In Kibera, Kenya's largest slum, at least 1,000 women and children
waited outside in the hot sun all day for the Red Cross to distribute
desperately needed food.
"I am very hungry," cried one woman. "I haven't eaten for three days."
Those
in Kibera represent a growing humanitarian crisis in Kenya. The Red
Cross estimates at least 100,000 people have been displaced since
violence broke out after the disputed re-election of President Mwai
Kibaki last Sunday.
The United Nation's World Food Programme issued a statement
today that it would supply food to the Northern Rift Valley of Kenya,
where most of the displaced people are, as well as other conflict
regions in Kenya.
"WFP is working in cooperation with the Red Cross, U.N.
agencies and the government to provide food assistance to the displaced
and other victims of violence as soon as possible," the statement read.
Food and fuel supplies are dwindling all over Kenya as well,
leaving the poorest of Kenya's poor, such as those in Kibera, with
nothing.
"There's been a lot of looting," said Kibera resident Abdul
Raza Kiongo. "Most of the shops are closed down, and we find that now
the price of the items has really risen." He added that milk and bread
cost nearly twice as much as before the violence.
The Kenyan Red Cross said it is doing everything it can to help
people in need. Kibera is especially worrisome, said Abdishakir
Othowai, the special projects manager of the Kenyan Red Cross Society.
"The slums of Kibera are the poorest of the poor," said Othowai. "We are thinking over 90 percent of them may need assistance."
But politics continued to keep the people in Kibera from receiving food.
An opposition rally was being set up just a few feet from the
Red Cross truck. When Othowai and other Red Cross officials arrived to
distribute the food, they were not happy with the nearby rally. "We
cannot have a Red Cross food distribution right next to a political
rally," said Othowai. "The Red Cross does not get involved with
politics."