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Kenya: Slum Dwellers Evicted for China-Built Nairobi Expressway

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Nairobi — Rights groups in Kenya are pushing authorities to resettle tens of thousands of squatters evicted just ahead of the holidays to make way for a Chinese-backed expressway.

Kenyan Lucy Wangare, in her forties, cleans a makeshift tent that has provided her family flimsy shelter since October, when Nairobi city authorities evicted them from their home of almost two decades.

She, her husband, and her sister spent the holiday season living in the tent, enduring cold and wet nights.

City authorities evicted more than 40,000 squatters like Wangare from the Mukuru Kwa Njenga slum and razed their homes to make way for construction of the Nairobi Expressway.

What is left of the Mukuru slum looks like a wasteland, with scores of makeshift tents forming a small island.

Authorities gave them just days’ notice to vacate their homes, says Wangare.

“If you look at where I sleep, you’d think I wasn’t a Kenyan citizen, you’d think I was a refugee, said Wangare.

They used to have property and houses but, right now, they’ve been left destitute. She blames Kenya’s government.

The half a billion dollars elevated expressway aims to ease Nairobi’s notorious traffic by connecting the main international airport to the city center and wealthy suburbs.

The Chinese state-owned China Road and Bridge Corporation is building and financing the expressway, which should be working in 2022, and will collect the tolls for nearly three decades.