Category Archives: Conservation

Africa’s Natural Resources: Forum wraps Up with Suggestions for Sustainable Use of Africa’s Natural Resources

From: News Release – African Press Organization (APO)
PRESS RELEASE

Forum wraps Up with Suggestions for Sustainable Use of Africa’s Natural Resources

Africa accounts for 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land that need to be protected against rapacious speculation

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, October 29, 2012/ — The eighth African Development Forum (ADF VIII) wound up in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Thursday with the adoption of a Consensus Statement suggesting better ways in which African countries can use their natural resources to promote people-centered sustainable development.

The 11-page document is the tangible result of the October 23-25 forum on the theme “Governing and Harnessing Natural Resources for Africa’s Development.”

It focused on how to generate maximum benefits from the exploitation of Africa’s lands, minerals, fisheries and forests for the benefits of the people.

On land, which has come under intense speculative pressure from local and foreign investors, the document calls for scientific and methodical approaches to land issues that would guarantee transparency, equity and sustainability.

These include strengthening policy, access, property rights, and investment in large scale agriculture in line with the existing Comprehensive African Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP).

Africa accounts for 60 per cent of the world’s uncultivated arable land that need to be protected against rapacious speculation.

In an open letter to Forum participants, OXFAM said some 50 million hectares had been acquired in 700 transactions in recent years.

However, the mining sector incarnates the paradox of Africa’s natural wealth, where bounty breeds penury. According to the Consensus Statement, Africa ranks first or second in known world reserves of bauxite, chromite, cobalt, industrial diamond, manganese, phosphate rock, platinum-group metals, soda ash, vermiculite and zirconium. The continent is home to one-fifth of global gold and uranium supplies, while over 30 countries produce oil and gas in commercial quantity.

To resolve this dilemma, the Forum, among other measures, called for the implementation of the African Mining Vision adopted by African leaders in 2009. The vision sets out how mining can be used to drive the development of their countries.

According to the document, “transparent, equitable and optimal exploitation of mineral resources to underpin broad-based sustainable growth and socio-economic development is the major challenge for African countries today.”

On fisheries and aquatic resources, the Forum called for the strengthening of policies, legislation, strategies, investment and collaboration among states in various areas to develop the sector. Greater attention also needed to be paid to the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) action plan on inland, coastal and marine fisheries and aquaculture at the national and regional levels. Africa loses a million tons of fishery resources estimated at over US $600 million annually to illegal and unreported fishing.

The forum dwelt at length on the need for the sustainable exploitation and preservation of Africa’s forests estimated at 675 million hectares or 17 per cent of global forests. The need for sustainable exploitation of the Congo Basin, the second largest forest in the world, was a recurrent theme at the gathering.

The Statement cited policy, legal, regulatory, economic, governance, equity, knowledge, institutional and environmental constraints as critical to the sustainable management of Africa’s forest resources with a developmental vision.

“Overcoming these constraints is key for attaining inter-sectoral linkages between agriculture, forest, industries and human settlement in Africa,” the document added.

The ADF, a United Nations Economic Commission for Africa biennial event is convened in collaboration with the African Union Commission, African Development Bank, and other partners to establish an African-driven development agenda that reflects consensus and leads to specific programmes for implementation. It is usually attended by some 1,000 participants including Heads of State and Government, African Member State policy-makers, development partners, other United Nations agencies, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations (IGOs/NGOs), academia, practitioners, civil society organizations (CSOs), the private sector, eminent policy and opinion leaders, and the media.

Distributed by the African Press Organization on behalf of the African Development Bank.

Contact: Felix Njoku – n.njoku@afdb.org – +216 71 10 2612

SOURCE
African Development Bank (AfDB)

Kenya: Money, tribe and impunity driving our politics

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

In the recent past, I have been involved with several Community Groups, the Councils and the University Students in Kenya in championing for safer waste disposal and environmental management.

I was invited to a workshop on Green Economy at Kenyatta University on the 3rd Oct and I attended. And on the 12th-16th November, they will be hosting World University Students in Nairobi on the same topic; Green Economy.

Having read the posting and suggestions from a friend from Cameroon Mr. Ohiri Ubomah, I want to make some open follow-up on the same. Can the University Students in Africa unite to create a move that will change the course of action in Africa?

Yes they can.

Mr. Ohiri leaves and works in the United States of America and him and other colleagues are keen on making Health Education be incorporated in the Education Curriculum in Africa. We could add Environmental Management to this as well.

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Africa is celebrating 50 years of their Independence during this time in History. And as we celebrate those years, they are definitely lost years. We have seen no tangible development across Africa that we can take to the bank. And it is is with this in mind that as we celebrate our 50 years on Independence in Kenya next year, on the 1st June 2013 to be specific, we must pause, think and re-group.

Will it be business as usual? No. Not this time.

We will also be going for a General Election in Kenya next year, and with this comes an opportunity to entrench impunity, tribalism and to unleash stolen money on the electorate. We can stop this if we unite forces and mobilize the University Students to step forward and help make change take place.

For how long will we be saddled with inept leadership hinged on stolen money and tribe as the driving attributes to power and more wealth. And not to National Development?

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I firmly believe that University Students in Africa have the ability to isolate issues and stay with the facts. I also firmly believe that University Students can be the change agents that will catapult Africa to new Leadership. They can withstand any financial onslaught from the Politicians and help make all and sundry understand the issues upon which Elections ought to be won.

If our Politicians cannot understand this, then someone MUST make them understand this. And the University Students across Africa stand a better chance stepping forward now to help drive the change agenda.

These are issues close to my heart.

Oto

SOF-DI transforming lives in WEstern Kenya

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

One of the Key Partners of The Clean Kenya Campaign is A Better World/SOF-DI.

Today, I want to share with you in pictorials the great work Ms Frey and the Frey Family is doing for our people in Western Kenya.

A true Friend is he who impacts you with knowledge for self reliance as he betters your life. This is what the Frey Family is doing in Kenya.

On the 12th of October 2012, they will be planting 20,000 trees from their seed bed around Kwishero. This is besides the 8 Springs they are protecting every month at their cost.

They have now introduced what they are calling Community Conversation, as a way to impacting and sharing agricultural knowledge with the people and the Government.

We at The Clean Kenya Campaign are happy to have A Better World/SOF-Di, and especially Ms Brigitte Frey as our Key Partner in our Journey of Hope across Kenya.

Please check the photos below my sign off.

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch. blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@ yahoogroups.com
The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

USA: Impacts of Genetically Engineered Crops on Pesticide Use

From: Yona Maro

Genetically engineered, herbicide-resistant and insect-resistant crops have been remarkable commercial successes in the United States. Few independent studies have calculated their impacts on pesticide use per hectare or overall pesticide use, or taken into account the impact of rapidly spreading glyphosate-resistant weeds.

http://allafrica.com/download/resource/main/main/idatcs/00041893:d7f3ec2c246deae9d77df401674e0d4a.pdf


Karibu Jukwaa la www.mwanabidii.com
Pata nafasi mpya za Kazi www.kazibongo.blogspot.com
Blogu ya Habari na Picha www.patahabari.blogspot.com

KENYA AND TANZANIA TO FUND A MULTIMILLION SHILLINGS JOINT PROJECT TO REHABILITATE MARA RIVER ECOSYSTEM TO BOOST ITS TOURISM VALUE IN THE REGION.

News Analysis by Leo Odera Omolo

Kenya and Tanzania have agreed to team up together in a joint concerted effort t save Mara River which experts says is on the verge of drying due to wanton destruction of its most important water catchment, which is the Mau Forest.

Human settlement and illegal loggers and squatters have depleted the Mau Forest, which is one of the most important water towers in the region.

The two countries have jointly earmarked colossal amount of money to the tune of Kshs 978 million. The moneys are to be utilized towards the improvement of the Mara River infrastructure.

The environmentally important Mara River originated in the Mau Forest in the Southwester of the expansive Rift Valley Province and traverses through the common bores f the two countries before emptying its waters in Lake Victoria in the Tanzania’s northwestern region of Mara near the lakeside town of Musoma.

