How a Slum Upgrade Project is Restoring Dignity and Hope for 50,000 Nyeri Residents

Nyeri: Ruth Wachira comfortably turns on a water tap outside her modest wooden house in Chorong'i, a colonial village in Nyeri town. For someone who had depended on the goodwill of her neighbors to access the precious commodity, it would have been dif...

Nyeri: Ruth Wachira comfortably turns on a water tap outside her modest wooden house in Chorong’i, a colonial village in Nyeri town. For someone who had depended on the goodwill of her neighbors to access the precious commodity, it would have been difficult to convince the grandmother of four that she would one day enjoy the simple joys of having piped water in her compound. ‘Before my home got connected to piped water, I used to depend on my neighbors,’ she says. Ruth is one of the 26 direct beneficiaries of Kenya Informal Settlements Improvement Program (KISIP) in Chorong’i village. The program, which is in its second phase, is focused on promoting dignified living for inhabitants of informal settlements by addressing systemic challenges like the lack of secure land tenure, inadequate infrastructure, and limited socio-economic opportunities.

According to Kenya News Agency, besides access to amenities such as piped water, beneficiaries like Ruth are enjoying murram roads linking the villages to the main road. The biggest upgrade yet is her promotion from being a squatter to holding the title deed for the 40‚¬Å¡¬€¦¡¬€š¬¦¡¬€š¬…¡¬‚¬¦¡¬80 parcel of land she has been residing on for nearly 20 years. To empower herself, Ruth recently acquired a dairy goat, which provides milk for her family, complementing the farm produce she harvests from her kitchen garden.

‘Life as a squatter comes with numerous insecurities and challenges. For one, you cannot make any sound investment or development decision due to lack of security of land tenure. But now, that title deed has given me some sense of belonging. I can walk into a bank or microfinance and take up a loan to embark on a development project,’ she says.

Ruth is not alone. A few kilometers away in Kiamwathi, another colonial village in Nyeri Town, Stephen Maathai, a beneficiary of KISIP, narrates how the upgrade program has changed the village’s outlook and its inhabitants. For Maathai, the expansion and murraming of roads have made his village more accessible, especially during the rainy season. Additionally, he notes that since the installation of the high-mast security light, popularly known as “mulika mwizi,” the crime rate in the village has significantly reduced.

‘The mulika mwizi has really improved our security, especially at night. Those who work in town do not have to worry about their security at night when they return home from work because the place is well lit. Also, we no longer hear of cases of break-ins or theft of poultry, which were very common in this area before,’ says Maathai.

Maathai notes that improved lighting has increased the operating hours for businesses in the village, with more businesses opening up. ‘The grocery shops now operate till late at night, and we have new ones coming up thanks to the security lights,’ he says.

Further away in Mweiga, where the county government has been constructing a series of storm drainage systems to complement the road network, residents cannot hide their joy. The area is prone to flooding due to the gradient of the terrain, and residents say that with drainage trenches, they are no longer worried about flooding during the rainy season. ‘First, gaining access to this area during emergencies was an uphill task, but through the KISIP project, our road network has improved significantly. They have also constructed drainage trenches, so we are no longer worried about rainwater flooding our houses like it previously used to happen whenever there was a heavy downpour,’ said Lucy Muthoni, who resides in Mweiga.

Beatrice Koech, the County Project Coordinator, says that in Nyeri County, the upgrade program will dignify the lives of more than 50,000 inhabitants of five colonial villages. She notes that once complete, the impact will be felt by communities neighboring the five villages. ‘For instance, the roads that we are constructing will serve the people inside and outside these settlements, so the benefits go beyond the five colonial villages,’ she says.

Koech also notes that the program is building on the achievements of the first phase, which mostly addressed systemic challenges in informal settlements, such as lack of secure land tenure. She says that the focus of the second phase will be to improve the livelihoods of the beneficiaries by addressing issues such as inadequate infrastructure and eliminating factors that limit them from accessing socio-economic opportunities.

According to Nyeri County Executive Committee Member in charge of Lands and Physical Planning, Ndirangu Gachunia, the project is being undertaken at a cost of Sh 500 million. Ndirangu placed the completion rate of the works at between 48-50 percent in all five sites. ‘Under KISIP II, we are working in five colonial villages of Kiamwathi, Chorong’i Kiawara in Nyeri town, Mweiga in Kieni, and Ihwagi in Mathira East. Most of the small works, like the installation of high-mast security lights, have already been finalized. What is remaining is the heavy works, including excavation work and tarmacking of roads to improve access to the settlements,’ said Gachunia during a site visit to one of the projects.

Beyond the physical infrastructure, Gachunia says the benefiting villages will also get a slum prevention strategy, which will address the underlying factors that make people move into informal settlements. Overall, the program is also taking shape in 40 other counties with funding of Sh21 billion from the World Bank’s Internal Development Association (IDA), Agence Fran§aise de Development (AFD), the European Union (EU), and the national government. According to the KISIP II website, the program is expected to have improved over 81 informal settlements in the country by its lapse in 2028.

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