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Families living in colonial villages 60 years after independence

 Colonial administrators talking Kenyans into colonial villages during the Mau Mau uprising in the 1950s. [File, Standard]

Hundreds of families are still stuck in colonial villages as Kenya marks the 60th Madaraka Day celebrations.

These families have lived in deplorable conditions in the villages for decades. They have been hoping the government would relocate them or survey land and issue them with title deeds.

The problem of colonial villages emerged in the early 1950s when the British colonial government displaced locals living in the highly fertile land where tea, coffee and dairy farming was at its best due to favourable climatic conditions.

Displaced families were settled in villages surrounded by home guards and run by chiefs who had been deployed by the British settlers.

These villages have now become congested as thousands of families have continued to multiply over the years. During the colonial era, the British established at least 840 colonial villages. Nyeri county had the highest number of these villages, at 220.

Over the years, most of the villages became towns, and as of 2013, when the devolution set in, 116 colonial villages with 6,583 households were still in existence.

Increasing pressure

In Nyeri county, at least 983 acres are occupied by colonial villages. The process of demarcation has been slow and painful as families grapple with increasing pressure for more space.

Grace Wanjiru is among the thousands who lived in a colonial village. In 1951, she got married. But barely three years into her marriage, her life was turned upside down; her husband, who was working in Nairobi, away from his home in Kiambu, was detained as the colonial government declared a state of emergency in Kenya. This was during the Mau Mau War for independence.

 Mary Waheto a resident of Micha Colonial Village at Gatitu in Nyeri displays her allotment letter. [Kibata Kihu, Standard]

Wanjiru found herself and her son at the mercy of ruthless home guards alongside hundreds of women in her village.

"Now the women were left to fend for themselves as their husbands worked on farms owned by the wealthy. That is how we were left behind. We could not tell if our husbands would come back or not. And as a matter of fact, some men never returned," Wanjiru said.

She was one of the lucky few women whose husbands returned. But before they reunited, Wanjiru experienced unimaginable hardship in raising their son by herself.

Life became a struggle for Wanjiru and the other women as they were forced into hard labour for days with no pay and had little or no food to eat.

Six decades after independence, thousands of families are still living in dehumanising colonial villages. They have been demanding that the villages be surveyed so they can be issued with title deeds or be resettled in alternative land but their efforts have not been successful.

Those living in the villages have little to smile about as they do not own the small pieces of land they live in.

At Kirichu Colonial Village in Nyeri County, Muhia Githenji explained that he inherited his home from his parents, and they had lived all their lives in the small space as a family.

"The trouble with living in a colonial village is we cannot build a permanent house because we have no ownership documents."

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