Welcome to KCDN

This is KCDN, an Environmental Management, Economic Empowerment and Poverty Eradication Civil Society.

We welcome you to our site. Kindly feel free to share with us your thoughts. Ideas that add value will be appreciated. Ideas that want to make us improve our physical environment will be welcome. And more so, ideas that redirect us from the lost cause will be of immense value.

It is us who will improve the lot of our Environment, our Economy and make Kenya a Clean Country, where People join hands to work for our own Economic Emancipation and where Municipal Solid Waste Management is looked at as a resource, not as waste.

We need to set the standards in this region of the World and become the referral point in how a people can join hands and work for their own Economic Liberation, where waste can be used as raw material and become a source of employment for our people.

Our collective actions will surely make a difference. This is why in partnership with our Key Strategic Partners- The Public Service Transformation Department, the National Environment Management Authority, the Ministry of Environment and Mineral Resources, the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation,other key Ministries, the Local Authorities in Kenya, the Provincial Administration, A Better World, Akiba Uhaki Foundation and other Partners, we are moving deliberately in sensitizing and mobilizing Kenyans to work towards A Clean Kenya where waste is separated at source.

And this is why we are inviting Kenyans to join with us in The Clean Kenya Campaign and be a Member of Kimisho Sacco Society Ltd

Welcome.

Odhiambo T Oketch,
Team Leader & Executive Director,
KCDN, KSSL, KICL & TCKC,
Tel; 0724 365 557,
Email; komarockswatch@yahoo.com, kimishodevelopment@gmail.com
Website; www.kcdnkenya.org.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Broken Dreams from our Fathers



