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  <title>Jane Weru</title>
  <link href="http://huffingtonpost.com/author/index.php?author=jane-weru"/>
  <updated>2013-05-18T23:00:15-04:00</updated>
  <author>
    <name>Jane Weru</name>
  </author>
  <id xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">http://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/index.php?author=jane-weru</id>
  <rights>Copyright 2008, HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.</rights>
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<entry>
    <title>Security of Tenure for the Urban Poor: A Critical Tool for Sustainable Social and Community Resilience</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-weru/security-of-tenure-for-th_b_2559995.html"/>
    <id>tag:www.huffingtonpost.com,2013:/theblog//3.2559995</id>
    <published>2013-01-27T00:00:03-05:00</published>
    <updated>2013-03-28T05:12:01-04:00</updated>
    <summary><![CDATA[Nairobi is a thriving metropolis that unfortunately suffers from high levels of inequality and violence. Sixty-five percent of the city's population of 4 million lives in the highly marginalized densely populated slums of the city. In 2007, something remarkable happened.]]></summary>
    <author>
        <name>Jane Weru</name>
        <uri>http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-weru/</uri>
    </author>
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jane-weru/"><![CDATA[<p>Nairobi is a thriving metropolis that unfortunately suffers from high <br />
levels of inequality and violence. Sixty-five percent of the city's population of 4 <br />
million lives in the highly marginalized densely populated slums <br />
of the city, where residents face conditions of considerable insecurity <br />
and indignity characterized by single 10' x 10' shacks made of galvanized <br />
sheets, wood, polythene, wattle or mud with little access to clean water, <br />
sanitation, health care, schools and other essential public services. The <br />
poor who live in these fragile areas are at the mercy of environmental <br />
vagaries, especially ﬂooding. Overcrowding raises the risk of respiratory <br />
illness.  Contaminated water supply and unsanitary waste disposal <br />
causes gastro-intestinal problems, skin ailments, cholera, typhoid and <br />
other infectious diseases. Malnutrition is highly visible among children. <br />
At almost every turn, these factors thwart efforts by these communities <br />
to become resilient. </p><p><br />
<br />
In addition to the conditions that prohibit more resilient systems from <br />
developing within the slums, housing is fundamentally unstable. Most <br />
of Nairobi's slums are situated on private lands. Consequently, residents <br />
live with the threat of forced evictions and violent demolitions with no <br />
warnings and no recourse. Eviction orders are often hidden by slumlord <br />
cartels in order to mitigate the risk of losing rental income prior to the <br />
evictions. Before demolitions and evictions, armed contingents of riot <br />
police and provincial administration gather at local police stations. Massive <br />
bulldozers and excavators are stationed around the settlements with <br />
the owners' addresses carefully concealed and camouﬂaged. On many <br />
occasions, vigilante groups from neighboring areas are hired to ensure <br />
"adequate security" during the demolitions.</p><p><br />
<br />
These forced evictions and demolitions have resulted in the displacement <br />
of entire communities, plunging hundreds of thousands of people further <br />
into excruciating poverty as they are forced to begin rebuilding their lives <br />
from scratch. The destruction of small businesses and micro enterprises <br />
worsens the state's already dire unemployment rate, while individual slum <br />
dwellers lose everything, including the friends, neighbors and community <br />
connections they have developed over time.  Children's education is <br />
disrupted and a culture of violence is embedded into their psyche as <br />
they watch their parents and relatives ﬁghting back attempts to violently <br />
demolish their homes. While new slums are often created on unfenced <br />
parcels of land close to the eviction area, a fresh demolition at a later <br />
date is inevitable, and the incessant cycle of forced evictions and violent <br />
demolitions creates an environment where thousands of slum-dwellers <br />
are teetering on the precipice of a revolt, making slums a potential source <br />
of national, regional and global insecurity. </p><p><br />
<br />
The Mukuru slum in Nairobi sits on private land. Since the value of the <br />
Mukuru plots has appreciated over the years, the registered title deed <br />
holders are in the process of selling them, and for the slum residents the <br />
