Monday, October 2, 2000
Ntimama in new push for land rights
By KIPKOECH TANUI
Maasai leaders yesterday renewed a controversial clamour for the return
of community lands taken away during the colonial era.
Leading the campaign, Cabinet Minister William ole Ntimama said Maasai
leaders would fight for the restoration of the vast area covering Naivasha,
Molo, Nakuru, Mau Narok, Kedong, Kitet and Ndabibi to the community's ownership.
He said the land lies to the south of the Mombasa-Kisumu railway from
Konza. He did not, however, specify the end of the stretch towards the
western side.
"We have the map of the land that was originally ours and we have now
resolved to reclaim it!" he proclaimed at a conference which brought together
the top cream of his populous Purko clan.
"For over 100 years, the Maasai have been continuously and perpetually
relegated to the dark corners of Kenyan society. For all this time, we
have not had access to education and health facilities," he said, adding
that leaders were now more determined than ever to have the ownership of
the vast tracts of land in the Rift Valley from which the community was
evicted by the British Government.
Leaders are working on the technical aspects of the fight for the reclamation
of the land, he said, and have vowed to enlist the support of influential
Maasai personalities, including Vice-Presdident George Saitoti, in their
endeavour.
"We shall enjoin every Maasai leader in the effort. We know that not
all will come on board, but we shall approach every one of them. This is
an issue that stems from all the ranks of the community and there is consensus
on the move," Mr Ntimama said.
Speaking during a cultural meeting at Maji Moto (hot water), Narok,
Mr Ntimama said: "This conference has passed a resolution – that MPs, councillors
and all opinion leaders demand the return of all Maasai land which was
lost through conquest by the colonists, annexed, grabbed, stolen or ceded
to outside forces."
Other leaders present were Narok South MP Samson ole Tuya, a former
chairman of the Narok County Council, Mr Shadrack Rotiken, the Narok Town
Council chairman, Mr Joseph ole Nchoe, and the Narok South Kanu chairman,
Mr Tikoshi ole Nampaso.
The local MP, Assistant Minister Stephen ole Ntutu, was absent, but
Mr Ntimama said he would have attended the meeting were it not for the
fact that he was abroad.
Mr Ntimama, a self-styled champion of Maasai rights, started the agitation
for the return of community lands in the early 1990s, shortly before the
explosion of ethnic clashes in parts of the Rift Valley Province.
Yesterday, however, Mr Ntimama, a Minister of State in the Office of
the President, sought to downplay speculation that the move could lead
to a flare-up of ethnic tensions in the province and lead to bloody clashes
such as were witnessed in 1991 and 1992.
The minister dismissed fears that the move would incite the community
into evicting non-Maasai resident in the area as was the case in Enoosupukia,
where ethnic fighting flared up in 1996-97.
"Enoosupukia was a special case, the rivers were drying up because the
settlers were destroying the water catchment areas. Water could no longer
flow to the lower areas and something had to be done about it.''
He added: "The disparities of the past must be corrected and bridges
built to close the development gaps.
"The time to correct the wrong and evil crimes committed against the
Maasai is now, we have been victims of neglect and discrimination!" said
the Narok North MP.
The community expects compensation for loss of property and reparation
for lives lost, Mr Ntimama said, from "heirs and successors of the British
Colonial Government".
The minister, who is also the Narok District Kanu chairman, also used
the occasion to plead with non-governmental organisations and foreign governments
to support education projects in Maasailand, explaining that this was the
best way to correct historical disparities.
"We have been victims of geographical exclusion and under-development.
The principle of equitable distribution of resources has not been observed
or implemented," said Mr Ntimama, who has been in the Cabinet for the past
12 years.
Asked if spearheading the latest move would not earn him the tag of
a tribal leader, Mr Ntimama retorted: "Who is not?''
The minister also said leaders will fight for the inclusion of a clause
on community land rights in the new Constitution when it is finally written.
Speaking to the Nation after the closure of the meeting, Mr Ntimama
said the Kenyan and British governments should also compensate the Maasai
community for land "stolen but whose ownership cannot be restored to them".
A joint statement issued by the leaders and read by Mr Ntimama said
the two governments should also work out the modalities for reparations
to the Maasai families whose members were killed or famished by the colonial
administration during their eviction at the beginning of the last century.