This presentation was to take place in SA on the 16th April 2013 but the Conference has been cancelled to a later date. But I think I ought to go on and share my thoughts;
The Broken Dreams from our Fathers
Citizens Rights to Basic Needs; a Presentation to the Conference of Mayors and Municipal Managers in Africa at the Premier Hotel, Kempton Park, Johannesburg SA on the 16th April 2013 by Odhiambo T Oketch
Your Worship the Mayors of Africa,
The Town Clerks of Africa present,
All the Executive Officers present,
The Intelligent Africa Group,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Africa is largely celebrating her Silver Jubilee- 50 Years since most of Africa became Independent Sovereign States. We had a dream. Our Fathers had a dream and in that dream they dreamt of One United Africa sovereign, developed enough to be in a position to give aid to other Nations of the World.
For in Africa we were rich in minerals and the land was fertile, the forests were thick and the rains never failed.
It is my great pleasure to join with you today in this conference as we seek to ignite that dream that our Fathers had in us. You are the drivers and the engine of development in Africa and you hold the keys; you can either make it or break it for Africa.
You can choose to have your own Dreams for Africa.
I have been invited to come and share my thoughts about the Citizens Rights to Basic Needs and a few things come to mind immediately;
1.    Clean neighbourhoods and environment
2.     Adequate and clean supply of water
3.    Affordable shelter and housing
4.    Safe, secure and timely transport
5.    Quality and affordable food
6.    Quality and Universal Health Care
7.    Efficient communication
8.    Fuel and lighting (Energy)
9.    Access to Quality Education
10.  Safety and Security
These issues are not unique to Africa alone. These are basic issues all Towns and Cities across the World are struggling with. And with the vast mineral deposits we have in Africa, I want to believe that we can be the next big thing in the World. We have gold, diamond, oil and a huge human resource in Africa. And this is what we need to make Africa move to the next level.
It only needs prudent management and a focused service oriented leadership. The Fathers of our continent, Nelson Mandela, Kwame Nkrumah, Leopold Sedar Senghor, Julius Nyerere, Seretse Karma, Ahmed Sekou Toure, Ahmed Ben Bella, Amilcar Cabral, Patrice Lumumba and Jomo Kenyatta to name a few, had a dream for the continent. They envisioned a continent that was united, prosperous, highly developed and peaceful, one that was ahead if not an equal partaker in world business with the rest of the world, a continent with capacity to give aid to other continents!       
In 1963, the Organization of African Unity was formed to advance cooperation and solidarity between newly independent African countries and fight against colonialism. In an attempt to revamp the organization, and move away from it being seen as an alliance of African dictators, it was re-named in July 2002 as the African Union.
At Independence the clarion call was service delivery at the most basic level of needs- fight against poverty, ignorance, disease. We have gone a full 50 years into our Independence as Sovereign African States and the dreams from our Fathers have largely been broken. We are now living in abject poverty with begging bowls to boot. We have not fought against ignorance and disease is still rampant across Africa.
We have also developed some new ways of living- tribalism, Nepotism, Corruption, Greed, Impunity and all the kind of vices that will never move Africa forward. And time is ticking and asking for a new crop of African Leaders, men and women brave enough to have new Dreams. Dreams of a new Africa- safe, secure, happy and fulfilled.
In a famous speech given in 1960, Kwame Nkrumah had this to say about the African Dream:
"We have seen, in the example of the United States how the dynamic elements within society understood the need for unity and fought their bitter civil war to maintain the political union that was threatened by the reactionary forces. We have also seen, in the example of the Soviet Union, how the forging of continental unity along with the retention of national sovereignty by the federal states, has achieved a dynamism that has lifted a most backward society into a most powerful unit within a remarkably short space of time. From the examples before us, in Europe and the United States of America, it is therefore patent that we in Africa have the resources, present and potential, for creating the kind of society that we are anxious to build. It is calculated that by the end of this century the population of Africa will probably exceed five hundred million. Our continent gives us the second largest land stretch in the world. The natural wealth of Africa is estimated to be greater than that of almost any other continent in the world. To draw the most from our existing and potential means for the achievement of abundance and a fine social order, we need to unify our efforts, our resources, our skills and intentions”
This was the birth of the African Dream that would have driven us to prosperity, to complete realization and achievements of Basic Needs. To date, Africa is still struggling to keep water flowing in our taps. In Nairobi, the Capital City of Kenya, many households do not have running water from the taps and this has made the cost of water provision to be way above the reach of many.
We are still unable to offer our people affordable shelter and housing, and this has led to the emergence of several informal settlements where law and order in terms of urban planning is poor, yet, the Local Authorities collect their daily cess from the people. It is my firm conviction that even in the informal settlements, we can plan for basis human needs such as roads, water, health facilities, electricity and schools. It only needs order, clear and firm conviction and maintenance of the same.
Our roads are clogged with human and motor traffic that drains the human resource hours on end everyday in Africa. Again, in Nairobi, you will spend 2 hours every morning and another 2 hours every evening to cover a 15 Kilometer stretch that under ordinary circumstances, one would cover in 15 minutes. Again the cost of fuel keeps rising every other Month to the discomfort of both the investors and the ordinary worker. And we are doing nothing to invest in our Roads and in modern Rail Transport. In Kenya, the rail Transport system that was built by the Coolies in 1895 is dead. And this is having a severe ripple effect and strain on our roads and yet, our Mayors and Municipal Managers seem not to know what they should do. It is sad that we are not dreaming for Arica, yet our Fathers had sweet dreams for our Continent!
We are doing nothing to enhance food security in Africa yet we are daily facing the challenges of rural urban migration. Everyday, able bodied young people are flocking to our Towns and Cities in search of greener pastures at a time a rallying call to go back to the land would do Africa proud. We must make a deliberate effort to work for food security in Africa and the best placed persons will be the Political Leaders, the Mayors and Municipal Managers in Africa. You can provide the basic infrastructure that would ensure efficient food distribution across our Towns.
We must feed our working population in our Towns and Cities and proper incentives must be given to the people who will go back to the land and engage in modern agriculture. This comes with subsidies in terms of machinery and fertilizers for the land, fertile and large as they are, are remaining unattended to. And we are all just watching.
A working population needs proper and adequate Health Care System. As Municipal Managers, it is your responsibility to build the Health Centres and Hospitals for our people. You will then need to develop Health Care Systems that offer best services to our people. Many of our Towns and Cities are lacking in basic infrastructure and little efforts are being put in place to address this. It is worrying that many of our Cities and Towns do not have clean and secure Maternity Hospitals, yet our Mothers and Sisters are still very active in building Africa.
Communication in Africa is very expensive. The cost of telephony, internet connectivity and general communication remains high and unreliable in Africa. I remember in Kenya, our President Mwai Kibaki was taken to the Coast of Mombasa at some point in time to launch the Fibre Optic Cables Network that was going to see drastic reduction in the cost of Internet Connectivity as it enhances Connectivity Speed. That was a mirage and it remains a mirage several years down the line.
The cost of fuel in Africa is simply killing the confidence of the investors who are doing business in Africa. In Kenya, we have the Energy Regulatory Commission that has decided to be giving us new fuel prices every month. We cannot build Africa through such ad-hoc management styles. We must have a predictable pattern in the fuel costing that will make the Industrial Investors have confidence in building their plants in Africa. It then behooves the Mayors and the Municipal Managers in Africa to be the agents that seek for this consistency in order to attract more investors. With more investors, you are sure of keeping in check the rate of unemployment. But with haphazard fuel cost planning, we will be in for some very rude developments that keep Africa remaining the Dark Continent.
Education is all. President Nelson Mandela once said that the best gift you can give to a child is Education. And how are we best placed to advance this? At the City of Nairobi, the Council has several schools and a complete Education Department to help manage the same. The Council Schools have been doing well despite the presence of Academies where children from the affluent go to. But as Municipal Managers, how best do you want to be remembered by our people. Great efforts must be placed in tapping quality human resource to manage and give instructions in these Municipal Schools. And you must mobilize for resources to enable you pay for this human resource. A great deal of parents in our Metropolis cannot afford to take their children to the Academies and other high cost schools. It is hence incumbent upon us to put in place structures that will enhance and develop the quality of instructions in these schools, and to make them compete at par with the rest.
You must make Africa safe and secure. Investors will only come in their droves to safe and secure neighbourhoods.
Last but not least is Clean Neighbourhoods. Africa has been labeled a Dark Continent and we have made her a Dirty Continent. Dark and Dirty. Yet, waste and waste management is the next frontier in human development. Waste presents us with immense opportunities in terms of Employment Creation. Many of our Towns and Cities are engaged in shifting waste from one point to another, at a time we should be taking advantage of the volumes of waste we generate. Garbage and waste is seriously competing for space with our roads and public utilities.


