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RE: [bc-gnso] Kenya ICANN meeting - hotel information /ideas

  • To: Marilyn Cade <marilynscade@xxxxxxxxxxx>, bc - GNSO list <bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] Kenya ICANN meeting - hotel information /ideas
  • From: Phil Corwin <pcorwin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 22 Dec 2009 01:02:28 -0500

In Kenya, ethnic distrust is as deep as the machete scars

By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, December 22, 2009; A10

KIAMBAA, KENYA -- Nearly two years after a wave of post-election violence 
brought this East African nation to the brink of civil war, Joseph Ngaruiya has 
learned to ride his bike with one leg, the other having never fully healed from 
machete cuts. He's learned to tolerate the "sorrys" and small talk of neighbors 
who he believes hacked him nearly to death and burned a church here, killing 36 
people in one the worst days of the ethnic bloodletting.

What he has not managed, he says, is to summon sufficient faith in their 
apologies or in justice to keep him from buying an AK-47 once he gathers enough 
money.

"To stay the way we were that time, unarmed, we can't," said Ngaruiya, 38, who 
was among hundreds of thousands of ethnic Kikuyus driven from this western 
farming region by Kalenjin tribal militias after the disputed December 2007 
election. "Next time, it will be much worse."

Despite a power-sharing deal and a reform agenda intended to rescue this nation 
from collapse, the situation remains dangerously volatile, troubling U.S. 
officials who are already juggling other worries in the region. With Kenya's 
eastern neighbor, Somalia, at war with al-Qaeda-linked rebels and its 
northwestern neighbor, Sudan, sliding toward civil war, U.S. officials say a 
stable Kenya is more crucial than ever.

But the coalition government of President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader 
turned prime minister Raila Odinga has remained entrenched in the divisive 
tribal politics that led to the ethnic violence.

The government has moved slowly on reforms, blocking any domestic judicial 
process for trying the perpetrators of the violence, who are widely believed to 
include Kenya's political elites.

The International Criminal Court recently announced its own investigation, 
which is likely to focus on a few top leaders alleged to have orchestrated 
violence.

"Leaders and people are going into their tribal cocoons, where they feel they 
are safe," said Ken Wafula, director of the Centre for Human Rights and 
Democracy, a Kenyan human rights group. "Unless something is done, we are 
waiting for an explosion that would be very disastrous."

Rift Valley violence

Perhaps nowhere is the situation more fragile than here in the rolling, green 
Rift Valley. Some of the worst ethnic violence played out in this western 
region after Odinga accused Kibaki, who is Kikuyu, of stealing the 2007 
presidential election. What followed has been described by investigations as a 
well-planned bloodbath in which Odinga's Kalenjin supporters burned houses and 
farms and otherwise drove Kikuyus out of the Rift Valley with bows, arrows and 
machetes. Kikuyu gangs soon organized their own ethnically driven retaliation 
against Odinga supporters. In all, more than 1,000 people were killed.

Though the tribal calculus could change this time, depending on political 
alliances in Nairobi, the capital, people speak with near certainty of a repeat 
of that violence, only this time with guns.

According to Wafula and others, Kalenjin and Kikuyu self-defense militias are 
forming, some of them including retired military commanders. And while reports 
of people buying guns are difficult to verify -- and Kenya's gun laws are 
strict -- Kenyan police earlier this month intercepted a cache of 100,000 
bullets, military-grade weapons and uniforms being smuggled with the assistance 
of local police, which has lent some credence to the claims.

Sitting in his mud-walled house, Joseph Ngaruiya said that he knows where to 
get a gun when he's ready.

"You go near the swamp by the Ugandan border," said the former shopkeeper, who 
rescued his wife, daughter and four boys from the burning church. "You can't 
miss."

It was late afternoon, and Ngaruiya ran his fingers absently along the machete 
scars that divide his face and crease his skull. He was tired from riding his 
bike to town, where he has tried without luck to find work. Groceries, shops, 
and bus and truck companies seem interested in hiring only Kalenjin these days, 
he said, because of the possibility that Kikuyu-dominated businesses will be 
burned, as they were last time.

When he thought about it, he said, the post-election crisis taught him not that 
tribalism is a destructive tool of political elites but that his tribe is 
perhaps his only refuge anymore. The Kalenjin, he figured, have decided the 
same.

"We Kikuyus, we are uniting," Ngaruiya said. "And the Kalenjin, they follow 
their leaders so strongly. We know that. This thing has made tribalism 
stronger."

Kiambaa, a mostly Kikuyu community of yellowy fields and shaded red dirt paths, 
is relatively quiet these days; only about half of its residents have returned 
from tented displacement camps. Where the church was burned, two rows of low, 
wooden crosses, already overgrown with weeds, mark the graves of people who 
died inside, most of whom were women and children.

Tensions here remain so high that local Kalenjin leaders objected to building 
more permanent cement graves or a memorial, saying it would amount to an 
admission of guilt, or even a curse.

