Korogocho

Korogocho
informal settlement (currently being upgraded by NYS)
Nickname(s): Koch

Nairobi slums locations
Korogocho

Nairobi slums locations

Coordinates: 01°13′00″S 36°55′00″E / 1.21667°S 36.91667°E / -1.21667; 36.91667Coordinates: 01°13′00″S 36°55′00″E / 1.21667°S 36.91667°E / -1.21667; 36.91667
Province Nairobi Province
District Nairobi East
Division Kasarani
Location Korogocho
settled 1960s
Area
  Total 1.5 km2 (0.6 sq mi)
Elevation 1,603 m (5,262 ft)
Population (2008)
  Total 150,000
  Density 100,000/km2 (260,000/sq mi)
  est.

Korogocho is one of the largest slum neighbourhoods of Nairobi, Kenya. Home to 150,000 to 200,000 people pressed into 1.5 square kilometres, northeast of the city centre, Korogocho was founded as a shanty town on the then outskirts of the city.[1][2]

In 2009 it was estimated to be the fourth largest slum in Nairobi, after Kibera, Mathare Valley and Mukuru kwa Njenga.[3]

Etymology

The name Korogocho is a Swahili term meaning crowded shoulder to shoulder.[1]

Location

Located 11 kilometres northeast of the Nairobi city centre, Korogocho's 1-1.5 square kilometres were originally on government owned land which was a vacant outskirt when it was founded by rural migrants to the city in the 1960s. It borders one of Nairobi's main rubbish dumps, Dandora.[4] The slum is a "Location" (a formal subdivision) of Kasarani division, Nairobi Province,[2] and is divided into seven "villages": Highridge, Grogan, Ngomongo, Ngunyumu, Githaturu, Kisumu Ndogo/Nyayo and Korogocho.[4]

As Korogocho expanded, it grew onto private land, and almost half its land is now owned privately.[4]

Ethnicity

Korogocho residents come from more than thirty ethnic groups, although most are from the Kikuyu, Luo, and Luhya peoples.[4]

Infrastructure

The limits of Korogocho within Nairobi.

There is little formal infrastructure serving Korogocho's residents. Most housing was built by families living there, and is made of found or recycled materials. Despite this, many of the residents pay land rent for the right to live there. Others pay rent to those who have constructed their habitations.[2] There is no central sewer system, piped fresh water, and crime rates are high.[2] An informal council of elders and chieftaincy, like that found in much of Kenya, also provides land and housing for some widows and others in greater need.[5]

Small scale farming is commonly practiced, despite the crowded conditions.[5] There is no system of street lighting, resulting in increased insecurity and the construction of special lighted safe areas by government and NGOs.[6] There is a Kenyan Police station, along with the chieftaincy at the very centre of Korogocho village.[4] Crime is endemic, and law enforcement in the shanty towns are poor. Organised crime groups are said to operate here. In 2004 the Zambian diplomat Osward Banda was murdered and his five-year-old son, tied to his dead father, was left in his car in a Korogocho street.[7]

Health

Rinsing sewerage drums after they have been emptied into the local river.

With poor infrastructure, few resources, overcrowding, and proximity to the dump, health in Korogocho is poor. Several organisations provide free clinics in the slum,[4] while other organise HIV/AIDS prevention work. The area has been singled out by officials because of high illegal drug and alcohol abuse, and had an estimated 14% HIV infection rate in 2008.[8]

An education centre has been set up in Korogocho called the " Caretakers Orphans Education Centre" CEOC funded by charitable donations in the UK to help HIV orphaned children gain an education,food, and basic medical attention. http://thebusinessphone.com/the-caretakers-orphans-education-centre/

Development programmes

Slums, covering only 5% of Nairobi, provide homes for 2.5 million Kenyans, well over half the city's entire population.[4] Several large Italian development projects are based in Korogocho, including those funded by Italian Government and World Bank debt swaps,[3] and a coalition of Catholic Church charities, Bega Kwa Bega, founded in 1991 and based on an earlier project by the Italian Comboni Missionary society, begun in 1973.[9]

The Government of Kenya has created a development body focused solely upon improving the lives of Korogocho residents, the Korogocho Slum Upgrading Programme (KSUP) .[10]The KSUP is funded through the Italian Government as part of a debt swaps scheme and involves representatives from UNHabitat, local government and federal government. Local representation for the people of Korogocho was to be guaranteed through the establishment of a Koch Resident's Committee consisting of 6 residents from each of the 8 'villages' in Koch, totaling 48 people.

