Jane Wanjiru Maina, a mother of seven, is tired of living in an internally displaced people's (IDP) camp in the show grounds of Nakuru, in the Rift Valley.
"The tents are now starting to leak and I can see a possibility of spending the [Christmas] holidays here," said Maina, who also has three grandchildren under her care in the camp. She lost property worth 485,000 shillings (US$8,000) during a wave of violence that followed December’s presidential election.
"Although I would really like to leave so that I can take care of my family like I used to before, I have to stay on until the government comes up with a better compensation package," she said.
Each resettled IDP household is receiving 10,000 shillings ($166) in family assistance funds. The IDPs also take home a one-month food ration along with a kitchen kit.
"If I leave this place with 10,000 shillings, will my grandchildren ever learn to read and write?" she asked. "We are not landowners so why should we have to go back to receive compensation?" The resettlement funds are paid out in areas of return.
Most of the former IDPs who have returned to their places of origin are landowning farmers, according to a report by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). Many of those still living in camps are agricultural workers, who do not own land, or business people.
Photo: Ann Weru/IRIN ![]() |
| Jane Wanjiru Maina, an IDP living at the Nakuru show ground camp |
Another IDP among the 14,000 living in the Nakuru show grounds said he preferred to stay there to be in a better position to lobby for more support.
"Why should I get the same amount of money as someone who is going back to his farm?" Samuel Mbote asked. "Even if you are moved [from the camp] with the tent, where will you pitch it?"
More time
The IDPs in the showground camp and the Afraha stadium camp, also in Nakuru, had been expected to start returning home on 1 July.
However, they asked for more time to allow them to bury an IDP killed during a demonstration.
According to the director of resettlements at the Ministry of Special Programmes, Wilfred Ndolo, discussions were ongoing to find a long-term solution for such IDPs. "They will probably get interest-free loans," he said.
He added that there were plans to provide an extra 25,000 shillings ($416) for shelter support. "We have the money but we still do not have the data of those who lost their houses."
At least 36 million shillings ($600,000) has been paid out in shelter support to 3,600 households, he said.
Meanwhile, the IDPs who remained in the camps were still receiving assistance. "They have food, water and electricity," Anthony Mwangi, the KRCS public relations manager, said.
Photo: Manoocher Deghati/IRIN ![]() |
| Food being distributed at the Nakuru IDP camp |
Transport problems had also delayed IDP returns at the Kedong camp in Naivasha, he said.
The Red Cross official said there was a need for further efforts to foster reconciliation. IDPs who had been resettled in Surgow, in Eldoret North District, from a camp in Eldoret had to be returned to the camp after receiving a hostile reception.
According to OCHA, about 100,000 people have left IDP camps for 134 “transit sites” near their home areas. The OCHA report said sanitation facilities in some sites was below standard, with residents defecating in the open, leading to a risk of disease.
Cases of malnutrition have also been detected among IDPs in “host” communities not targeted by food aid, according to OCHA.
The resettlement of IDPs began on 5 May in Kenya's Rift Valley Province under a government campaign, Operation Rudi Nyumbani (Go Back Home). So far, at least 210,000 IDPs have left the camps, including those in transit sites, Ndolo said.
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