News
National census off to a slow start
Mr Salim Dhalla, his wife Zohreen and their daughters answer questions from national census official Nelly Botta, at their home in Koja Flats in Mombasa. Photo/Gideon Maundu
Posted Tuesday, August 25 2009 at 22:30
The national census continued at a slow pace on Tuesday, even as officials expressed optimism that 50 per cent of the population would be covered in the first two days.
Enumerators were taking up to 45 minutes to gather data in each home.
People were expected to answer questions such as the number of people who spent Monday night in the house, religion, number of livestock, whether their children attend public or private school, water source, material used to build their homes, type of toilet and energy used.
It is one of the most comprehensive attempts to collect data on the standards of living of Kenyans and visitors to the country.
In Coast Province, the start of counting on Monday was delayed to allow Muslims, who are observing the Holy Month of Ramadhan, to break the fast.
The count was also done at military barracks, police stations, prisons and residences of people in disciplined forces.
There, supervisors and enumerators drawn from the forces, carried out the count on behalf of the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).
There were complaints in Kayole, Soweto and Doonholm areas of Nairobi, where two sets of enumerators arrived for the count.
The Provincial Administration was accused of carrying out parallel recruitment, leading to the confusion.
In Nyanza, parts of Rift Valley and Western provinces, counting went on, albeit at a slow pace.
In some places, especially in Nyanza, some people insisted on being counted as clans and not individuals.
Command post
At their command post in Nairobi, officials in charge of the national census hope to have counted about 36 million Kenyans by noon on Wednesdayday. They announced that the process had been smooth so far.
KNBS director-general Anthony Kilele said the census officials were expected to reach 50 per cent of the estimated 12 million households in the country.
However, those who were not in the country on Monday night will be left out of the official statistics because KNBS is “seeking a snapshot of the people who were in Kenya on that specific night”.




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