This sad disaster in Huruma brought to the fore the fact that Kenya has been ruled by incompetent leaders since the country attained its independence. Every president from Jomo and on to Uhuru has found it incredibly easy to appeal to and exploit the ignorance of the Kenyan citizen.
So, Uhuru struts into the slums of Huruma accompanied by his flunkies and a few minutes later ... Abracadabra....they have a villain ...and it's....oh...well...cos of corruption....eh...in the county government of...the ...opposition led by....Kidero, who is in the party...Hope you get my drift.
I spent part of my early years in that city and can't recall experiencing these perennial floods. Someone I know who has lived there since the colonial days concurs that floodings in Nairobi were quite rare. And in the colonial city council corruption was at a minimum and there was barely any grabbing of public spaces and land -- least of all in riparian areas. I, too, recall a Nairobi of weekly garbage collection and where maintenance standards were adhered to, including the sewer/drain storms those colonials bequeathed the NCC in '63. But back to the point.
From, say, post-independence Kenya, 1964 onwards, it became a free-for-all. To explain Huruma 2016, one ought to check the archives to figure out who has served as Nairobi Mayor, City Councillor, or administrator during that period. Include also the Moi appointed Nairobi City Commission of the 80s to early 90s. Names like Rubia, Margaret Kenyatta, Ngumba, Gumo, Waweru, etc, reign supreme. And prominent here, too, is one of Nairobi's most prominent land owners and property developers, G. Kirima aka Deputy Mayor.
In this episode I read somewhere that the two brothers who own this building inherited it as part of the estate of their late father who died in 1997.
Not to absolve Kidero of blame, but it's clear that these brothers and their father got access to this land way back -- so who was doling out land titles and licenses literally on a river bed?