Parts Of West Pokot Declared Marginalized

A team from the Commission on Revenue Allocation (CRA), visited West Pokot to collect data that will help inform the finalization of the Third Policy Identification of the Marginalized areas in Kenya.

The CRA team, led by Commissioner Jonas Kuko, visited the remote, ‘hard-to-reach’ areas in the County to ascertain the availability of water supply, education, roads, hospitals, and electricity and how they have negatively or positively affected the community around them.

According to Kuko, the CRA is developing a Third Policy Identifying Marginalized Areas, and they visited West Pokot County, to collect data on the status of basic services including water, roads, health, electricity and education, for the purpose of the Equalization Fund.

He further explained that a ‘Third Policy’ is a criterion for sharing revenue among marginalized areas across the country.

The Commissioner said the areas that are termed ‘marginalized’ are determined by the data of the 2019 Population and Housing Census, by the National Bureau of Statistics.

Kuko noted that the status of water, roads, electricity, health, and education in the region forms a criterion by which marginalized areas are going to be considered during the allocation of equalization funds.

He reiterated that water, roads, electricity, health, and education are the backbone of the county’s and country’s economic progress.

The Commissioner further said that infrastructure plays a critical role in society and the economy and helps in the provision of services to households and industries.

The Commissioner noted with concern that the availability of roads, water, education, electricity, good hospitals, and other key facilities in the region is essential and helps spur economic growth.

He noted that a region that has good infrastructure development has low levels of vulnerability.

The Commissioner pointed out that a lack of basic amenities such as schools, water, electricity, roads and hospitals affect the growth and overall development of that region.

He pointed out that roads help to connect people and support trade by facilitating the movement of goods, and when the same is missing, it leads to low economic growth in that region.

Kuko also pointed out that water infrastructure helps improve health when there is better access to clean water, and when the same is missing, it leads to bad health.

‘We noted with concern that getting clean water for domestic use is a challenge in some parts of the county.’ ‘The water scarcity makes some of the residents travel several kilometres in search of it,’ he said.

Kuko noted that from their visit to West Pokot County, they have confirmed that indeed some parts of the region are marginalized, and there is a need for more money to be pumped in for development so that no County and no one is left behind in terms of development.

He said the government is committed to addressing the plight of the needy and vulnerable population affected by drought effects and those left behind in terms of infrastructure development.

Kuko appealed to the national government to pump in more money for the areas in West Pokot, where terrain is a problem and there was lack of basic amenities.

He also said that the government is keen to ensure all Kenyans have access to quality services and good infrastructure for economic development.

Kuko said there is a need for the local community to be educated that they have resources that, if well utilized, could earn them a better living standard.

‘The local community has resources that could earn them a better living standard, and what they lack is relevant knowledge and skills to enable them to maximize the resources available,’ he said.

The CRA team inspected Equalization Fund Development Projects in the County, and for unfinished infrastructure, they called for speedy completion and promised to ensure all pending bills are cleared.

West Pokot County Commissioner (CC), Apollo Okello, told CRA that most areas of the County are marginalized and there was a need for more resources to be pumped in for the development of schools, water, electricity, hospitals, and roads.

Okello said that the Equalization Fund was good and helped improve people’s livelihoods.

However, he said that security is an issue that needs to be addressed and that part of the money meant for equalization should be earmarked for security development, reiterating that a stable and peaceful environment is an important development.

The CRA team met the County Secretary at the Office of the Governor, who confirmed that the areas CRA picked for its proposal for the Third Policy are indeed marginalized and a lot needs to be done in terms of development.

They inspected six equalization fund projects, including Akiriamet bridge and Sigor Sub- County Hospital theatre in Pokot Central Sub-county, Kanyarkwat, Kolenge’lai to Tipet road, Totum, Kopoch to Miskwony road, Tamarukwo borehole in West Pokot Sub- county and Konyao borehole in North Pokot sub county.

West Pokot County is a vast area that lies to the north-west of Elgon and covers an area of approximately 9,164.4 sq m.

It is accessible by a good road from Kitale town in Trans Nzoia County, a distance of 37 kilometres.

The County is bounded by the County of Turkana to the north, Baringo to the east, Elgeyo Marakwet and Trans Nzoia to the south, and also shares the international boundary with the Republic of Uganda to the west.

The County has four constituencies, namely Kacheliba, Kapenguria, Sigor, and Pokot South and is made up of five sub counties with twenty county wards and 103 villages.

