Saturday, January 28, 2012

Northern Kenyans are fighting for water resources due to the extensive damming of rivers in upstream Ethiopia


 Since the extensive damming the Omo river in Ethiopia  ethnic clashes have  increased in northern Kenya. In the recent clash it took the life of  18 people in the remote north Kenyan region of Moyale, residents said on Friday, January 27, 2012.
“We have collected 18 dead bodies from the scene of the clashes,” said Wario Godana, a resident of Helu village, where fighting between men armed with automatic rifles and machetes have forced hundreds to flee.
Fierce fighting between the Gabra and Borana ethnic groups broke out late Thursday in areas close to Kenya's border with Ethiopia due to mainly luck of enough water and resources.
Clashes between rival cattle herding pastoralists in the region are common, with herders often carrying guns to protect their animals, but the recent fighting has been unusually heavy.
“Attackers have burnt down a school, people are fleeing,” said Amina Abdi, in a village outside Moyale.
Regional government official Isaiah Nakoru said he could confirm only five people had been killed.
“Five are dead, but the search is on going for the missing, among the dead is local chief,” said Nakoru.
“Security officers are combing the area for more bodies and to end the fighting.”
Northern Kenya was hard hit last year by one of the worst droughts for decades, with many herders losing the livestock on which they depend on the free flow of the Ethiopian waters to the region.

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