This particular river is economically valued by the two African nations because it is also supporting two important tourist attraction centers, and also supports two most valuable National Game Pars on both sides, namely Mara Game Reserve in Kenya and the world famous Serengeti National Game Park on the Tanzanian side of the border.

The two governments and NGO organizations operating in the two countries are to partner with the residents and communities living around the Mara ecosystem to sensitize them on the need to stop polluting the river.

The program wile implemented through the Lake Victoria Basin Commission {LVBC} which will coordinate and manage the entire project of rehabilitating the river. The LVBC is an institution o the East African Community {EAC}.

The comprehensive plan to rehabilitate the Mara River was disclosed recently b Coordinator of the Nile Equatorial Basin Subsidiary Action Program Antoine Sendama during the Mara Day celebrations held at Mulot Trading Center in Narok North district. The function was attended by top government officials from both Kenya and Tanzania. They included cabinet ministers and permanent secretaries,

The depletion the Mau Forest had already started spelling dooms for the reforestation n the to countries

The executive secretary of the Kisumu-based LVBC Consius Kamangire told the gathering that the Mara River was a disaster in waiting which must be averted at all costs.
Kenya and Tanzania have already started wildlife and water conservation, farming with communities around the Maasai Game Reserve and strategy to bring to a halt with time rapidly ruing out.

Sendama said NELSAP was formed 10 years ago and Mara River was identified as area of the trams boundary river basin management project to be prepared and implemented under the program.

In attendance w Kenya’s Minister for the East African Community Affairs Musa Sirma and the Permanent Secretary in the Tanzanian Ministry of East African Community affairs George Luwao .

Sirma told his audience that the Mara River Day celebrations was meant to promote trans boundary management framework for the Mara River.

The two nation which are partners in the EAC through the LVBC plans to improve protection and management of Mau Forest and conserve the Maasai Mara Game Reserve and Serengeti National Game Park ecosystem.

The main objectives of the program ensuring household food security increasing farms income and alleviation of poverty through increase access to water for household consumption and agricultural production. This include achieving river basin conservation and rehabilitation of new projects including multipurpose project like Tanzania irrigation and watershed management projects in Gucha, Migori, Yala and Nzoia Rivers.

The program is also meant to promoting co-operative management of shared water reservoirs in a bid to demonstrate benefit of cooperation and sustainable investment projects.

Mara River was losing chunk of its waters due to climate change and vulnerability. The climate change will affect on the residents way of life and threatened the very foundation on which the region’s economies rest..It will affect impact negatively in food and energy security to high temperature through flood and veritable rainfall.

Ends

Kenya: Town Clerk endorses the 10th Oct Nairobi Markets Clean-up

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

I had a flurry of meetings today morning to help mobilize for the Major Clean-up that we will be hosting in partnership with the Nairobi Market Traders Society across all the 53 Markets in Nairobi on the 10th October 2012.

Our call to The Clean Kenya Campaign across the Country has been well received and today, the Deputy Town Clerk at the City Council of Nairobi, Mr. Simon Ole Morintat, did give an assurance that he will personally lead the Nairobi Monthly Clean-ups, Beautification and Tree Planting. He said he is going to mobilize for the participation of all the Council Officers and the City Fathers as we re-energize The Nairobi Monthly Clean-up Campaigns.

I also had a meeting with Mr. Daniel Masetu- Assistant Town Clerk Reforms, Dr. Robert Ayisi- Director- Public Health Department and Mr. JN Kariuki- the Director Social Services and Housing Department, and all were really enthusiastic and looking forward to the 10th of October 2012 when we shall clean all the 53 Markets in Nairobi.

To help plan effectively for the 10th October Nairobi Markets Clean-up Campaign, we will be hosting a Planning Session with the Leaders of the 53 Markets in Nairobi at Charter Hall on the 19th September 2012 as from 8.00am. The meeting will be chaired by the Deputy Town Clerk Mr. Morintat and several Departmental Directors with the Council will be in attendance. Besides planning for the 10th October Clean-up, the Council will be giving their assurance and under-taking on several Services currently wanting.

Again, as is our tradition, we will not want to point figures and engage in blame games. We will be seeking solutions to our current problems of Waste and Garbage. The good thing is, we all agree that Markets are our converging zones and if we have them clean, the whole country will go Clean.

On the same note, Migosi Otieno Sungu will lead The Clean Kenya Campaign Team to join with our Brothers and Sisters at Lindi and Laini Saba in Kibera for their Clean-up Campaign tomorrow. This has been organized by Kounkuey Design Initiative, Usalama Youth Reform Group, Slum Care Community Group, Ndovu Development Group and several other CBOs.

They are also in the process of launching their fourth project in Kibera at the Lindi/Laini Saba Bridge, near the Laini Saba Mosque to build a Public Space project on this site.

On the 15th September 2012, we are joining with KICOCEN and the Municipal Council of Kisumu for a major Clean up in Kisumu City.

Now, Eng Maurice ‘Courage’ Oduor has been asking me about the typical expenses associated with the Clean up and Awareness Campaigns, and today, and every other day, I have been giving him the typical expenses. Organizing a successful Clean-up and Awareness Campaign is a tedious affair. It involves making several phone calls, hosting several meetings, writing several letters, remaining online for several hours, traveling and all that.

It also involves serious thinking.

At The Clean Kenya Campaign, I must appreciate that Eng Courage was one of the first few people who saw relevance in what we were doing and he did give us support initially. Then, unlike Saul who saw light and transformed into a better person, Courage saw darkness and lost his tracks and confidence in the Campaign. But, we are so elated that ultimately, he has met his Damascus and he is firmly back with us in The Clean Kenya Campaign and offering us some very useful hints and advice.

We are hence appealing and inviting all of us, whenever we are, to all join in The Clean Kenya Campaign and ensure that we have a Clean Country come 1st June 2013.

If the People, the Government and the Councils are with us, we can stand in our way?

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,

The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC

Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com

The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

Kenya: Kenyans must deliver Kenya – 1st June 2013

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

We are living in hard times as we approach celebrating our 50 years of Independence next year.

We at The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC are very appreciative with the many Kenyans who have joined with us in this Campaign. If you want to support in any way, please visit About Us in our website- www.kcdnkenya.org

A Clean Kenya is achievable, even within one day. We only need leadership, clear resolve, commitment and patriotism. We must not live like Pigs in our own Country, just because Waste and Garbage is overwhelming us, yet, these are Gold Mines waiting to be tapped.

During The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management, I was impressed with the presentation from Ms Kithinji from the Kenya Association of Manufacturers. On the mass production of flimsy paper by the Manufacturers, she blamed us for not tapping into that as a raw resource for conversion. If Mzee ‘Prof’ Munywe of Kayole Environment Management Association can make fencing poles from plastic at his small level, then, major investors would do great making Electric Poles from the same.

They only need Government commitment and support and they will move in big time.

In the process, we would save our Trees and boost our Tree Cover in Kenya.

L-R; Dr Kepha Ombacho- Chief Public Health Officer at the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation, Eng Magdalene Mwende- International Ecology Manager at Bamburi Cement, Mr. Mario Kainga- Assistant Director of Environment City Council of Nairobi and Mr. Benson K Githinji- the Commandant- Traffic Department at the Kenya Police during The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management

Again, we had a meeting with Mr. Ahmed Mohammed of Forsight Techologies, and we were simply impressed with what they can do with all the foul smell we get from the waste we are dumping on us. With their Enzymes, they can spray all the waste sights and get rid of the smell that is choking and killing Kenyans. But who wants to listen?

The problem is, we have some tired academicians in charge of Government Departments charged with this duty. We also have a new breed of bright academicians who have come out and joined in The Clean Kenya Campaign. We will work with them to ensure that Kenya is as Clean as any other Nation and Waste is made a Resource for Conversion. But for the tired academicians, the ones that only gloat about their PhD status, we will forcefully evict them from Government service. This is our Government and we have every stake in it.