According to the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (2016), 57.3 percent of the population in the County lives below the poverty line, compared to a national average of 36.1 percent.

However, food levels stand at 57.4 percent against the national average of 32 percent, while 26.3 percent of the county’s residents live in extreme poverty.

Agriculture activities are conducted in the highlands parts of the County compared to the lowland areas, which are characterized by drought effects.

Source: Kenya News Agency

County Assembly Holds Consultative Meeting With Development Partners

There is a need to equip Members of the County Assembly (MCAs) with the necessary knowledge and strategic skills to enable them discharge their legislative duty effectively, Garissa County Assembly Speaker, Abdi Idle, has said.

Opening a one-day consultative meeting that brought together the County Assembly members and development partners at a Garissa hotel, Idle said lack of capacity building was a major stumbling block facing county assemblies countrywide.

The Speaker said that the critical role played by the County Assembly in delivering their core mandate of legislation, representation and oversight, cannot be underestimated.

Idle noted that for the MCAs to fulfill their legislative, representation and oversight roles, they need intensive training and capacity building.

‘Capacity building skills, the leaders will learn on how to communicate and engage with the media efficiently and use it as a medium to pass on relevant information to the people,’ Idle said.

The Speaker called on organizations engaged in gender equality and other donors to chip in, so as to increase their participation and representation in their respective county assemblies and improve on the content or issues they try to advocate for.

Deputy Speaker, Musdaf Abdirashid, lamented that unlike in the National Assembly and Senator that are autonomous legislative institutions, the county assemblies are still operating at ‘the mercy of the Executive or the Governors’.

Abdirashid said that for County Assemblies, to execute their three roles of legislative, representation and oversight, they must be made autonomous and delinked from the Executive.

‘How can you bite the hands that feed you? We entirely depend on the Governors for our day to day activities and therefore impossible to oversee them,’ Abdirashid said.

‘This has to a large extent compromised the MCAs mandate of being impartial, as they operate at the mercy of the Executive. This has to change,’ he added.

Among the issues highlighted during the meeting were on how to support women in leadership specifically women caucus, youths and special persons with disabilities

On the issue of Gender equality, the clerk to the Assembly, Mohamud Santur, said that a lot of strides have been made to bridge the gender disparity of female MCAs, where they chair five House Committees, while the remaining are vice chairs of the other committees.

The County Assembly is deliberate in its quest to engage with the development partners so as to effectively execute its core constitutional mandate.

The partners present included UNICEF, UNDP, UN women, women caucus, SOCCAT and council of governors among others.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Drive To Green Kisumu County Launched

The Government has partnered with the African Guarantee Fund (AGF) to roll out a greening initiative in Kisumu County with a view to boosting forest cover in the area.

The Kisumu Greening Initiative, a partnership between the State Department for Trade, State Department for Forestry and AGF is part of the government’s target to plant 15 billion trees, to achieve 30 percent forest cover by the year 2032.

Trade Principal Secretary (PS), Alfred K’ombudo, said the initiative targets to give impetus to ecological restoration efforts in Lakeside County which has one of the lowest forest covers in the country at 0.44 percent.

Through the partnership, he said 20, 000 trees shall be planted this season in Nyakach Sub-County, adding that the initiative would be scaled-up to cover the other Sub- counties in the area.

‘We are making our contribution towards the 15 billion trees target through this initiative. We want to be able to green Kisumu and improve forest cover and capability of the community in several ways,’ he said.

Speaking during the launch of the drive at Rarieda Kokech Primary School in Nyakach Sub-county, the PS said through funding from AGF, members of the community have been issued with fruit tree seedlings as well to reap economic benefits from the exercise.

The trees among them grafted mangoes, oranges, lemon and tamarind, he added, were part of the State Department of Trade’s initiative to bring in a commercial aspect in the tree planting exercise, to economically empower communities.

‘Greening is not just about trees. It is also about the commercial aspect of ensuring that trees are part of the livelihood of the community,’ he said.

The State Department for Trade, he said, has been incorporated in the National Tree Planting Steering Committee, to exploit the commercial aspect of the initiative.

‘We are not just pushing for fruits trees but also the indigenous trees with medicinal value so that we can help farmers secure markets for the products locally and abroad,’ he said.

K’ombudo called for more partnerships to scale-up the project to boost forest cover and address challenges posed by Climate Change.

African Guarantee Fund Group, Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Jules Ngankam, said besides procuring the tree seedlings, the Fund will support the community to nurture the trees to maturity, to ensure that the programme is sustained.