It was headed by a Chairman (Peter Kinyanjui), Secretary (John Okello) and Treasurer (Nyaga, a former enforcer and gangster). Membership of the KRC is supposed to be through democratic election every two years. However, an election was due in November 2010 but the current members refused to stand down and have turned themselves into a Community Based Organization (CBO), unlawfully, since the money they control is not for their personal use.

Although the KRC was set up to be a representative body for Koch residents, the Committee has, over the last two years, turned into a corrupt organization headed by self-interested individuals who wield significant power because of the large amounts of money and resources they have access to.[11]

Korogocho came to popular attention in some parts of the west following the marketing of several export based craft and clothing companies which were founded there,[12][13] while the 2007 Seventh World Social Forum ended its Nairobi summit with a half marathon which was begun, symbolically, in Korogocho slum.[14]

Political unrest

Korogocho was one of the sites of the 2007-2008 unrest over the disputed presidency of Kenya. At least fifteen men died in one incident at the end of 2007,[15][16] when ethnic and political divisions resulted in rioting and battles with the police.[17]

Market

This is an informal market not licensed by Nairobi city council. It specialises in selling fresh food produces and also new and second hand clothes. It operates every day with no official hours. It is a bit disorganised in terms of the arrangements but people trade within the constrains of the disorderliness. It is located adjacent to Korogocho slums opposite Dandora estate.

References

  1. 1 2 Korogocho. BEGA KWA BEGA Development project. Accessed 2009-06-02
  2. 1 2 3 4 Background. Korogocho Slum Upgrading Programme (KSUP). Government of Kenya. 15 January 2009.
  3. 1 2 Kenya-Italy swap benefits Korogocho slums. Millicent Muthoni, The Standard. 15 January 2009.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 PRESENTATION OF KOROGOCHO SLUM. Korogocho.org, Comboni Missionaries. 8 January 2008.
  5. 1 2 City farmers of Kenya. Diana Lee-Smith, peoplendplant.net/Mazingira Institute. 19 Oct 2000
  6. Nairobi's Lady of the lamp. The Independent (London) 16 June 2007.
  7. Gunmen bind boy to his father's bloody body. Reuters. November 25, 2004.
  8. KENYA: Selling beer and HIV education in Nairobi's slums. IRIN. 05 Nov 2008
  9. GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT BEGA KWA BEGA. BEGA KWA BEGA Development project. Accessed 2009-06-02
  10. KSUP.org. Korogocho Slum Upgrading Programme (KSUP). Government of Kenya. 15 January 2009.
  11. Other KRC members include Hawa Dima
  12. Kenyan Company Launches a Line of Environment-Friendly Footwear. CNN SUNDAY MORNING. Aired August 26, 2001
  13. Pulling Up by Their Sandal Straps. Jennifer Friedlin, Wired Magazine. 06.26.2003
  14. What did we achieve? Another world is possible. The World Social Forum is a small part of the road to it. Sasha Simic, the Guardian (London) 27 January 2007.
  15. Scores dead as Kenya erupts post result. Reuters Jan 01, 2008
  16. Kenya death toll seen at 250. Helen Nyambura-Mwaura and Daniel Wallis, Reuters. 1 January 2008.
  17. Kenya: Citizens Wanted Change But Were Short-Changed. The Weekly Observer (Kampala), Martyn Drakard. 10 January 2008

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.