Waste and Garbage Management is becoming a big issue and according to projections from the World Bank in their last report, the Municipal Solid Waste generated by the Municipalities across the World will hit 2.2 Billion Tonnes by 2025 and this will cost the World some $375 Billion annually to manage. Africa cannot afford this. But we can do something to mitigate this by turning the waste problem into an opportunity. We can;
  1. Register all waste handling groups across our Cities
  2. Train the same groups on proper waste management with particular emphasis to specialization on different waste streams
  3. Delineate clear waste streams for each group
  4. Create holding grounds for the waste handlers as they sort and transport each waste stream to the end user
  5. Create a clear data bank for all waste users and convertors to enable the waste handlers know where to take their various forms of waste
  6. Create a clear payment structure for each waste stream and make those payments be on real time.
  7. And then institute the process of Separation of Waste at Source as a compulsory undertaking by all.
Africa must rise up and join in the Waste Revolution.
We may also look at the Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and see what he says about Basic Needs. Maslow identifies 5 levels of needs and classifies them in the following manner;
1.      Biological and Physiological needs - air, food, drink, shelter, warmth, sex, sleep, etc.
2.      Safety needs - protection from elements, security, order, law, limits, stability, etc.
3.      Belongingness and Love needs - work group, family, affection, relationships, etc.
4.      Esteem needs - self-esteem, achievement, mastery, independence, status, dominance, prestige, managerial responsibility, etc.
5.      Self-Actualization needs - realizing personal potential, self-fulfillment, seeking personal growth and peak experiences.
For purposes of this Conference, we will only look at the 2 lower Basic Needs and look at how best we can be agents that can help in their fulfillments.
As Mayors and Municipal Managers, you have a huge responsibility to ensure that your Towns and Cities are well rated in terms of Service Delivery. When you are elected or appointed into office, a huge responsibility is placed on your shoulders. It will really matter how you carry this yoke, for the results shall be seen.
It is our time to turn Africa around. We can choose to develop Africa or destroy her as has been done by many before us. We have unnecessary infightings in Africa to the detriment of development. The DRC Congo has been bleeding. The Somalia has been bleeding and in Kenya, we had an ugly experience in 2007. Rwanda had a similar episode. Uganda went the same route. Nigeria, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt have gone through some tumultuous periods, yet, these are largely issues that dialogue and leadership can solve.
We have enough wealth which when prudently managed can turn Africa around. And you are the leaders upon which much hope is bestowed. Our wealth is enough for all of us, but not enough for our greed.
We have the human capital that is equal or even better compared to the brains driving the first world, yet, we are sitting on our laurels waiting for Manna to once again fall from the Heavens. We went to the same schools and even did better. But of what value is going to school if you cannot replicate your academic process into reality.
You must be the selfless leaders upon which Africa must have new Dreams. You must fight tribalism, nepotism, corruption, greed and impunity and set the tempo upon which Africa shall rise. And Africa must rise during our time, not any other time.
The time is now and you are the agents who must make Africa rise from being a Dark and Dirty Continent to being the next frontier in Human Civilization.
The time is now and you are the agents who must provide clean and available water to the people of the African metropolis.
The time is now and you are the agents that must provide secure and affordable housing to our people in Africa.
The time is now and you are the agents who must decongests our roads and make road traffic easy and efficient in Africa.
The time is now and you are the agents who must make food available and affordable to all our working populations in our Towns and Cities.
The time is now and you are the agents who must ensure that Africa has affordable Health Care Services.
The time is now and you are the agents who must ensure that communication and internet connectivity becomes efficient, faster and cheaper in Africa.
The time is now and you are the agents who must manage the cost of fuel in Africa.
The time is now and you are the agents who must make Africa have quality and affordable education across the whole continent.
The time is now and you are the agents who must make Africa safe and secure for major investment opportunities.
And the time is now and you are the agents who must make Africa Clean.     
Let us join hands and work for a Clean Kenya, a Clean Africa and a Better World.           God bless you, God bless Africa. 

Odhiambo T Oketch is the Executive Director at The Clean Africa Campaign- TCAC      
Email Contact; oto@kcdnkenya.org,
Tel; +254 724 365 557                                                 http://kcdnkomarockswatch.blogspot.com

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