‘This initiative calls for a lot of resilience. Some of the trees will take years before you start reaping the benefits, but you must take care of them so that they grow,’ he said.

AGF, he said, was in full support of the government’s drive to plant 15 billion trees, to address Climate Change concerns.

State Department for Forestry, Director of Ecological Restoration, Erick Akotsi, lauded the partnership, saying it will go a long way in helping to achieve the 15 billion trees target.

The State Department, he added, has developed a strategy to support institutions and communities, to play an active role in the program to achieve set targets.

Strategies, awards and schemes have been established to incentivize communities and institutions involved in the exercise.

Source: Kenya News Agency

County Ropes In School Children In Tree Planting Drive

The County Government of Embu in conjunction with NGO-Rainforest Alliance, has embarked on an initiative of donating tree seedlings to schools in Embu, as part of the greening initiative and also raising a generation of environmentally responsible young people.

The development comes at a time the County is projecting to plant one million trees annually, as part of playing a role in aiding the government achieve the projected target of planting five billion trees in the coming five years, to combat effects of climate change.

Three schools including Kianjokoma, Kathangariri and Kanja Primary schools, received a total of 1, 500 tree and fruit seedlings during the launch of the initiative, at Kianjokoma, which was presided over by the Deputy Governor, Kinyua Mugo.

Learners in the schools are expected to plant and nurture the trees to maturity, which will also go a long way in increasing their interest in environmental conservation.

Speaking during the launch at Kianjokoma Primary School, Mugo said the County is committed to combating Climate Change that had made drought a common phenomenon in the County and country at large.

‘We want to ensure we rehabilitate our degraded water catchment by planting trees that assist in nature’s recovery,’ he said.

The Deputy Governor said the County will also put emphasis in agroforestry, by incorporating fruit trees farming in the greening initiative, to help farmers boost their incomes and nutrition.

He also challenged tea factories in the area to shift from use of wood fuel in their boilers to solar to conserve trees.

Rainforest Alliance Country Director, Michael Orangi, said they had also embarked on a program of training tea and coffee farmers on sustainable agriculture and diversification, to boost revenue, as they also conserve the environment.

He said through the Mt. Kenya Sustainable Landscape and Livelihoods Program, farmers will be trained on how to diversify to high value crops such as grafted avocado and macadamia as well organic farming.

Kenya Tea Development Agency Ltd (KTDA), Zone Six Board Member, Enos Njeru, said conservation of the environment will go a long way in improving production of tea due to favorable weather conditions translating to more earnings to farmers.

Source: Kenya News Agency

Kirinyaga Intensifies Cholera Prevention Campaign

The County Government of Kirinyaga has intensified campaign against the spread of cholera, following detection of sporadic cases in Ndia Constituency.

The campaign that includes sensitization of the residents through Public Barazas, health education in schools and use of public address systems in urban centers and villages, is aimed at informing the public on the importance of protecting themselves against the disease.

Speaking during a sensitization forum at Ndia Technical and Vocational College, the County Executive Committee (CEC) Member of Health, George Karoki, said that seven cases have in the course of the month, been detected within the County.

He said that out of the cases, one person has been treated and discharged, while two others are in stable condition, as they undergo treatment at the Sagana Sub-County Hospital.

The other four are being observed, awaiting the results of their laboratory tests.

Karoki noted that cases of cholera, which is a highly contagious disease, have been on the rise in many counties in the recent past, necessitating sustained public action on its prevention and control.

He said that the campaign is a multiagency initiative that incorporates the National Government Administration and the Ministry of education.

The County Government is also giving aqua tabs, to enable vulnerable households in the affected areas to treat their drinking water and at the same time giving protective prophylaxis treatment, to people who have had close contact with cholera patients.

Some of the cholera symptoms that the community has been advised to look out for include watery diarrhoea, vomiting, nausea and lethargy, for which they should immediately visit a health facility.

Karoki noted that the disease can be fatal since it leads to dehydration, thus the need for one to get treatment from the hospital.

The CEC has also appealed to members of the public to ensure that they observe the required hygiene practices such as washing hands with soap and running water, consuming treated or boiled water, eating well cooked and hot food and proper fecal waste disposal.

He also called upon all food handlers to ensure that food is prepared and sold under hygienic conditions and appealed to the public to shun food that is hawked in disregard to public health standards.

Karoki also warned owners of business enterprises or residential premises against discharging effluent into rivers, since it contributes to contamination of water.

Source: Kenya News Agency