'It's taking too long'

One of those objectors is Alfred Kiplamai Bor, an influential Kalenjin elder 
whose sprawling family farm is just across a barbed wire fence from Kiambaa. He 
is accused of helping to finance Kalenjin militias, which poured across his 
farm to attack his neighbors at Kiambaa, a charge he denies. Bor's sons were 
recently acquitted in a Kenyan court of charges that they directed the militias 
and helped burn the church, a trial that many Kikuyu victims said was deeply 
flawed.

Bor, 88, calls Kikuyu neighbors "thieves" and accuses them of a sordid array of 
tribal practices that he calls "uncivilized."

"They are not wanted here," said the elder, sitting at his home on a little 
hill, where he's hosted some of Kenya's top Kalenjin leaders. "To solve this 
thing, it's very difficult."

Before the election, the Bors bought sugar and other goods from Kikuyus in 
Kiambaa. Kikuyus walked to Bor's farm for milk and corn. With few exceptions, 
those simple gestures of trust have not resumed.

One of Bor's sons, Emmanuel, said he does not share his father's views, though 
he feels in some way captive to them. When the militias arrived at his farm on 
New Year's Day -- by his count, more than 1,000 young men smeared with mud to 
disguise their faces -- he said he had little choice but to pretend to join 
them. Had he declined, he said, he might have been killed. When he arrived at 
the burning church, he said, his conscience told him to help. He said he yelled 
at the militias to open the church door before the building collapsed. He was 
there to rescue his neighbors, he said, not to burn them.

"These are people I've grown up with here," Emmanuel Bor said. "I don't know 
why they've not come back. This reconciliation is worrying. It's taking too 
long."

He walked outside his house then, across his field, under the barbed wire and 
into Kiambaa. It was getting dark, and the silence of the place was odd.

"This place was so full and busy," Bor said, walking past burned-out houses. 
"But listen now -- only bats. What keeps people away? I really don't 
understand." There are some Kikuyu neighbors who believe the younger Bor's 
story and have been branded traitors for it. Others said that even if they 
wanted to believe him, they cannot.

"We don't know what they are planning," said Regina Muthoni Nyokobi, whose 
mother died in her wheelchair in the church fire and who sometimes dreams of 
revenge. "We don't know their hearts."

Philip S. Corwin
Partner
Butera & Andrews
1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20004

202-347-6875 (office)

202-347-6876 (fax)

202-255-6172 (cell)

"Luck is the residue of design." -- Branch Rickey

________________________________
From: owner-bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx [owner-bc-gnso@xxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Marilyn 
Cade [marilynscade@xxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Sunday, December 20, 2009 5:12 PM
To: bc - GNSO list
Subject: [bc-gnso] Kenya ICANN meeting - hotel information /ideas


I have been doing more research on the options for travel and hotels in 
Nairobi, Kenya,for the upcoming ICANN meeting and wanted to share my 
experiences, for what they are worth, with other BC members.

I also looked into the security issues; talked to a couple of folks who travel 
to Kenya regularly, and got some helpful information and advice. If anyone is 
interested, I'll volunteer to set up a call with those 'regulars' who travel or 
who are in country, before we travel. In the meantime, of course, I closely 
watch the various 'alerts' from US State, Canadian, UK government, and a couple 
of other sources, since I travel rather frequently to a wide number of 
countries around the world as part of my business.

If there are business constituency members who want to 'get the scoop' and hear 
about what the advice is from an experienced group of travelers, we can do a 
small and low profile 'discussion' call. No need to make this a big deal, since 
only those who are thinking of attending would be interested.

Several of you will be booked at the venue hotel, or may be booked by the ICANN 
staff [e.g. Councilors]  so you may not be interested in these additional 
options, but for some members, who may be considering but haven't finalized 
travel, this might be useful.

Let me know, off list, if you would like to have such a call and I'll 
coordinate with those friendly advisors I have beneffitted from.
.

Hotels: for what it is worth:


Through various sources, I've learned:

There are several 4 star and 5 star hotels within walking distance.

The Nairobi Safari Club may not actually be walking distance. It was difficult 
to get a clear answer on that.

Hotels that are within walking distance are the Intercontinental, Hilton, and 
Stanley.

Hilton: I booked at the Hilton, after some review and discussion. It isn't as 
fancy as some Hilton's in US or Europe, but is a 4 star.

I got a rate of $184/plus taxes /USD per night by pre paying at the Hilton.

The Intercont. which is always a preferred hotel, was a little more pricey at 
$295 plus taxes/USD. Pre pay at the Intercont. didn't reduce the price per day.

the Stanley, which seems to be lovely, was a bit higher at around $325 USD/+ 
taxes.

Other hotels that are recommended by a number of sources include the NAIROBI 
SERENA @ ABOUT $250-300 USD. Taxi to venue.

Fairmont the Norfolk at around $430 USD. Taxi to venue.

I'm not a qualified tour guide, so take all this into account, and assume you 
should do your own due diligence, but if you want to join a call with me and a 
few other experts on Kenya travel/because they live there or travel there, let 
me know at marilynscade@xxxxxxxxxxx.

We might benefit from sharing information informally.

Marilyn Cade







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