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From: "IRIN" <he...@irinnews.org>
Date: 13 Jan 2017 09:03
Subject: Kenyan slum activists build climate change resilience from the
bottom up ...
To: "ElisabethJanaina" <elisabethjana...@gmail.com>
Cc:

Today's humanitarian news and analysis

*Online version
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Kenyan slum activists build climate change resilience from the bottom up
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Living in the Kenyan slum of Mukuru is hard enough, but when it rains it’s
downright miserable. Streets flood, sewage overflows, homes are inundated.

After each bout of torrential rain, Nairobi’s largest informal settlement
is left a little shabbier, a little poorer, the community more insecure.

Climate projections for East Africa suggests parts of the region will
receive heavier rains in the future, which will impact the most vulnerable.
In the case of the Kenyan capital, that means the 60 percent of its
residents currently living in informal settlements.

A walk through Mukuru is enough to appreciate the magnitude of the
challenges. A courtyard turned into a pond by recent flash floods reflects
the metal shacks surrounding it, now inaccessible until the water dries up.
That could take weeks.

Residents cross, tiptoeing on the rocks just visible above the water to
reach the main street. A short walk ahead, a bridge over the nearby river
leads to the other side of the slum, where the local school is. When the
river bursts its banks, the bridge becomes inaccessible, sometimes for
months, and kids miss their classes.
Insecurity

Finding solutions in Mukuru is especially difficult because it is built
partially on private land, which traps residents in chronic land tenure
insecurity: they could be evicted and lose what little they have at any
time. This doesn’t encourage them to plan for the long-term.

[image: Mukuru slum, Nairobi]
Lou del Bello/IRIN
When the river floods it get a lot worse

Aware that climate change will magnify risks, slum activists from local
universities and research institutions are teaming up to take action in
Mukuru, working with the residents to build resilience, and develop legal
and financial tools to force accountability from public authorities.

Shadrack Mbaka, of Slum Dwellers International, is one of the brains behind
the project – spurred on by the fact that “informal settlements [have] been
cut out of the development plans” of the Nairobi City Council.

SDI is partnering with Strathmore University, the International Development
Research Centre, Nairobi University, the Katiba Institute and Muungano wa
Wanavijiji, a slum dwellers’ network, to develop the research
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and come up with recommendations for upgrading Mukuru.

The lack of pipe-borne water and sanitation is one major issue. Of more
than 800 households surveyed in Mukuru, just four percent had access to
adequate bathrooms, only seven percent had proper toilets, and just 29
percent had adequate water provision.

Christine Wayua makes a living for herself and her family by threading
beads into colourful jewellery. She works from a bench outside her home in
a narrow passage, off one of the main roads in Mukuru.

“Whenever it rains it's a disaster for the communities living here,” she
told IRIN. “There will be a lot of flooding and it's not just rainwater:
it’s water mixed with sewage, and the water gets into the homes.”

That can lead to the spread of waterborne diseases, like cholera, which is
common in Kenya’s slums.

[image: Resident Christine Wayua strings beads in Mukuru]
Lou del Bello/IRIN
Christine Wayua at work
Profiling

SDI and its partners are trying to tackle the community’s vulnerability
from the bottom up, with the help of people like Wayua.

First they “profiled” Mukuru, counting people and households. Then they sat
down with the residents to imagine a new, better design for the community’s
infrastructure. With an agreed plan, they can engage
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the politicians, who had previously ignored their needs.

Wayua is aware of climate change, and recognises it may exacerbate the
problems the community already faces. But she is pragmatic, looking to
focus instead on how to prepare for the future.

In the case of Mukuru, she feels the issue boils down to land tenure. “We
need more guarantees that we will be able to occupy this land in the
future,” she explained.

Mukuru’s coalition of activists are exploring a range of strategies to
improve land tenure and property rights – including converting private
holdings into community land, and then establishing a Community Land Trust.
The CLT will help defend constitutional rights to housing, water, health,
and sanitation.

*Watch IRIN's film on Mukuru, The Right to Stay
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=dbb0ecd675&e=399c7ee738>*

Another approach is to foster liveability, safety and affordability. This
includes initiatives to improve service delivery through “community
partnerships” and “community-based management structures”. One target is
the cartels, whose control means prices for services in Makuru, as in other
slums, is higher than in Nairobi’s middle-class suburbs.

“It's fundamental that people realise that the community is theirs to
protect and upgrade,” said Wayua.

She gave the example of a garbage point, designated as a place where the
community could collectively dispose of their rubbish: “But still you will
find that no one really wants to carry their garbage there, so the nearest
open space they see is where they are going to dump it.”

Mbaka says that engagement is growing, and will lead to behavioral change.
Even garbage collection could, eventually, be a success.

[image: Trying to make ends meet in Mukuru]
Lou del Bello/IRIN
Trying to make ends meet in Mukuru
Urban poor

Responding to the “complex realities in Mukuru” could help develop the
“long-term solutions” to benefit the rest of Kenya’s informal settlements,
says a Strathmore University study.

There are 158 overcrowded informal settlements dotting Nairobi. They host
the majority of the city’s population, but take up just 1.6 percent of the
city’s land area.

The land is marginal and disaster prone, and houses are typically flimsy.
But what really drives vulnerability for the urban poor is “the lack of
risk preparedness, and the capacity to respond when something bad happens”,
said David Dodman, an expert on resilience with the International Institute
for Environment and Development.

“You can't separate the process of rapid urban population growth, which
means that more people are located in increasingly hazardous sites, from
the actual changes in the climate that may be making those sites even more
risky.”

ldb/oa/ag

*TOP PHOTO: Mukuru after the rains. By Lou del Bello*
slum_4.jpg
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Feature <http:///feature> Environment and Disasters
<http:///environment-and-disasters> Climate change
<http:///environment-and-disasters/climate-change> Cities
<http:///politics-and-economics/cities> Kenyan slum activists build climate
change resilience from the bottom up Lou del Bello
<http:///authors/lou-del-bello> IRIN <http:///byline/irin> NAIROBI
<http:///publication-location/nairobi> Africa <http:///africa> Kenya
<http:///africa/east-africa/kenya>

*Read on
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