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Who is Behind Endless Gikomba Fires?

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Fire burns property at Gikomba Market Market in Nairobi on Thursday, June 25, 2020. The cause of the inferno could not be immediately established. [PHOTO/ DENNIS ONSONGO]
Fire burns property at Gikomba Market Market in Nairobi on Thursday, June 25, 2020. The cause of the inferno could not be immediately established. [PHOTO/ DENNIS ONSONGO]

Nairobi’s Gikomba is by all accounts one of East Africa’s largest open-air markets. There, you will find everything from clothes and shoes to tools and cutlery. It provides a living for countless traders and their families.

The market, however, exists under the cloud of a constant threat. In the past six years, at least fifteen f***s have been reported at Gikomba.

In October and November 2021, at least three f***s were reported – on October 19, November 8 and November 26. News of a f**e at Gikomba has become so common that it’s no longer considered headline news.

With each f**e, traders literally watch the source of their livelihoods go up in smoke. In August, over 900 traders from the market sued the Nairobi County Government over the endless blazes – highlighting the devastating effect of the f***s on their ability to earn a living.

They want Ksh20 billion as compensation for all the f***s. Most of the f***s have been pegged as a***n a*****s, and after each i******t police announce that investigations will be undertaken – a promise that usually ends at that.

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President Uhuru Kenyatta in 2017 ordered a p***e to get to the bottom of the f***s, but not much has been forthcoming on that front.

Depending on who you ask, those to blame for the f***s are either powerful, connected land-grabbers eyeing parcels in the expansive, busy area, traders settling business beefs or tenants in houses owned by the county government.

At the end of the day, however, the problem has gone on unchecked for far too long.

Interior Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho in August stated that a contractor would install cameras at the market. The government’s plans, however, are clearer in budget statements tabled by Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yattani.

The State wants to install security cameras at the market and establish a call centre as a means of undertaking real time surveillance and identifying potential culprits. A borehole is also to be drilled at Gikomba and a 100,000-litre steel tank installed to ensure access to water during emergencies.

“In the past decade, the Gikomba market has reported cases of f**e o*******s that have constantly been linked to a***n a*****s as opposed to natural occurrences,” Yattani notes in the 2022 Budget Policy Statement (BPS).

But as the traders wait for the cameras, they’ll be wondering why exactly its proving so challenging to identify those behind the never-ending f***s.

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