We cannot live as if Waste is such an issue that needs constant studies. You will realize that the City Council of Nairobi, in their own admission, said that in partnership with JICA, they did a Master Plan on Solid Waste Management for Nairobi in 1988 and REVIEWED the same in 2010. They have now painted some vehicles and branded them with- Solid Waste Management insignias and possibly, they are doing some further studies. They are doing something definately. But one thing they are not doing is; they are not getting rid of the mounds of garbage and waste at every corner.

This is not acceptable. We want action. Not studies. Again, if this Team is tired, they MUST ship out, or shape up.

And as a Team, we are going to push the various Councils into action. If the City Council of Nairobi cannot wake up and do something, as we move on with our Programmes, we are going to mobilize all the Residents of Nairobi to come dump their waste at City Hall, so City Hall can see what to do with it. Maybe, it will give them nearer sampling for further studies.

I am hence giving NOTICE to these mandarins at City Hall, your time is up. We must bring Nairobi back to her lost glory as a Green City in the sun. And we have never issued a notice that we have failed to honour. We will dump waste on you very soon.

Lastly, we have realized that the vested interests are re-grouping and now, they are using the Secretaries to block some of our communications to the bosses. One such Secretary is the one to the Director-General of the National Environment Management Authority who sat on our invitation to the DG to attend The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management. The DG NEVER saw our invitation.

Your time is up and we are sealing all holes. Kenya must be made Clean, and for this, we have no apologies.

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,

The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC

Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com

The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

Tanzania-Mlawi talks over the disputed oil and gas exploration in the disputed Lake Malawi collapsed

Writes Leo Odera Omolo

Information emerging from Dar Es-Salaam says that the dispute between Tanzania and Malawi over Lake Nyasa has ended in deadlock with both sides strongly recommending for mediation or the involvement of the International Court of Justice {ICJ} to resolve the statement.

The recommendation was made after week long talks between the to countries held in Malawi’s northern city of Mzuzu ended last Saturday with the two sides making little progress.

This was disclosed to the media by foreign ministers from the two sides in Lilongwe, the Malawian administrative and political capital.

Malawi Foreign Minister Epharaim Mganda Chiume said that during the talks the two sides made little progress in resolving the contentious issue hence the recommendations.

The Malawian Minister, however, said the two sides had agreed to meet again in next month {Sept 2013} in the Tanzanian capital, Dar Es Salaam to carry on with further discussions on the matter before considering the involvement of either a third party or ICJ.

The Minister was quoted a having said, ”We felt that there were still other options of diplomacy we could explore including involvement of third party. We have recommended that officials from the two countries should look into the matter again in Dar-Es Salaam.”

He went on , ‘And we also recommended that before the September meeting our Attorney Generals {AGs} should take time to interpret Article 1{2}[vi of the 1890 Anglo-Germany Treaty so that when we meet again next month we should all have legal understanding of the article.”

Chiume said the border dispute between the two neighboring African nations had been there for too long and that it was high time that it was resolved amicably, adding that failure to do so would impact negatively of the two countries.

On the other hand Mr Chiume’s Tanzanian counter-part Bernard Membe said the dispute indeed required further talks with the two sides maintaining their calms and diplomacy.

“We have agreed that the dispute we have requires a negotiated settlement through diplomacy,” said Membe.

Two weeks ago the Tanzanian government issued an order that there be no more flight across the disputed lake by aircraft from Malawi carrying out aerial survey and exploration for oil and gas over the lake until the dispute is resolved. Malawi obeyed and called for a top level meeting between the two Both people, however, have been urged to refrain fro making any provocative remarks which may create during the discussions his side had urged there should be no further exploration on Lake Nyasa {Lake Malawi] ,especially in the disputed part which is the northeastern part of the lake, to give room to the ongoing discussions.

The border dispute between Tanzania an Malawi begun recently when Malawi engaged a British firm Surestream to explore Lake Malawi for oil and gas deposit. The lake border Malawi and Tanzania.

The latter claims that part of the lake on that side belongs to the former Germany colony, while Malawi’s colony believes it owns the whole lake, based on the Heligoland. Treaty between Britain, Malawi’s colonial masters, which stipulated that the borders between the two countries were on the eastern shores of Lake Malawi.

Amid fears among the people of the two countries that there would be war over the lake, presidents of the two countries, Malawi’s Joyce Banda and Tanzania’s counterpart, Jakaya Kikwete, have been quoted in both local and international media to have said ‘the two countries would ever go to war, no matter what.”

The two presidents met recently in Maputo in Mozambique where on the sidelines of SADC Summit for Heads of State, they discussed the matter amicably and arrived at fruitful results,” according to President Banda. Tanzania claims the border runs along the middle of Lake Malawi, especially the disputed part which is the northeastern

Tanzania on its part claims the border runs along the middle of Lake Malawi, which is the home to over 500 species of fish and a major tourist attraction for Malawi.

When African states became independent, they agreed to maintain their colonial borders. Tanzania then Tanganyika was a German colony that Britain took over after World War One, British administration.then the placed all the lake’s waters under Malawi {the Nyasaland}.

At issue is largely undeveloped swath of Lake Malawi, where Lilongwe has awarded a license to British firm Surestream to explore for oil in northeastern waters near Tanzania.

Malawi has carefully watched Uganda’s developments around Lake Albert, where oil firms are pouring billions of dollars to exploit reserves estimated at 2.5 billion barrels.

Lake Malawi lies in the same Great Lakes system stretching along he African Rift, and Malawi is hoping for a similarly large payout-which would transform the fortunes of a country whose economy depends o small farmers and large foreign aid.

Ends

Kenya: The 2nd Consultative Forum is FULL

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

The response to The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management that we are hosting at the KICC tomorrow the 28th August 2012 has been overwhelming.

Many Groups and Teams from across Kenya have reached to us and only the accredited Teams will be allowed in. We would have wanted to host as many Teams as possible, but our logistics would not allow us to host beyond the accredited Teams.

On behalf of The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC, may I take this opportunity to wish all the Delagates a safe Drive into Nairobi, and a fruitful deliberations on The Practical Steps towards Separation of Waste at Source.

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

Kenya: Nairobi the Headquarters of UNEP

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

This is a preview of Nairobi, the Capital City of Kenya, and the Headquarters of the United Nations Environment Programme- UNEP.

During The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management, courtesy of the Public Service Transformation Department at the OPM, A Better World/SOF-DI, Mugumo Communications Ltd and Akiba Uhaki Foundation, we will share The Documentary of the State of Nairobi and what the people are saying.

We cannot afford to live like this 50 Years after Independence. We must hence join hands to help make a difference.

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com
The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

Listen to Gov Ogbeni Rauf of the State of Osun in Nigeria

From: odhiambo okecth

I need not add more. Read on;

– – – – – – – – – – –

Date: Monday, August 13, 2012, 9:00 AM

Clean And Healthy Environment, Panacea To Sickness, Untimely Death – Aregbesola

The governor of the State of Osun, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola, has identified clean and healthy environments as panacea to sickness and diseases that usually kill people with ease in the society.

The governor stated this at the handing over ceremony of medical staff quarters, built by the Otan-Ayegbaju Pacesetters’ Club, Otan-Ayegbaju, for doctors and nurses working at the Comprehensive Health Centre of the community.

The state’s helmsman further stressed that cleanliness of the body and environment, combined with fresh air, are the greatest insurance against any form of sickness, as well as being tools to stem the spread of diseases.

The quarters contain five bedrooms, one living room and three kitchens, according to the Chairman, Planning/Project Commissioning Committee, Chief SegunAina (OFR).

Aina stated that the construction and handing over of the quarters to the state government was borne out of commitment of the club to provide comfortable accommodation for all nursing staff and resident medical doctors being posted to the community health centre.

According to Aregbesola, who commended members of the club for contributing to the improvement of healthcare delivery in their hometown, the best way to prevent untimely death as a result of sickness and diseases is to avoid living in an unhealthy area.
The governor disclosed that hospital patients in the state were reduced by 50 per cent with the introduction of a 90-day emergency environmental sanitation and the O’ CLEAN programme, maintaining that it is safer to maintain a clean environment than to save money for medical treatment.

