 start moving into modern houses, it was announced on Sunday.

And each family will be paying Sh1,000 every month for the houses built under Kenya Slum Upgrading Programme (Kensup).
“The rent will include water and electricity,” deputy secretary in the ministry of Housing Mr Salim Molla said.

He explained that rent for the house will only be Sh500 while Sh300 is meant to pay for electricity while the rest is for water consumption.

Mr Molla was speaking at a meeting his Ministry had convened to sensitise the slum dwellers on modalities of decamping from their informal settlement to the new housing units the government has constructed.

The meeting was held at Soweto village, which is part of the sprawling Kibera slum.

Mr Molla who said he had come to represent Housing PS, Mr Tirop Kosgey was accompanied by the national coordinator of Kensup, Mrs Leah Muraguri.

He also announced that from Monday, a surveyor will be marking every house unit indicating its number in the order the beneficiaries have been registered.

The official at the same time said the government will assist the slum dwellers to relocate by providing the with money for transporting their household goods.

But he instructed them to ensure they demolish their ghettoes immediately they relocate.

“We want to start building new other houses in the area where you decamp so that we can settle all the residents of this slum,” he told the meeting.

Resettlement in the new houses will be made bit by bit.

Kensup (Kenya Slum Upgrading Programme), Mrs Muraguri said was started by the government in 2004 with the aim of resettling all the people living in slums into decent houses.

“The government is determined to resettle you in decent houses and get rid of all slums in this country. And we want to start implementing the project with you people of Kibera,” Mrs Muraguri said.

However, what emerged from the Soweto meeting is a clear indication that the resettlement programme will not be easy for the government.

Instead of being enthusiastic about the new move to relocate them, the residents expressed a lot of dissatisfaction and scepticism.

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Etwan ke Twan
    Posted August 20, 2009 06:06 PM

    Blimey! Hope my views are published coz past postings have been censored! Kenyans are a unique breed!Frankly speaking majority of Kenyans abhor change for better or new ideas! The Kibera case as rightly put by BOBCAT will not succeed,many will see it as interruption of their "normal" way of life - what happened with Majengo housing - yes most let out the houses and moved back to the slums!

  2. Submitted by bobcat
    Posted July 26, 2009 08:53 PM

    Ok,one praise for Kibaki.Now stick to ur guns Muraguri,the ghettos must be demolished once they leave,take lessons rom India,if they're given keys to the new crib,they'll go back to the ghetto an rent it out to some middle class guy for 5K,no jokes,Kenyans will neva lack something to complain about,uv done your part,the order should b leave the ghetto by this date or you lose both house and ghetto.

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