EASTERN


Villagers weave their way to wealth

Monday, 08 February 2010 06:56 Bunge La Mwananchi Secretariat
Print PDF

They were poverty stricken. Their children were dropping out of school, while Aids ravaged their youth. Now pay day comes every week.

What started humbly as an attempt at turning around the lives of a people in a poor setup by using local materials is today a major industry raking in millions of shillings.

Every week, more than 15,000 sisal discs nicknamed by the villagers “CD” are sold from Migwani District of Mwingi South to be used in decorations for special bags.

Decorated bags

The CDs measure no more than four inches. The decorated bags are eventually shipped to markets in Europe, the United States and Japan. The discs fetch just about Sh30 apiece. But this translates to some Sh450,000 a week for the groups.

For the weavers across the dusty villages of Migwani, pay comes via the paying points in trading centres or through electronic M-Pesa and Zap. Groups in the aloe industry are equally buoyed financially, making about Sh60,000 every week. Result? The once hopeless villagers are smiling all the way to markets and shops. Children are going to school and deaths from Aids have gone down due to better nutrition.

A local organisation known as Regional Institute for Social EnterpRise (Rise) through Mr Philip Mwangangi, says from a situation where people earned nothing, nearly Sh2 million is earned by ordinary villagers each month. He said: “We are training farmers in nursery management, grafting and water harvesting for irrigation. About 400 group-based farmers have been targeted for the first phase. Fruit tree nurseries are already in place,” he said.

Other areas Rise has targeted, according to Mr Mwangangi, include greenhouse horticulture and agro-forestry. He says five pilot greenhouses have been planned for growing tomatoes by selected community organisations. The agro-forestry endeavour is visible in the tree nurseries tended by each of the 19 organisations, and tree planting is taking place on Kwa Mutotya Hill in Nzauni Location that has been rendered bare by illegal loggers and charcoal burners.

“As the rest of the country focuses on Mau Forest, we plan to focus on this hill, which for generations has served as the water tower for Migwani,” he said. A founder director of the organisation, Mr Temi Mutia, said the loss of a close relative to Aids, which he previously took for granted, made him discover that poverty contributed to its devastation. He swore to alleviate poverty among his people. This was the subject of his PhD thesis.

“I found out that the Aloe vera that grew wild in our neighbourhood could be used to empower the people. In conjunction with my team, we also decided to focus on the natural Kamba talent of weaving, using the readily available sisal. My University at Utrecht in the Netherlands and some of my classmates agreed to help me look for markets, and the CD project kicked off,” he said.

Mr Mutia, who did a Masters in Entrepreneurship at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, teamed up with Dr Patrick Kareru of the Chemistry Department. “With help from the agricultural sector co-ordination unit that supports private sector in agriculture and the Micro EnterpRises Support Programme Trust, it has been possible to bring about this reality.”

Last Updated on Monday, 08 February 2010 06:56
 
Quick Post

Enter code here  

Discuss...

From dependence on relief, village turns into a breadbasket

Monday, 08 February 2010 06:52 Bunge La Mwananchi Secretariat
Print PDF

Members of the Kenya Community Development Foundation at Katutuni village in Ikombe division within Yatta District sowing butternut seeds. Photo/SAMMY CHEBOI

Members of the Kenya Community Development Foundation at Katutuni village in Ikombe division within Yatta District sowing butternut seeds. Photo/SAMMY CHEBOI

A decade ago, Katutuni village in Ikombe division within Yatta district was always in the limelight for all the wrong reasons. It was beset by poverty, overwhelmed by preventable diseases while the rate of school dropout due to hunger was high.

Gloom and despair took its toll on residents in the face of unrelenting droughts.

“We had been reduced to nothing. This was no longer a place worth living in,” recalls Raphael Masika.

In the face of such desperation, the community resolved to act. And Makutano Community Development Association (MCDA) was born to be a rallying point for community members to venture into development projects.

Since they had no capacity to turn their dreams into reality, for a while the thoughts remained just that: thoughts.

But by happenstance, Kenya Community Development Foundation (KCDF) in partnership with Safaricom Foundation came to the rescue of the villagers.

“These people knew what they wanted to do. They needed support to realise their dreams,” says Al Kags, KCDF’s head of marketing and partnership.

