Kenya tribe’s houses torched in Mau Forest eviction
8 April 2010 Thugs and plain-clothed police officers are destroying the homes of Ogiek tribe members in Kenya’s Mau Forest, leaving families destitute. Some houses were burned to the ground, while others were hacked apart with chainsaws and machetes. The attacks, in Ngongori area of the Mau Forest complex, began last week when most of the Ogiek men were attending a funeral some distance away.
The evictees believe the attacks were arranged by powerful landowners in the area who want to expand their wheat fields. Very little forest remains in Ngongori, because outsiders have cleared so much of the land for farming. The thugs returned yesterday to renew the attack. One Ogiek man, Kiplangat Cheruyot, told Survival ‘people were just crying and children were running away’. This is not the first time that the evicted Ogiek, who do not have official title to the land but who have lived there for generations, have been told to leave. One man told Survival, ‘they started doing this a long time ago. Destroying houses as we build them again.’ …
photo exhibit: http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2010/apr/06/slide-show-portraits-from-a-parched-land/