Aregbesola charged the people to plant trees and flowers in their surroundings for fresh air, just as he enjoined them to do exercise from time to time.

The governor then urged other associations at Otan-Ayegbaju, to emulate the Pacesetters’ Club and assist the government in delivering qualitative healthcare services and development of the state at large.

He, however, promised to deploy more health workers, especially doctors and nurses, as well as general health practitioners to the health centre in the community,with a view to facilitating the free health care drive.

In his address, Aina lamented that the health centre in the community was suffering from dearth of nurses and doctors, as the health practitioners posted to the centre usually complain of lack of accommodation.

Aina disclosed that the Otan-Ayegbaju Pacesetters’ Club deemed it fit to build the medical staff quarters and hand it over to the state government,so as to attract medical practitioners, who will henceforth be posted to the community health centre.

He stressed that the quarters have been furnished to the taste of the doctors and nurses, pleading with the government to post necessary and adequate personnel to the health centre for 24-hour service.

According to him, there was inadequacy of medical personnel on duty at the health centre during the day and none during the evening, nights and weekends.

Appealing to the state government to upgrade the Otan-Ayegbaju health centre to a General Hospital, Aina disclosed that the community had set aside 11 hectares of land to accommodate the upgrading.

Commending Aregbesola on the Osun State Youths Empowerment Scheme (OYES) and the Osun Rural Enterprises and Agriculture Programme (O’REAP), the Owa of Otan-Ayegbaju, Oba Lukman Ojo Fadipe, stated that the state is developing aggressively with the various projects embarked upon by the governor.

Oba Fadipe, who also handed over the medical equipment donated by the community to the health centre, to the state government, urged Aregbesola to, as a matter of urgency, look into the health care delivery of the community and provide doctors and nurses for the health centre.

Kenya: Moving towards 28th August 2012

from: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

We are moving towards The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management on the 28th August 2012 at the KICC where our focus will be on Making Practical Steps towards the Process of Separation of Waste at Source, and to make this happen, we hosted the 2nd Planning Session at the NEMA Nairobi offices this morning.

Our National Focus is on Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Eldoret and Nyeri. And as we do all this, we will have an Award System for three Categories on the 6th December 2012 again at the KICC;

The Cleanest Town
The Cleanest Estates- three from each Town, and
The Cleanest Colleges and Institutions of Higher Learning

Today’s meeting was attended by;

Ms Anne Theuri- NEMA Nairobi- she flagged off the meeting and left for another asignment.
Ms Sarah Muthoni- NEMA Nairobi
Mr. Mario Kainga- Assistant Director of Environment at the City Council of Nairobi
Mr. Kepha Rinsyi Bikwati- CEO Institute of Packaging of Kenya
Mr. Geoffrey Mutuku- Policy Officer Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources,
Mr. Odhiambo T Oketch- Executive Director TCKC- Chairing.

Seated; Mr. Mario Kainga from the City Council of Nairobi and Ms Sarah Muthoni from Nema. Standing L-R; Mr. Kepha Rinsyi from the IOPK, Odhiambo T Oketch- TCKC and Mr. Geoffrey Mutuku from the Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources.

We had apologies from;

Mr. Titus Simiyu- Provincial Director of Environment Nairobi- He was well represented,
Ms Tracey Masinde- Public Service Transformation Department at the Office of the Prime Minister- She telephoned and gave her report
Ms Susan Wanjohi- Ministry of Education-
Mr. Simon Kimani- Kenya Medical Training College
Ms Beatrice Kithinji- Kenya Association of Manufacturers- She called and gave her report
Ms Doreen Ivy- Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources

We are moving strategically towards the 2nd Forum and as we continue with the planning process, I must appreciate the commitment that we have seen from our Partners. We are really thankful to the following Institutions;

1] Key Partners;

The Public Service Transformation Department at the Office of the Prime Minister
The National Environment Management Authority

2] Strategic Partners;

The Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources
Ministry of Local Government
Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation
Ministry of Education- Strategic Partners
Ministry of State for Special Programmes
Ministry of Nairobi Metropolitan Development
The City Council of Nairobi
The City Council of Mombasa
The City Council of Kisumu
The Municipal Council of Eldoret
The Municipal Council of Nyeri
A Better World
The Institute of Packaging of Kenya,
Vision 2030 Delivery Secretariat
and all Friends who believe in a Clean Kenya

We are reaching out for more partnerships in this Campaign. It has not been easy, and I can confirm,it needs a lot of resilience and commitment to manage this process. This is why I have forever remained indebted to the small team of Friends who have consistently supported our logistics, administration and reach outs. I will publish the list of this small Team on Friday for posterity.

Lastly, as we approach the 28th August, I am happy to report that the following Teams have indicated their wish to particpate during The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management at the KICC;

The Public Service Transformation Department
The National Environment Management Authority
The Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources
The Ministry of Local Government
The Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation
The Ministry of Education
The Ministry of State for Special Programmes
The Ministry of Nairobi Metropolitan Development
The City Council of Nairobi,
The Institute of Packaging of Kenya
Disaster and Environment Management Association- Masinde Muliro University
Chepkoilel Environment Association- CUESA
Lake Bogoria National Reserve
Kayole Waste Management Association
PYGRON- Pumwani Youths Group Association
Fountain Youth Initiative
International Youth Council of Kenya
Kenya Institute of Social Work and Community Development

We will be accrediting two participants from the Groups that would like to participate.

This will be a Forum with a difference and your active participation, engagement and support is hereby invited.

As we move The Clean Kenya Campaign across Kenya, we want to continue appreciating our Key Partners- The Public Service Transformation Department and the National Environment Management Authority, and all our Strategic Partners for their continued support.

Let us all work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Deliverable as we turn 50.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com

The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.

Natural resource governance: New frontiers in transparency and accountability

From: Yona Maro

Natural resources – oil, gas, minerals, forests, fish, water and land – present a number of challenges to the transparency and accountability agenda. Much of the focus of donors engaged in transparency and accountability issues in the natural resources sector has been on improving governance systems at a national level. This report recommends that donors need to develop specific programmes focused on the transparency and accountability needs of communities, civil society groups and governments at this very local level – and that those needs should not be defined as being simply a watered-down version of existing national-level transparency programmes. The report recommends that Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) programmes themselves should be strengthened by providing greater resources for audits that would focus not only on reporting what has been paid, but also on what might not have been paid. This recommendation focuses in particular on the role of commodity trading and transfer pricing practices that have the potential to significantly reduce revenues to resource-exporting developing countries.

http://www.transparency-initiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/natural_resources_final1.pdf


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Kenya: Discipline as a Factor in The Clean Kenya Campaign

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

I left Town yesterday at about 7.45pm and as I was passing through Landhies Road, just around Machakos Bus Stage, I witnessed what has become the norm in the recent past; Matatus driving into Town driving on the wrong side of the road and condemning us to a stupid snarl up.

Along Jogoo Road, around Hamza, the same thing happened. Now it was Matatus traveling towards Donholm driving on the wrong side of the road and condemning those traveling to Town to a snarl up.

Such cases are very common across and it all boils down to discipline.

How disciplined are we as a people?

There must be something wrong with the Matatu driver who decides to do his thing on the wrong side of the road. There must also be something wrong with the passengers who are seated in this Matatu. And there is definitely something wrong with the law enforcement agencies who look the other side as we trample on simple traffic rules such as keeping left.

The beauty of a clean neighbourhood; University of Nairobi’s Chiromo Campus

When one decides to drive on the wrong side of the road, there are several things that also go wrong. The Flower Beds that we are struggling to maintain in between the roads are destroyed; the trees we are planting along the roads are destroyed; the road cabs and pavements are destroyed, and with this, we begin a process of tear and wear on our roads. Yet, we are the ones who are taxed heavily for such roads to be built.

To work for a Clean Town, we must be disciplined in order to enforce the kind of standards that we desire. Our Towns will never be Clean by themselves. It is us, we the people, who must make the all needed steps to ensure we live in Clean Towns and Cities.