He says they funded the association and conducted intensive reflection sessions that helped the community acknowledge and appreciate the resources within its locality, define its priorities and device strategies to address them.

To address the problem of hunger, MCDA has trained and worked with the community to harvest rain water for irrigation. The village is slowly being transformed as a number of services are now within a radius of five kilometres.

Today, the community has 10 dams, seven shallow wells and one borehole drilled close to one of the dams. The villagers have turned 10,000 acres land into productive use.

“We have exorcised the evil spirits of dependence on relief food,” says Masika, in Biblical-speak terms.

Through the assistance of the two organisations, MCDA now has a secondary school catering for children from poor backgrounds, 32 of whom are orphans.

The association is also engaged in intensive cultivation of drought-resistant crop varieties, beekeeping and processing sunflower for oil.

All this has been achieved, thanks to KCDF and Safaricom Foundation’s 2007 pilot food security programme that sought to support Kenyans to grow their own food instead of relying on relief supplies.

Encouraged by the results, KCDF sought to augment the programme by incorporating innovative ways of growing food as well as expand it to many areas.

Last Updated on Monday, 08 February 2010 06:52
 
Quick Post

Enter code here  

Discuss...

Abducted woman found dead in Machakos

Monday, 08 February 2010 06:48 Bunge La Mwananchi Secretariat
Print PDF

A woman who was kidnapped in Nairobi by four people claiming to be police officers has been found dead in Machakos.

Area police boss Hassan Baruwa and his team of detectives found the body of 45-year-old Hellen Kitaki dumped in a ditch in Mua Hills.

They discovered it while pursuing the gangsters soon after a report was made at the station on Thursday at about 3am.

“Yes, we found the woman. Unfortunately, she was dead. She was hit with a blunt object on the head,” Mr Baruwa told the Saturday Nation on Friday.

Four people entered the woman’s compound in a Nairobi estate and knocked at the door claiming to be police officers in search of a vehicle that was allegedly involved in an accident on the Nairobi-Mombasa highway.

They asked her and her husband to cooperate with them as they were looking for the owner of a Toyota Rav 4, registration KBF 414 W, which was parked in their compound in Siwaka Estate.

The four asked the couple to accompany them to a police station to record a statement but on the way turned against them, introducing themselves as members of the outlawed Mungiki sect.

They drove with the couple all the way to Machakos and abandoned Mr Kitaki in Mua Hills in the middle of the night and took his wife hostage.

“I’m lost for words” was all Mr Daniel Kitaki could say when news of his wife’s death was broken to him.

“Her clothes were intact. There were no signs that she had been sexually abused. What is puzzling is why they chose to kill her and let go the husband,” Mr Baruwa said.

Last Updated on Monday, 08 February 2010 06:48
 
Quick Post

Enter code here  

Discuss...

State ponders teacher’s sex trial options

Monday, 08 February 2010 06:44 Bunge La Mwananchi Secretariat
Print PDF

The government may appoint a special prosecutor to try a primary school headteacher in Makueni District who is accused of sexually molesting young girls under his charge.

State counsel Moses O’Mirera said the case, which has been highlighted in the media, has aroused public interest and the best way out was to get an impartial prosecutor.

“There have been accusations and counter-accusations targeting the police and education officials. I think the best way out is for the matter to be handled by a special prosecutor,” Mr O’Mirera wrote to the Makueni CID boss.

Criminal

Mr O’mirera said the state was only aware of a criminal case involving the schoolhead, Mr Andrew Kithusi, that occurred last year.

The Nation confirmed that the AG has directed the Machakos State Law office to recall and urgently forward the file to Nairobi.

The AG has also ordered investigations into the alleged defilement of the other girls.

Last Updated on Monday, 08 February 2010 06:44
 
Quick Post

Enter code here  

Discuss...


Quickvote
Did you like the way IIEC conducted Referendum exercise?


Bunge Blog
Bunge la mwananchi

Physical Address: City Office: c/o Fahamu Trust,Peponi Plaza, Block C, 2nd Floor in Westlands, Nairobi.
Postal address: P O Box 456 – 00606, Nairobi, Kenya
Website: www.bungelamwananchi.org
Email: info@bungelamwananchi.org

mwananchibunge@gmail.com

grnyongesa@yahoo.com

tweet

tweet