"I was employed as an entertainer because I had
attended school," he told IRIN. "I worked for seven years at the
hotel until January when the management sent me home. Now I am struggling to
support my three children."
Like Letresh, John Lekollol had worked as a waiter for
a decade at another hotel in the game reserve until he too was sent home
because the hotel could not afford to keep its staff on the payroll after
business slackened.
"We have resorted to begging," he told IRIN.
"I have lost my status. The government must assist us to feed our children
[and] pay fees for those in college. My two daughters at teachers’ college will
drop out if the hotel fails to call me back soon."
Fabian Lolosoli was a member of the Kalama Community
Wildlife Conservation group in Samburu - a project started up to help families
that had lost livestock to drought and bandits.
"The project is now threatened as tourism, their
main source of income, has collapsed," he said. "We had managed to
assist most members to start income-generating activities after raising money
from tourists who visited our camps [but] we have not received any visitors
since early January."
Women traders who used to sell crafts have also been
hit hard, said Rebecca Lolosoli of Umoja Women’s Group at Archers Post,
Samburu. "The political crisis and violence are taking place very far from
here, but we are suffering very much.
"This crisis is a major challenge to our plans to
empower women by giving them a source of income and providing an alternative
source of income for most of them who only know livestock and nothing
else," she added.
Circuit without tourists
Northeastern Kenya used to have a popular tourist circuit that took visitors to
Isiolo, Laikipia and Samburu.
Over time, hundreds of families that initially depended
on livestock as a source of income shifted to rely on tourism - a less risky
venture in a region that suffers frequent drought.
Isiolo county council, for example, also relied heavily
on tourism as a source of revenue. Now, said Councillor Galma Ali, it is
struggling and has had to suspend some programmes such as bursary allocations
to poor students and rubbish collection.
"The politicians must end this problem,"
Mohamed Galgalo, who used to sell goat meat that was mainly consumed by tour
drivers, told IRIN.
Galgalo was referring to the leaders of ruling Party of
National Unity and the opposition Orange Democratic Movement, who agreed a
month ago to create a coalition government but have yet to agree on its
composition.
After two months of post-election violence in which at
least 1,500 people died and hundreds of thousands were displaced, the coalition
agreement was seen as the best chance to pacify the country.
This week the talks were suspended, prompting the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs to warn that the 8 April
suspension could slow or halt progress made in returning thousands of internally
displaced persons to their homes.
Tension has since risen again in some parts of the
country, spurring calls from the international community and aid agencies for Kenya's
President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga to reach a consensus quickly
and implement the coalition accord.
"The politicians must resolve the current
stalemate and also address the problem of high food prices, which have forced
many families to go without food," said Halima Wako, who used to sell
fruit at the Isiolo road barrier.
"The government must also give us food and not
close the schools."