Depositing garbage by the roadside is a sure evidence of lack of discipline on our part.

Throwing things off the car as you drive is a sure evidence of lack of discipline on our part.

Refusing to enforce the law and the by-laws is a sure evidence of lack of discipline on our part.

Dereliction of duty is a sure lack of discipline on our part.

Lethargy in office is a sure lack of discipline on our part.

And as we match towards the 1st of June 2013 when we will be celebrating our 50th Independence anniversary, it is incumbent upon us to encourage discipline as a necessary ingredient in our National Psyche to help us move towards attaining the objects of the Vision 2030 as a Transformative Agenda for Kenya.

This is why in partnership with the Public Service Transformation Department at the Office of the Prime Minister, the National Environment Management Authority and other willing Partners, we are inviting all of us to join in The Clean Kenya Campaign. Please visit About Us in our Website- www.kcdnkeny.org and see what role you can play in this National Campaign.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org
Facebook; Odhiambo T Oketch
Facebook; Monthly Nationwide Clean up Campaign
Mailing Group; friendsofkcdn@yahoogroups.com

The Clean Kenya Campaign is an Initiative of The KCDN Kenya.


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Kenya: Human wildlife conflicts have intensified as big cats kills domesticated animals forcing the nomad maasais to take revenge by killing elephants

Writes Leo Odera Omolo.

WITHIN a brief span of five days the wildlife / human conflict have intensified with report that un-identified wild animals, but suspected to be lions attacked a village within the vicinity of the capital city of Nairobi and killed twenty pigs and piglets worth Kshs 400,00.

This incident came within only to days a report that a rogue leopard strayed in Kirinyaga district and killed ten sheep and goats..

At the same time, residents a village Gatundu district near Nairobi are living in fear after a leopard killed seven sheep at the weekend.

The big cat is said to have strayed into Mrs Lucia Wangari’s compound in the dead hour of the night and mauled the sheep.

‘It was around 3AM when I was watching the Olympic Games on TV when I heard dog barking and sheep bleating. When I went out to check, I saw a leopard. Said Lucia’s son Martin Gakunya.

“When we switched security lights on, the leopard took off and fled and disappeared into the darkness leave behind seven sheep dead.”

Villagers in this particular village reported that the latest attack brings to 15the number of sheep killed by wild animals in this area in the last two months..

Another farmer, Patrick Kamau, said last month, the stay leopard killed five sheep, and three others belonging to his brother. The farmer bitterly complained that they have reported the three incidents to the Kenya Wildlife Services by so far no compensation has been paid out.

In Kajiado district several Maasai morans were admitted at the various hospitals for treatment following a fight with KWS game rangers. The Maasais had mobilized armed themselves and went on hunting spree against wild animals following the death of one herds boy who was gored to death by a rogue bull of buffalo in Tsavo West National Game Park, not far away fro the Kenya-Tanzania borders. The Maasis avenged and killed several elephants which they speared to death before the combined reinforcement police and are rangers arrived.

Meanwhile a farmer in Kapsoo in Baringo County is counting loses after his highly prized dairy cows were struck dead by lightning following late afternoon downpour I the area.

According to a herds boy who witnessed the Monday evening incident, there was heavy rains accompanied by thunder and lightning.

“It occurred at around 6 pm local time and the cows were sheltering under trees. Lightning struck when I was just preparing to milk the cows,” said Peter Koech

Koech recounted that immediately after the incident, heavy smoke covered the scene. He rushed to inform the owner of the animals as neighbors thronged the scene. He said he was lucky to have survived the ordeal that occurred only a few meters fro where he was standing.

A family member said the incident was a major loss because the four cows were the only source of their livelihood. The cows were purchased with the money borrowed from a government financial agency which is funding farmers with loan money on easy repayment terms. The four dead cows were valued at Kshs 200,000 and those left are three orphanage valves.

Ends

Kenya: Clean/Green City under the Sun.

From: odhiambo okecth

Thank you Allan.

We at The Clean Kenya Campaign would like to work with our Friends from the Media to further sensitize and mobilize Kenyans to The Clean Kenya Campaign where we are all responsible for the waste we all generate.

oto

– – – – – – – – – – –

Date: Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 8:06 AM

Dear Oketch,

Pole for the departed bro. May his soul rest in peace.

Kudos! for the good work that you have embarked on. I really get perturbed whenever I look around the roads coming and going out of Nairobi, the capital city of the biggest economy in East Africa, and the city the hosts UNEP, it is such an irony that all I see is heaps of all kind of waste. Mostly the first question that clicks in my mind is who is not doing what they are supposed to be doing. Is it the people who dump or the authorities charged with collecting the waste? But I tell myself, if everyone did what they were doing the way it was supposed to be done nothing would go wrong. That is, if the local authorities collected the waste in time, the bins would have space for more waste and MAYBE people would make use of the empty bins to throw the waste.

But it all has to start somewhere and that’s what you are doing. Good work!!

Kind Regards,

Allan Muturi
Photojournalist
(+254) 0724 459 067
t: @allanmuturi

From: odhiambo okecth
To: KCDN
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2012 5:01 PM
Subject: The Port City of Asmara

Friends,

As I make this posting, my heart is with my kid Sister who has just lost her Husband. May the almighty God rest his soul in peace and give my Sister the strength to bear the loss.

Now, The East Africa Youth Forum 2012 was hosted in the Port City of Asmara from the 7th July 2012. The Forum was attended by several Youth Leaders from across the whole of East Africa.

is the University of Nairobi- Chiromo Campus.

One thing that surprised all the participants was how clean Asmara is. I am told, they did not see any single dirt. And yet, Eritrea is only 21 Years into their Independence.

One thing that stood out for the Youths was the resolve by the Public Officers to do their work. They make it so easy for the general populace to fall in place and maintain Law and Order.

I bet we must do something in Kenya.

I am happy to report that The Clean Kenya Campaign has taken root and the Government Agencies concerned are working with us to ensure that as we celebrate 50 Years into our Independence next year, a Clean Kenya shall have been achieved.

This is a deliberate deliverable initiative and on the 28th August 2012, we will be hosting The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management at the KICC where we will look at Practical Steps that we must make in the Process of Separation of Waste at Source. A Strategic Planning Session for this will be hosted on the 31st July and all those whom have been invited are very key to the success of this Campaign.

A Clean Kenya at 50 is very possible. Eritrea has achieved it. Rwanda has achieved it. Why can we not achieve the same?

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557

Kenya: The Port City of Asmara

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

As I make this posting, my heart is with my kid Sister who has just lost her Husband. May the almighty God rest his soul in peace and give my Sister the strength to bear the loss.

Now, The East Africa Youth Forum 2012 was hosted in the Port City of Asmara from the 7th July 2012. The Forum was attended by several Youth Leaders from across the whole of East Africa.

[image] the University of Nairobi- Chiromo Campus.

One thing that surprised all the participants was how clean Asmara is. I am told, they did not see any single dirt. And yet, Eritrea is only 21 Years into their Independence.

One thing that stood out for the Youths was the resolve by the Public Officers to do their work. They make it so easy for the general populace to fall in place and maintain Law and Order.

I bet we must do something in Kenya.

I am happy to report that The Clean Kenya Campaign has taken root and the Government Agencies concerned are working with us to ensure that as we celebrate 50 Years into our Independence next year, a Clean Kenya shall have been achieved.

This is a deliberate deliverable initiative and on the 28th August 2012, we will be hosting The 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management at the KICC where we will look at Practical Steps that we must make in the Process of Separation of Waste at Source. A Strategic Planning Session for this will be hosted on the 31st July and all those whom have been invited are very key to the success of this Campaign.

A Clean Kenya at 50 is very possible. Eritrea has achieved it. Rwanda has achieved it. Why can we not achieve the same?

