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Proper planning holds key to cut in city’s crime rate

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Evening rush hour on Ronald Ngala Street. A former Bogota mayor proposes that for the crime rate in the city to ease, more walkways for pedestrians need to be created. Photo/MICHAEL MUTE

Evening rush hour on Ronald Ngala Street. A former Bogota mayor proposes that for the crime rate in the city to ease, more walkways for pedestrians need to be created. Photo/MICHAEL MUTE 

By STEVEN BULL
Posted  Monday, October 19  2009 at  22:00

In Summary

  • Man who transformed Bogota’s infrastructure gives tips to Nairobi planners

The answer to Nairobi’s growing crime problems lies, not in the tightening of arms laws, but in the proper planning of the city.

Shifting the transport focus from cars and matatus to pedestrians and bicycles could reduce the city’s crime rate and raise the overall quality of life.

In a presentation at the 8th International Conference on Urban Health, former mayor of Bogotá, Columbia, Enrique Peñalosa, said dedicated public vehicle lanes should also be established.

The presentation focused on how the former mayor transformed Bogotá’s transportation infrastructure and created more public spaces. It also highlighted how the changes increased the quality of life, and how it could all be done in Nairobi.

The presentation by Mr Peñalosa, the chair of the Institute of Transportation and Development Policy, was titled “What is a Good City: Public Space, Transport and Quality of Life.”

During his three-year term as mayor, Mr Peñalosa fought to reduce the number of cars in the urban centre while improving pedestrian and bicycle pathways.

By the time his term came to an end in December 2000, Bogotá’s murder rate had dropped from 82 per 100,000 to 16 per 100,000, simply because of the increase of “human dignity”, he said.

Lack of democracy

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He said the biggest problem in cities like Nairobi today was not the traffic jams, or crime. Those are merely symptoms. The problem is equality, he said. There is a lack of democracy and a lack of respect for the dignity of all citizens, said Mr Peñalosa.

“Up to 95 per cent of people in under-developed cities do not drive to work, and almost as many don’t even own a vehicle, so why are we so focused on expanding roads for this elite five per cent? That’s not democracy,” he said.

Bogotá narrowed major roadways in the city centre, expanded pedestrian pavements and constructed a state-of-the-art public transport system that covered all regions of the city, including the slums.

“Nairobi shows a lack of respect for human dignity. This shows that first-class citizens with cars are more important, more valuable than third-class pedestrians,” said Mr Peñalosa, adding that this was not a sign of a democratic society.

Democracy doesn’t just mean casting a ballot; it means the collective good of the public is more important than the good of a few private citizens, he added.

The former mayor, who is billed as a “visionary politician and urban strategist”, said that cities like Nairobi that are trying to solve traffic issues by building more roads have their thinking backwards.

“Trying to solve traffic issues by building more roads is like trying to extinguish a fire using gasoline,” he said.

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Add a comment (10 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Ogofya22

    What the former Mayor said is Urban Planning 101. This is not leadership problem, but lack of competent advice from professionals. Any competent planner would have foreseen these problems ..crime, congestion, pollution, diseases, housing etc. Planning is about foresight. You cant blame the current leadership for problems that were caused by investment, planning and policy decisions were made many years ago. For years, Nairobi has been planned by people who were not trained planners. Urban designers, Architects,Building economists, Civil Engineers, Surveyors, Geographers are NOT Planners. There is lack of professional competency that can inform city leadership accordingly.

    Posted  October 20, 2009 11:57 PM  
  2. Submitted by sibuor30

    I am in Barcelona where I have spent the last 2 weeks taking 3rd year achitecture students on tour of Urban Design. What does Barcelona and Bogota have in Common? Visionary leadership. We need that. We have th eexpertise but no visionary leadership.

    Posted  October 20, 2009 06:36 PM  
  3. Submitted by kenyamoja99

    the former mayor of bogota is speaking a lot of sense. Lakini ni kama kumpigia mbuzi gitaa. As long as we chose babons as leaders in the name of tribalism we will never get anywhere. I have always dreamt of such a plan for my city of mombasa and we go back there when Im 40 and run for the mayoral seat. Hopefully by then kenyan mentalities will have evolved..

    Posted  October 20, 2009 06:00 PM  
  4. Submitted by thanairobian

    Our Kenyan leaders are so short sighted I think they only attended the conference for the freebies and didn't hear a word spoken.

    Posted  October 20, 2009 02:56 PM  
  5. Submitted by Chiawelo

    Alot of sense in that but is our leadership,especially politicians and in the public service amenable to reason?

    Posted  October 20, 2009 02:04 PM  

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