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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 5:23 PM
Subject: KENYA: Salome Matakwei, "Some people still hate me"
To: Elisabeth Janaina <[email protected]>


KENYA: Salome Matakwei, "Some people still hate me"

MT ELGON, 26 April 2012 (IRIN) - Between 2006 and 2008, a self-styled
militia, the Sabot Land Defence Forces (SLDF), carried out an
insurgency [ http://www.irinnews.org/Report/77152] to correct what its
leaders said were injustices committed during a land distribution
exercise which began in 1972 in Chebyuk, in the western Kenyan
district of Mount Elgon.

In the process, however, SLDF engaged in rape, murder and the physical
punishment of those in the region it saw as enemies, according to
local human rights NGO the Independent Medico-Legal Unit. Hundreds of
people were displaced.

The military intervened with "Operation Okoa Maisha" (Operation Save
Lives), which left an estimated 1,000 people dead; [
http://www.imlu.org/wp-content/plugins/download-monitor/download.php?id=6
] 300 others went missing, [
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/94080/KENYA-Government-must-account-for-Mt-Elgon-disappearances-report
] amid allegations of torture committed by both sides.

Six years after the insurgency and the military intervention, Salome
Matakwei, 38, the wife of SLDF leader Wycliffe Matakwei, who was
killed by the army, told IRIN her story.

"Wycliffe kept on telling he was not happy with the way the land was
distributed in Chebyuk settlement scheme, and he kept on telling me
that he would do something about it.

"I didn't know he was forming a militia group, but most of the time,
he would be away from home telling me he was attending some important
meetings, and I believed that the meetings were really important. I
didn't know they were meetings meant to plan how to kill people.

"He commanded people who killed others' husbands and sons, and raped
people's wives.

"Many women, just like me, are now left widows. I am not sad that I am
a widow, but I feel sad for the other women whose husbands were killed
by the military and SLDF, because my husband is responsible for all of
it.

"Some people still hate me and when I go to the market they talk and
say I should not talk to them because it is my husband who knows why
their husbands were killed. I am not bitter with them because he [my
husband] took their husbands away by starting the war.

"I try to explain to them that I have nothing to do with it. I don't
even know how to organize a small fight. I couldn't have helped my
husband organize that conflict [insurgency].

"I don't want to sit back and watch them suffer and now I have decided
to form self-help groups, and through these groups we engage in
income-generating activities like keeping livestock and chickens.

"These women need to put food on the table for the children left
behind by their dead husbands.

"We also move around the community preaching peace. I live with some
of the children whose parents were killed during the conflict and when
the military came."

ko/am/cb
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95367



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