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557

Kenya: Let us apprehend those who litter — Hon Beth Mugo

From: odhiambo okecth

Dear Friends,

The Minister for Public Health and Sanitation Hon Beth Mugo today called upon all the law enforcement agencies such as the Police, Public Health Officers, Local Authority Askaris and the People of Kenya to apprehend all those who litter and deposit garbage in our neighbourhoods and by our roads.

For more details, please visit; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com

Odhiambo T Oketch,

Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Email; komarockswatch@yaoo.com
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org

An Initiative of KCDN Kenya.


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Kenya: Response from His Worship the Mayor of Kisumu

From: odhiambo okecth

Your Worship,

We appreciate your response. This goes further to prove that Kisumu is indeed our Millennium City. Very few Public Servants are IT Savvy and this is one thing we are proud about.

Keeping our Towns Clean is something we must all work for, and at The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC, we will never tire to give accolades where they are due. We have noted with appreciation the efforts being put in place in Kisumu, Mombasa and Eldoret, where the respective Town Clerks are so energized about the work at hand.

We are working closely with the Public Service Transformation Department to host the 2nd Consultative Forum on Waste Management within 45 Days and we would like to invite you and our colleagues the Town Clerks from Mombasa and Eldoret to also join with us to help chart the way forward.

After due consultations, we will engage with you.

Peace and blessings,

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Executive Director,
The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC
Tel; 0724 365 557
Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com
The Clean Kenya Campaign- Website; www.kcdnkenya.org

– – – – – – – – – – –

Dear Odhiambo,

Congratulations for the noble effort in cleaning our cities and urban centres. We are proud to be associated with this initiative.

Thanks for your kind comment about Kisumu. We will continue to improve in the Solid Waste Management and city beautification.

Kind Regards

Sam Okello
Mayor of Kisumu City
P.O. Box 105
Kisumu
Tel: 057 – 2024086
Fax: 057 – 2020809

— On Tue, 7/10/12, Oto . wrote:
From: Oto .
Subject: The Best City in the World?
To: “Oketch Odhiambo”
Date: Tuesday, July 10, 2012, 9:56 AM

Residents of Curitiba in Brazil think they live in the best city in the World, and a lot of outsiders do agree.

Curitiba has 17 new parks, 90 miles of bike paths, lots of trees everywhere and traffic and garbage systems that officials from other cities come to study. Her Mayor of 12 years as at 2008, Mr. Jaime Lerner, had an approval rating then of 92%.

In Kigali Rwanda, the town is spotless; no litter, no garbage, no potholes, and all systems seems to work. Water flows from the taps every time you turn the knob, and electric power is sufficient. And in Kigali Rwanda, the drive is supported from the highest level. Again, many outsiders troop to Kigali Rwanda to marvel at how they keep their Towns Clean.

In Kisumu City, something great is happening, and soon, Kisumu will be the Cleanest City in Kenya. The Department of Environment under Mr. Sande, with the support of His Worship the Mayor Cllr Sam Okello, have made a deliberate effort to enjoin stakeholders in the beautification, cleaning and greening of the Town. Residents are donating even seedlings to help make the Town Clean. Mr. Charles Muga has donated 100 seedlings while Me. William Odhiambo has donated 50. I want to see many outsiders trooping to Kisumu to marvel at how Clean the Millennium City is.

This is the way to go.
As we approach the first Consultative Forum on Waste Management that we will be hosting at Charter Hall tomorrow morning in partnership with the Public Service Transformation Department, the National Environment Management Authority, the City Council of Nairobi and other strategic partners, we want to invite the residents of Nairobi to also rise to the occasion and start believing that we can make Nairobi the Cleanest City in Kenya.

The Clean Dream should then run down to Mombasa, Eldoret and other Towns where Town Clerks have shown tremendous interest in working with The Clean Kenya Campaign Team.
In our meeting this morning with Mr. Hamisi Mboga- Secretary General of ALGAK, at his offices, we were impressed by his enthusiasm and love for Clean Cities. It is important to note that Mr. Mboga was the Town Clerk in Mombasa when the Transformation Process in Mombasa under Hon Najib Balala was started when Hon Balala was the Mayor.

[image]Odhiambo T Oketch, Mr. Hamisi Mboga and Mr. James Ogongo of TCKC

Making our Towns Clean is a Transformative Agenda we want to pursue across all Kenya. This is a process that will see us engage in Pilot Processes on Separation of Waste at Source. It is a process that those in Authority should appreciate and embrace. For, it is only those in Authority who can rally Stake holders to be part of this process.

The Clean Kenya Campaign will just be catalyst that will help motivate and drive the process. The real people who must take ownership of the process are our Town Clerks across Kenya and their Environment and Public Health Officer.

Kenyans are tired of leaving in filth and garbage. It becomes more worse when the Capital City of our Motherland is the laughing stock of how not to do it. I get ashamed when other smaller Towns in Kenya make derogatory references to Nairobi as the Head Quarters of Garbage in Africa. Yet, we have men and women in Nairobi who, if they can apply their minds to the work at hand, can make all the difference.

As we approach 50 years of our Independence, it is a crying shame that we are still incapable of handling and sorting our waste into various components that can generate a life line for our people.

Waste is wealth and we want to live this adage now in Kenya. We want to see Kenyans separating their various components of waste at source to enable the Recyclers, Reusers, and other Converters turn the same waste as a resource for their raw materials.
We want to see innovation at work, and the best way to go is to engage the mind. Not to sit on the mind.
Let us all rise to the occasion and work for a Clean Kenya.

Odhiambo T Oketch
Executive Director, The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC Tel; 0724 365 557 Blogspot; http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com The Clean Kenya Campaign- Website; www.kcdnkenya.org

Kenya: Finding solutions to cleaner cities is not rocket science after all!! Mr. Rashmin Chitnis

From: odhiambo okecth

Friends,

This is a response from Mr. Rashmin Chitnis. Please read it carefully. He is the former Secretary General of the Hindu Council of Kenya, an Architect by Profession and a Trustee at The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC.

I will also share with you the insights from Dr Kepha Ombacho- the Chief Public Health Officer at the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation.

– – – – – – – – – – –

Date: Thursday, July 12, 2012, 12:56 PM

The initiative taken by TCKC to organize such a forum is indeed commendable. The input given by various individuals and the stakeholders will undoubtedly pave way for a cleaner environment. Together with the input, we also need to see a lot of positive action at the grass root level. The societal transformation is possible from such grass root level action. The spark that is ignited by TCKC will hopefully light many lamps in the hearts of families and will see such transformation for the benefit of our communities. I say this because the politicians and the bureaucratic structures have failed to do so. That apart, let us take advantage of this initiative to change our lives….. by ourselves.

Allow me to add a few thoughts through this email, as I could not attend the forum due to last minute commitments. I wish to focus through bullet points since speakers have elaborated through substantive rhetoric.

*?????????The next forum (and I hope we shall break away from the traditional culture of meetings) should decide how TCKC shall prepare a blueprint for a civic education campaign for a waste management beginning at the household level. When we succeed in creating this vital awareness, TCKC will not have to do the exercise of cleaning the streets.
*?????????Separation of waste at the source is essential and be made mandatory as we make progress. Separation of waste will help us towards attaining sustainable greener environment through recycling and preserving our precious natural resources.
*?????????Garbage dumps can be eliminated if Kenya can invest in tapping power from the methane gas (mentioned by one speaker) or through large scale incinerators. Private investors have generated wealth through power generation in European countries.
*?????????There are five main areas of separation of waste, i. e. paper, cans, plastic, bottles and the rest of the garbage. A lot of volume can be reduced if plastic and glass bottles are separated and taken for recycling. Not only that the youth can earn livelihood but the householders will be relieved to get rid of the unwanted stuff.

*?????????TCKC should form two self-help groups, one for civic education for waste management and two for creating structures in the neighborhoods for collection of separated waste products to recycling plants.

*?????????TCKC can also form another group to work with CCN to maintain sidewalks and where possible encourage residents to plant. Empty spaces attracts people’s attention to throw garbage. We must also through PPP, place adequate size dustbins at all public places and ensure people make use of them through awareness campaign. Lack of adequate dustbins is a major cause of unclean public places.

