Opinion

To end perpetual hunger, why not abolish villages?

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By CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO
Posted  Wednesday, January 14  2009 at  18:37

The prospects for 10 million Kenyans don’t look good this year. That is the number of people the Government estimates face starvation.

Mozambique, too, is in similar dire straits. Looking at Kenya, and Africa in general, I feel that until governments take unpopular vote-losing decisions, millions will continue to starve to death.

Whenever mass hunger strikes, the starving usually move in search of food and will gather at a point where some NGO is distributing relief food.

Then the situation improves, people disperse to their villages, and return three years later. The lesson in all this is that it is extremely inefficient to live in scattered villages, and remote places.
In all countries beset by hunger, the towns usually remain unaffected.

The city elite goes on partying and eating three-course meals as the peasants perish. The big men and women in the big town are usually accused of being greedy, heartless animals who are not bothered about stuffing their faces as the rest of the country starves.

That might be so, but food generally tends to go where large numbers of people live close to each other. That happens in the towns, not in the villages.

In some countries, you can drive in the countryside and find two homes close to each other, and for the next five kilometres, there will be no settlement. Then you stumble upon a lonely home in the middle of nowhere.

There are good reasons why we live this way. There is something deeply spiritual about the land on which we settle in the countryside. Our forefathers are buried in it. So the spirit of the clan and the family lives in it, and we keep that important connection to the past by staying on the land.

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However, when hunger comes, the spirits of the ancestors will not save you. Even the food-distributing NGO will not scour the villages looking for hungry people in their isolated homes. The hungry will have to crawl to the feeding centre.

What this suggests is that governments should “ban” the traditional villages. People should still hold the right to their land that they can farm, but they should be encouraged to live closer.
Rwanda did something close to this in the post-genocide reconstruction, though it remains controversial.

Part of the ferocity of the killings in 1994 was driven partly by lingering ancient conflicts over land between the pastoralists (the Tutsi) and the farmers (the Hutu).

Also, one reason nearly one million people were killed is that they were scattered in villages, and even if the UN peacekeepers had been able to protect them, there was simply no way to reach the thousands of isolated rural homesteads in time to save the occupants.

After 1994, in most of the country , new homes for refugees and displaced people — which almost everyone was in Rwanda — were built close together.

That freed a considerable amount of land which could be farmed and used more rationally for grazing without bitter quarrels about a neighbour’s cow straying and eating another’s potato crop.

Critics say Kigali has a cynical reason for this; to keep people living in near-encampments where it can control them. And human rights groups fear that this proximity will make it possible for the killers to slaughter more people if there is ever another genocide.

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Add a comment (31 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Moorni

    Osare Jako'Oyugi had this to say, some of you will have to stop your generation-homestead-building-scattering altitude luo style to conquer the hunger. It is too bad that the Luos are going to remain the victim of all name it.

    Posted  January 17, 2009 12:10 AM  
  2. Submitted by lawriem72

    Obbo what is you are saying should be legislated. There is no way all Kenyans can be farmers. Farming should be a profession and small chunks of land must be consolidated and meaningful farming activity done. People must live in villages as it is in the UK and Europe. By so doing, development -as it is say can easily be brought closer to the people.

    Posted  January 16, 2009 09:48 PM  
  3. Submitted by Wanjiku98

    wuod_aketch, who has the right to be in "your" parliament?. You? He is there to stay, suck it up. Tribalist. With some Kenyans, there is always a reason for their failures. The other guy is responsible for their failures. What are they responsible for. Nothing.

    Posted  January 16, 2009 07:40 PM  
  4. Submitted by kariukimwangi

    If we want commercial farming to succeed then Obbo you have a point. We cannot farm if people keep partition land into smaller pieces. With Kenya's population project at 76m in 2050 I think we need to move to urban centers and free the villages.

    Posted  January 16, 2009 05:16 PM  
  5. Submitted by victorKinyanjui

    A beautiful and well written prose; CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO, can you also write another one on why Japan, Taiwan, Singapore Seychelles etc do not need to create “ghettos” and worry about the “dead” so as to plant “MAIZE”. If there is no explanation, then the saying goes “Mchagua Jembe sio mkulima”

    Posted  January 16, 2009 04:57 PM  

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