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Why Burundi is new destination for adventurous Kenyans

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Some Kenyan students at Hope University in Bujumbura, Burundi. Photo/ANDREW LIMO

Some Kenyan students at Hope University in Bujumbura, Burundi. Photo/ANDREW LIMO 

By ANDREW LIMO
Posted  Saturday, October 17  2009 at  22:30

Burundi, which formally joined the East African Community (EAC) in June 2007, is becoming a popular destination for Kenyans looking for jobs and business deals beyond their own borders.

After years of civil war, the landlocked nation of about nine million people is rebuilding almost every sector of its economy, creating new opportunities in trade, education, agriculture and many other fields.

As in Uganda and to some extent Rwanda, resilient Kenyans are discovering that it is still possible to strike some luck in nearby East African destinations. And they do not have to endure the rigorous rituals of visa application like those who aspire to go to America, Britain and other Western destinations.

With only Sh5,000, one can hop onto a Kasoo or Akamba bus for the two-day journey via Uganda. By air, it takes less than two hours. Kenya Airways now operates two daily flights to Bujumbura to meet the rising demand, especially since the cessation of hostilities in Burundi.

But even before the guns from the 16-year civil war fell silent in Burundi, many daring Kenyans – mostly small-scale traders and students – had travelled there to seize opportunities and even made it a second home.

Ten years ago, Bernard Wanjohi, tired that his business in Nairobi’s Karanja Road in Kibera was taking long to bear fruit, decided to leave for Burundi.

“I entered Burundi from Mulavia, 50 km north of Bujumbura, on December 31, 1999,” he said in a telephone interview from Bujumbura. The 43-year-old Kenyan who operates a busy nyama choma (roasted meat) joint in Bukarama suburb of Bujumbura, says he has not heard a gunshot in the last two-and-a-half years.

When the civil war between majority Hutus and minority Tutsis raged on, it was the peasant farmers in the countryside who suffered the most. The residents of Bujumbura and its environs were fairly safe. Mr Wanjohi is full of praise for his new home. “It is peaceful. The people are friendly despite their culture of being very secretive and suspicious. The police have never harassed me here. There are no carjackings.”

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Kenyans are also increasingly attracted by the low cost of living in Bujumbura, the affordable university education and the fact that the French-speaking nation is now adopting English as well.

Article 137 of the Treaty for the Establishment of EAC states that “the official language of the Community shall be English and Kiswahili and shall be developed as the lingua franca of the Community”. Burundians therefore have no option but to adapt to the language of integration.

English is now being taught in high school, and Kenyans are drawn to Burundi by teaching opportunities. King’s School in the Kabondo area of Bujumbura, which was started by missionaries as a rescue centre for orphans in 1994, at one time had a staff of 12 Kenyans, among them the principal, Mrs Debbie Kimani, a Briton married to a Kenyan.

Most of the pupils at King’s School are children of diplomats and business people. Bujumbura has a business community of Asian origin whose children go to the elite school.

Criticism of France

Universities in Burundi have intensified the teaching of English, especially after the country joined EAC. Burundi cannot afford to stick to French as a national language; more so after neighbouring Rwanda switched to English in a move many believe is reinforced by President Kagame’s criticism of France for not doing enough to prevent the 1994 genocide.

Kenya has established an embassy at the PTA Bank building in downtown Bujumbura manned by a small staff.
Kenya Commercial Bank is headed there to open a branch. Oil giant Kobil was there last week saying it is establishing its presence there. There is also talk of a railway line being extended from Kampala to Bujumbura.

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Add a comment (13 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by kariste72

    Yes, there are no car jackings in Bujumbura but wait until enough kenyans arrive. Was the same thing in Dar es salaam until the Kenyans showed up and the banks and street corners became unsafe.

    Posted  October 20, 2009 01:16 PM  
  2. Submitted by azizochieng

    We need to vote in visionary and principled leaders to take us to higher heights. Kenya has a lot of resources, Kenyans are smart but we lack leadership to transform this country to a giant. Its time we woke up!

    Posted  October 20, 2009 10:31 AM  
  3. Submitted by machiavelli

    We need break the tribal baggage that has continued to weigh down on our Nationhood. You will know it has happened when Kikuyu's accept that a Luo as our next leader. Only then shall we start to see the full potential of our country. Bravo Burudi, you have come from far!!

    Posted  October 20, 2009 10:30 AM  
  4. Submitted by nyasgwa

    sounds like good music.

    Posted  October 20, 2009 05:57 AM  
  5. Submitted by MugambiEric

    Burundi here we come!! we are IDPs in our own country!!

    Posted  October 19, 2009 07:28 PM  

See all 13 comments