*?????????Catch them young is a popular saying. The civic education material should be shared for inclusion in the school curriculum and pursued very vigorously.

*?????????And finally, I must say there are three essential attributes that stand apart between Kenya and developed countries whose models we try and emulate. Discipline, timeliness and cleanliness. Reflect on them and you will realize that these simple basic qualities alone have made the countries develop. President Obama had remarked that we shall solve our problems through commonsense solutions. Finding solutions to cleaner cities is not rocket science after all!!

RASHMIN CHITNIS

From: otieno sungu
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2012 2:29 PM
To: Vugu Vugu

Subject: CONSULTATIVE FORUM ON WASTE MANAGEMENT REPORT-11th JULY 2012

Consultative forum on separation of waste was held yesterday the 11th July 2012 at Charter Hall in Nairobi. The forum was officially opened by the Provincial Director of NEMA, Mr. Titus Simiyu. In attendance were various stakeholders from both public and private sector who gave various thoughts and insights into the process.

MR. TITUS SIMIYU-Provincial Director-National Environment Management Authority-NEMA.

In his presentation, Mr. Simiyu first and foremost commended The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC for bringing together stakeholders from both the public and private sector to discuss the structured approach towards waste management. He decried the state of the Dandora waste dump and indicated that NEMA has been contemplating closure of the site. However, with the hindsight of this envisaged separation of waste process, NEMA found it prudent to engage and help drive the agenda of separation of waste to ensure such dumps are reduced and managed well so that the City Council of Nairobi-CCN can deal with smaller amounts hence better disposal of the same. He also decried the inability of enforcement especially with regard to waste dumping. NEMA will ensure from its part, all regulations on good environmental practice are upheld and enforced. As he spoke, he mentioned, his team was out cracking down on unlicensed waste collectors and those whose trucks do not meet the required specifications to ensure they do not spew waste in the process of transporting the same. Other areas of intervention which NEMA is working on and invited the City Council of Nairobi to help enforce is the dumping of medical waste especially the type that require incineration such as needles. NEMA is also cracking down on noise and smoke pollution especially from public service vehicles. NEMA will ensure all the Divisional and Ward Managers at the CCN are well equipped with the regulations from NEMA to enforce proper disposal of toxic medical waste and other Municipal Waste. He challenged the CCN to be creative and take an active role since such initiatives as the one by TCKC are meant to complement what they are mandated and expected to perform. He pledged that NEMA will work with all organizations and institutions both public and private in transforming Nairobi in line with Vision 2030.

TIM MURUIKI- Chairman, Nairobi Central Business District Association-NCBDA.

Mr. Tim Muruiki thanked TCKC for the continued sensitization and awareness program it has embarked on for the last 18 months but more so, the direction of separating waste at source. He gave a chronology of the process which begins with waste generators, essentially, all of us. He indicated that the biggest challenge we face regarding waste management is the lack of separating our waste, disorderly and careless disposal of the same that in return affects recycling and converting the same into useful products. To this end, he called on Kenyans to stop the blame game and apportioning blame and become key players in this process. Given there are already several informal recyclings going on, he called for structuring these processes through this initiative to ensure we have a clear chain from the generators bridged by the collectors to the final end user; the waste recyclers and converters. About Ksh. 800 million is spent every year in disposing waste by the Council. This figure could drastically reduce if waste was separated and sorted then recycled and converted into useful products. Half of that amount is what is required to contract various interest groups including youth groups to collect the same and deliver to converters/recyclers if we achieve separation of waste, in the process, creating jobs and employment opportunities for our people.

He also decried the lack of enforcement and punishing of those who dispose carelessly. If the Council managed to crack down on smoking in public, they should equally be able to crack down on those who dump waste anyhow. He wondered why it is easy to arrest someone who steps on flower beds in the streets and allow waste collectors who do much more damage to the environment to get off without being arrested. He encouraged this initiative to romp in women and youth groups across the city, organize them into teams that will implement this process through the various stages. It is possible for instance to generate 10-20 Megawatts of energy through converting certain types of waste into methane gas. Mr. Muruiki pledged to work with TCKC through NCBDA not only in implementing this process but in awareness campaigns and outreach to various stakeholders to ensure we achieve zero tolerance to waste. Mr. Muruiki was part of the teams that participated during the June Third Saturday of the month cleanup and awareness program.

Mr. Muruiki expressed fears of the strong vested interests in waste management within local authorities, incompetent and lethargic leadership within most departments and urged the initiative to remain focused and vigilant to attempts to frustrate this process from such characters who are comfortable with the status quo.

DR. DAVID OTUOMA –Secretary Nuclear Electricity Project, Ministry of Energy.

Dr Otuoma led the forum in considering the various ways in which we should begin separation of waste, recycling and converting waste.
First and foremost, he indicated that all of us must begin looking at waste as an opportunity. This mindset change will enable our thinking to translate waste into products.
The very first step in this process would be to turn waste to energy which does not require very elaborate steps. Creating energy and heat from waste in a logical waste management process that would not only sort much of our waste but also mitigate our power problems at household levels. This is already happening with some institutions in the country such as ILRI, Dagoretti slaughter house and The Institute of Spinal Research-ISR in Karen.

The processes include technological ones such as generating thermal waste to hydrogen gas.The other non thermal ways can be used locally such as the anaerobic digesters, fermentation through turning waste energy to ethanol. Dr. Otuoma gave the example of Kenyans blueprint that was picked up by Brazil, the concept involves turning sugarcane to ethanol thus producing energy to power vehicles and the byproducts of this process is the cheap sugar that is dumped into most developing countries, Kenya included. We thus have no reason to lament about expensive fuel prices because we can develop energy for cars from the same source.

Mechanical biological treatment is already being piloted in 3 towns, Bungoma Biogas Project from pit latrine waste generates methane gas for lighting households, Homa Bay has the piloting of fish bones generating methane for similar purposes.
Dagoreti Slaughter House produces biogas in a demonstration process under Pilot Programme. In Kilifi, a local sisal farmer is using juice from sisal mixed with waste from cows to produce 180 KW of electricity via methane generation.

In Nanyuki, a young former street boy and his peers run a sewerage system whereby they collect waste and rehabilitate the waste within 7 days through a pond system to produce clean water for horticulture and hay farming. As a consequence, they now have 70 acres under horticulture and hay.
These are just practical examples to show that waste can translate into wealth while mitigating the challenge. These are the case studies whose capacities we should build and then replicate across Kenya.

Ms Anne Theuri-The National Environment Management Authority-NEMA.

Ms Theuri took the forum through the regulations of NEMA especially with regard to waste disposal. She indicated that several waste collectors do not meet the required standards and as such NEMA will ensure that waste collection and disposal adhere to the regulations. Through such enforcement, much of the waste that finds its way on the streets and roadsides will be reduced if proper waste collection and disposal is adhered to. She also gave commitment from NEMA that they will guide this process through the separation of waste in order to achieve the desired results of this process.

Mr. Moses Mbego- Coordination Specialist Unep Kenya Country Office.

Mr. Mbego appreciated the efforts made by TCKC and gave the assurance that UNEP will assist this initiative through policy guidelines and advice. He expressed confidence that through the government agencies present, this initiative can transform waste management into opportunities if we focus on changing mindsets so that we begin to view waste as a resource and not a challenge. He advised that the initiative develops an Integrated Waste Management Plan that can form the backbone on which separation of waste rides. There are various waste management projects in Kibera supported by UNEP guided policies and that we could consolidate efforts for wider outreach and mitigation across the country.

Ms Beatrice Kithinji- Executive Officer Kenya Association of Manufacturers- KAM

The concern from the manufacturers is that cleanups without other mitigating processes eventually fatigues. She noted that this soon becomes a vicious circle and suggested, in line with the direction taken by TCKC that we seek to convert greater %ages of the waste to products to reduce what needs to be disposed.
She also rooted for structured process that ensures we stay focused and able to achieve specific goals within specific timelines. She expressed support for his process and the willingness of KAM to work with the various stakeholders to achieve this goal. She reminded the forum that collecting waste is not the greatest challenge but what to do with it once collected hence the need to separate, convert and recycle. She said that KAM will work closely with TCKC to ensure that we achieve our objectives of a Clean Kenya.