threat of evictions has become very real. </p><p><br />
<br />
In 2007, something remarkable happened in Mukuru. A few leaders of a <br />
small saving scheme of slum dwellers approached my organization, the <br />
Akiba Mashinani Trust (AMT), which is supported in its efforts to build <br />
resilience by The Rockefeller Foundation, asking for assistance in dealing <br />
with the problem of evictions. They decided to shop around for available <br />
plots of land and began saving a portion of their daily incomes. After a <br />
short while, they identiﬁed a 23-acre plot situated in Mukuru Kwa Njenga <br />
belonging to a local company called Milwhite Limited. The asking price <br />
was Ksh. 104 million (USD 1,235,000). Seeing the commitment of the slum <br />
dwellers,  AMT then engaged with the land owner and negotiated the<br />
price down to Kshs. 81 million (USD 963,000), and began searching for <br />
a commercial bank that would be willing to ﬁnance the slum dwellers for <br />
the remaining purchase price of the land. </p><p><br />
<br />
The members of the Mukuru saving scheme developed a robust system <br />
to collect and track funds, which itself was resilient.  The scheme is <br />
organized into twenty-three zones.  Each has its own leadership a <br />
chairman, a treasurer and a collector. Every day the collector visits each <br />
member within the zone and collects whatever funds are available and <br />
the funds are meticulously logged in a redundant system with checks <br />
and controls. </p><p><br />
<br />
The savers meet once a week at the zonal level, to check on their savings <br />
and to share information. At least once a year the scheme audits its <br />
accounts. A trained team of members from the various zones conducts <br />
the audit. After the audit, the results are shared with the zonal leaders <br />
and recommendations on how to improve the saving systems of the <br />
scheme is shared.</p><p><br />
<br />
As part of the land purchase,  AMT approached several banks for <br />
ﬁnancing, all of whom were very keen to collect the impressive deposits <br />
of the slum dwellers. But they were all, however, hesitant to issue a land <br />
purchase loan to AMT for a variety of reasons, including that they were <br />
not equipped to transact business with a large groups of slum dwellers. </p><p><br />
<br />
AMT was able to secure a 5-year term bank loan of Kshs. 55 million (USD<br />
653,600) for the purchase of the land. This was only done after placing <br />
a cash guarantee of Kshs. 24 million (USD 285,000) from SDI through <br />
the support of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Thanks to the <br />
vibrant savings of the 2,200 Mukuru residents, the loan was fully repaid <br />
within 1 year and 7 months of the disbursement.<br />
</p><p><br />
There are other impressive examples of slum dwellers, undeterred by <br />
their low societal standing, using new Kenyan constitutional provisions <br />
that give Kenyans the right to housing making their communities more <br />
resilient.  I was proud to be recognized for the work of  AMT at  The <br />
Rockefeller Foundation 2011 Innovation Forum. <br />
</p><p><br />
Recently, as the Mukuru people were in the process of completing the <br />
planning of their land, many of the members were faced with eviction <br />
from their homes by land owners.  As a result of the relationships <br />
developed over time, the leaders of the saving scheme jointly began <br />
to gather information on the eviction process and began to organize <br />
themselves and built relationships with their local churches and schools <br />
for greater solidarity. They obtained temporary court orders barring the<br />
land owners from evicting them, they organized protests and marches and <br />
built public awareness of their plight. <br />
</p><p><br />
While the plan of the Mukuru residents was reliant on outside funding <br />
and technical expertise, their scheme worked because it was theirs, <br />
and community members could intrinsically trust it.  Despite high levels <br />
of instability, violence and poverty, slum residents were able to look out <br />
for themselves by pooling meager resources that in the aggregate were <br />
signiﬁcant. This is a valuable lesson for similar communities around the <br />
world that seek to make themselves more resilient.<br />
</p><br />
<p><i>This post is part of a series produced by The Huffington Post and The Rockefeller Foundation on resilience, a topic being discussed at the 2013 World Economic Forum in Davos. To see all the posts in the series, click <a href="http://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/news/news/rebound-building-more-resilient-world" target="_blank" >here</a>.</i></p>]]></content>
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