Nairobi city county loses billions to cartels: study

The Mukuru Kayaba slum in Nairobi's South B neighbourhood. The city's slum economy is run by cartels, new research has revealed. PHOTO|NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • Cartels, the study shows, run the economy of most of the city’s slums, with dwellers of Mukuru Kwa Njenga, Mukuru Kwa Ruben and Viwandani paying over Sh7 billion cartels.
  • People in informal settlements also pay a fortune for basic services such as food and housing, the research by the University of Nairobi, Strathmore University, Akiba Mashinani Trust and Katiba Institute shows.

Nairobi. Nairobi City County loses billions of shillings to cartels in the informal settlements every year, a new study has revealed.

Cartels, the study shows, run the economy of most of the city’s slums, with dwellers of Mukuru Kwa Njenga, Mukuru Kwa Ruben and Viwandani paying over Sh7 billion cartels.

People in informal settlements also pay a fortune for basic services such as food and housing, the research by the University of Nairobi, Strathmore University, Akiba Mashinani Trust and Katiba Institute shows.

While the cost is high, the study shows, the services Kenyans in slums get are inferior to those provided in Nairobi’s formal estates.

“Cartels often control these slums, charging extortionate rates for access to essential services and threatening residents with violent evictions and forced demolitions,” the research report reads in part.

“For instance, a family in the slum pays for water at 172 percent more compared with a family living in a formal estate.”

According to the researchers, the 492,000 people who live in Mukuru Kwa Njenga, Mukuru Kwa Ruben and Viwandani live at the mercy of cartels that control access to basic services such as water, food, housing and electricity

The research conducted between 2015 and 2016 also reveals that at least two million Nairobi residents live in informal settlements, with such slums continuing to grow every day at a staggering rate. It further shows that as the informal settlements continue to grow, the challenges faced by dwellers, including urban poverty, keep on growing.

The study was conducted in Mukuru slums in Nairobi, covering an area of about 600 acres and Kiandutu slum in Kiambu County, which is 110 acres in size. Reacting to the study’s report, Nairobi Governor Evans Kidero said the city county was in the process of declaring informal settlements in the city special planning areas. (NMG)