Ms Susan Wanjohi- ES Office-Ministry of Education.

She noted that her Ministry could play a very key role especially in awareness through activities such as music festivals, drama, art and craft, essay writing competitions and also at household levels where parents learn quite a lot from their children. The success of mindset and attitude change can heavily rely on the school system to achieve the same.

TCKC could also organize visits to schools and colleges and give talks on this process and induct students to take a lead in the same. She also suggested the wildlife clubs and related organized groups within school communities that can effectively take up the initiative at school levels and grow with it. The presence of enthusiastic University students from the University of Nairobi, Kenyatta University and Inoorero University participating in the deliberations was testimony to what we can achieve through the school system in this process.

Mr. Sam A Moturi- Chairman Institute of Packaging Kenya-IPK.

Mr. Muturi shared the concept of their institute which has increased the packaging of milk from 5% to 10% to reduce waste. The institute is also fighting counterfeits which usually do not meet packaging standards. They are also encouraging and improving the quality of plastic packaging. The greatest challenge in this country with regard to waste management is lack of intellectual infrastructure. He noted that such initiatives that seek to mitigate such obvious problems need encouragement. He also noted that littering is a social problem, that with increased and continued awareness, we are bound to socially orient future generations to be more responsible disposing and managing waste. He routed for separation of waste at source as the way to go in sorting out the mess in Nairobi and other cities.

The IPK is already recycling PCVs, car bumpers, plastic chairs and other plastic products thus this initiative has a case study from where a comprehensive one can be developed to roll across towns and cities facing similar challenges. He pledged support to this process and assured the forum that his organization will assist with ideas in recycling various forms of waste. He said The Institute of Packaging Kenya will work with TCKC to ensure success of the Initiative.

MR OTIENO SUNGU-The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC

Mr Sungu took the gathering through the state of our cities and towns in a brief power point presentation. It was generally agreed that the images flashing of our capital city were pathetic and a poor reflection of our inability to rise up to the challenge, that waste was resigning us to filthy life styles and we must take a stand and resolve to make the first step.

In his brief remarks, he noted that as residents of Nairobi and as Kenyans, we must take the initiative to change the sorry state of affairs we find ourselves in. He noted that both public and private sector have key roles to play in the process but more so, the public servants entrusted with service must have the presence of mind to take their duties seriously, engage with all stakeholders and above all, understand their role as held in trust for the people who in return expect service, commitment and dedication. He assured the forum that TCKC will work with government institutions that are up to the challenge and out to make a change but in the same vein, continue unhindered by those that do not seem to realize the great debt of service their offices owe residents. The mandate of this initiative is derived from our collective will to ensure we live in better environments as envisaged in our constitution. He also made a commitment from TCKC to reach out to as many partners as possible in this process so that we establish a national process that will seamlessly ensure waste management becomes an affair we are on top of as a nation to achieve Vision 2030. Sound environmental management is key to this goal.

OPEN PLENARY SESSION-CONCERNS, CHALLENGES AND SUGGESTIONS.
* It was noted that one of the major huddles for this process is vested interests that will root for status quo to persist. For some, the obtaining situation is a source of income; they benefit from the confused state of waste disposal and would not want anything that upsets this status.
* Lethargic public servants who have no clue, idea, interest or even the passion to make a change. These unfortunately form the bulk especially where implementation needs to be achieved.
* The non attendance of the Forum by anybody from the relevant Department- The Department of Environment at the City Council of Nairobi.
* Challenges of institutional capacity to undertake the challenge hence the need to consolidate and wok in synergy.
* Mindsets and attitudes which have developed over time with regard to waste disposal.
* That we develop a national Road Map that will drive this agenda.
* That sensitization and awareness of the benefits was still very low and needs to be enhanced through outreach to grassroots; at the Ward levels.
* That we ensure we move the process to become a national agenda.

MR EMMANUEL LUBEMBE- Head of Public Service Transformation Department-PSTD at the OPM.
Mr. Lubembe, in his remarks as he closed the Forum gave direction to this process. He commended the TCKC for organizing the forum and pledged support for further consultations, preferably within the next 30-45 days in order to come up with a clear road map towards waste management at the national level.
He noted that this is a transformative agenda and as such, we need to bring on board all players to brainstorm, structure and institute practical steps towards achieving this feat. Transformation of our society, he noted, is the responsibility of all of us and we need to encourage public-private sector initiatives and partnerships to seek common solutions. The next level of this engagement thus will create a think tank of all stakeholders, work out the structure and form of this process, ensure we have the right arms to research, document and implement the resolutions and outcomes of the consultative agenda.
The Public Service Transformation Department will work with all groups involved in ensuring the implementation of the constitution and to this end, PSTD will work with TCKC to ensure quality of lives of Kenyans as guaranteed in the constitution is achieved. He noted that the right to a clean and healthy environment is now enshrined in our Constitution, and we must all jealously guard this as we work for a Clean Kenya as a Transformative Agenda.
He also noted that constant positive transformation is key to Vision 2030 thus we must keep the tempo and ensure we seek trends that direct us towards achieving the vision, he indicated that when we make periodic assessment; we must note how much we have achieved and the next steps towards the overall goal.

RESOLUTIONS AND THE WAY FORWARD.

The following 6 Resolutions were agreed upon and read out by Mr. Sungu;
* Continued Awareness complemented by practical interventions. We must continue the awareness campaigns to sensitize residents of the need for cleaner environments as we prepare to induct them to the separation of waste at source which will be a more sustainable solution to the waste dumps all over.
* Enforcement-That when we undertake cleanup exercises and consultative forums for awareness, the relevant arms of Government must put in place stringent measures to deal with those who keep disposing waste carelessly so that the cleanups begin to bear fruit.
* Regulations- The forum agreed that regulations need to be clear to those enforcing them, especially CCN staff. NEMA accepted to facilitate the Divisional and Ward Managers at the CCN to access NEMA regulations on waste management besides their own by-laws to synchronize and enhance enforcement.
* Consolidating Efforts- It was agreed, as directed by Mr. Emmanuel Lumembe that a follow up forum be organized by TCKC to bring on board all stakeholders, including waste collectors and existing recyclers/converters and every other relevant entities to formalize the road map and review the timelines for comprehensive implementation of separation of waste at source.
* Building Capacity- It was further agreed that this process requires building capacities of the various small initiatives involved, as such, under this initiative, a clear plan to ensure every player has capacity to perform.
* Utaguzi wa taka taka- at the suggestion of Mr. Sam Muturi, It was agreed that as we devolve into counties, we work out a master plan to ensure that the action plan will continue effectively through our partners and stakeholders and also the incoming county governments through successfully trending this process.

VOTE OF THANKS-MR. EMMANUEL DENNIS, CEO, National Youth Sector Alliance-NYSA, Director-Green Initiatives and Head of Strategic Team-The Clean Kenya Campaign-TCKC.

In his vote of thanks, Mr. Dennis commended the great support accorded TCKC by NEMA, The Public Service Transformation Department and the Office of the Town Clerk at the City Council of Nairobi in organizing the forum. He also thanked all the stakeholders who participated and gave their input to enrich this process and partner in moving it forward.

Through several other initiatives he has been involved in, the youth have benefited through job creation and also economic empowerment thus this initiative will definitely open up opportunities for the youth even as we manage waste in our towns and cities. He called for the flame to remain burning and that we ensure in the next forum to be organized in partnership with NEMA and The Public Service Transformation Department, the Road Map should be made clearer from the presentations held yesterday and concrete steps put forward for implementation.
Finally, we appreciate The Star Newspaper which has been keeping track of this process and gave us very good coverage both yesterday and today, National News page 7-City Needs New Waste System, WB says.

Mr. Otieno Sungu,
Programmes Manager,
The Clean Kenya Campaign- TCKC
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