Provincial

Where guns now sell for five cows down from 14

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The result of bloody cattle raids is often displaced families such as the one above, after clashes  that broke out in Laikipia West. The families are still camping in Suguta Marmar Centre in Samburu Central. Photo/ PAUL LETIWA

The result of bloody cattle raids is often displaced families such as the one above, after clashes that broke out in Laikipia West. The families are still camping in Suguta Marmar Centre in Samburu Central. Photo/ PAUL LETIWA  

By PAUL LETIWA
Posted  Wednesday, January 13  2010 at  22:21

Any mention of northern Kenya immediately brings to mind images of constant fighting, cattle raids and starvation. Bordering lawless Somalia and former war-torn Sudan, the region has seen few days of peace in the last 10 years. It is a region where the bloody cattle rustling persistently trounces any attempts at peace and reconciliation.

Indigenous herders occupy dwindling grazing lands that are best suited for livestock production, but suffering periodic drought. Their way of life has mostly been portrayed as backward and warlike.

Cattle rustling has a long history, and to some extent, has become an aspect of the traditional pastoralists’ culture. The only modern thing available is, unhappily, firearms, which have long replaced traditional weapons. Cattle rustling has become increasingly destructive and difficult to control.

Desolate region

Loss of human life, property, displacement of communities, disruption of socio-economic activities, threat to water catchments areas, feuds between the communities, and high levels of starvation and malnutrition are some effects of frequent ethnic conflicts in the desolate region.

According to a recent report from the University of Arizona that shows how violence shapes the health of nomadic pastoralists in northern Kenya, the demand for automatic weapons and their munitions in Turkana, Samburu and Pokot has in the last decade opened a big market.

“Fuelled by persistent droughts, the arms race among the major pastoral communities in northern Kenya has intensified in the last decade with almost 95 per cent of homesteads said to own a fire arm,” says the report that will be presented at the Global Response 2010, an international conference on violent conflict and health to be held in Copenhagen, Denmark later this month.

In one of the most vicious eruptions of conflict in the region, more than 100 people were butchered in Marsabit District at dawn in July 2005, when armed raiders believed to be Borana, attacked the village of Turbi inhabited by the Gabra community. During the ethnic warfare, which lasted for several days, dozens of people were injured and thousands of families displaced.

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The attack underlined the hostile relationships between communities in the arid north, where pasture and water are limited. The dominant ethnic groups in the area are yet to embrace peaceful co-existence. They all apportion blame with startling precision. And as expected, none of their clan members is aggressive, it is always the neighbouring community that attacks, stirring the need to retaliate.

The use of guns has risen during the past decade. In places like Samburu, Isiolo, Pokot and Laikipia, a population without firearms is the minority. Owning a gun among the pastoralists is no longer a secret. Many warriors use the weapon to herd their cattle. They argue that it is the only way to protect themselves from the “aggressive neighbouring tribes”.

Most of these firearms are cheap, portable, high-tech, easily obtainable, durable, need minimal maintenance and require little training to use. This means that even the youngest herds-boy can assume the status of warrior-hood and join the ever-growing militia groups.

The price of guns has plummeted over the years. According to sources, most guns are obtained in Isiolo Town. The price of a rifle is now only five cows, down from 14 in 2003. And to acquire an AK-47, a herder only needs two large bulls and a couple of smaller livestock. A bullet goes for between Sh100 and Sh150.

In recent years, attempts by the Government to disarm the herders have proved disastrous. Most of the communities were left vulnerable to those across the border who still have easy access to weapons. On this ground alone, the warriors of the north take it upon themselves to acquire arms to protect their people and cattle. The vicious cycle of hostility continues.

In a recent visit to Isiolo, one of the volatile areas in the North, the Minister for Internal Security Prof George Saitoti warned the residents that the Kenyan Government would start a military operation to force all herders to surrender illegal guns.

Surrender guns

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Add a comment (7 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by naliweliwalo

    First, the govt should protect its borders, and then they can then embark on disarming all Kenyans involved in the conflict. Otherwise, disarming Kenyans and leaving them vulnerable to neighboring communities in Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda and Somalia is a risk we cannot afford. Is the govt ready to guard its borders?

    Posted  January 15, 2010 08:32 AM  
  2. Submitted by tonnygatch

    Everyone should be disarmed. It is not a right to own a gun. People with guns feel invincible. people without guns use fists or spears which is safer than guns. The govt. should protect human life. That means making sure no private citizen should have a gun unless he has due cause to have one. It should also make sure all loop hole for illegal fire arms are tightly sealed and then protect the people using police and armed forces. No one in a country like ours should be protecting themselves.

    Posted  January 14, 2010 09:59 PM  
  3. Submitted by fairisle06

    It never ceases to amaze me that in the 21st century Kenya, we are still talking about ‘cattle raids’ What are the elected officials in that region doing about the problem? Disarmament without providing an alternative is unacceptable because every citizen has a right to protect himself and property.

    Posted  January 14, 2010 09:43 PM  
  4. Submitted by akamau2010

    The government should not ask the pastrolists to disarm without providing security.Since we all know that the government will not protect the citizens then ...you decide.In USA it is a right to own a gun.In Texas(WILD WEST) which was basically a pastrol state ALL farmers and cattle own guns.Northern Kenya is basically our Wild West.Let those poor folks own guns to defend themselves-Register gun owners.

    Posted  January 14, 2010 07:26 PM  
  5. Submitted by malasow

    disarmament of the pastrolists will lead to disaster after another. they have them for basic survival. who will protect the turkana from toposa, pokot from karamajong, gabras from ethiopian borans. our security forces exist on paper. be serious.

    Posted  January 14, 2010 06:39 PM  

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