Reject Issue 89: Celebrating Milestones in Peace Initiative Kenya Project

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ISSUE 089, September 1-16, 2013

Unfiltered, uninhibited…just the gruesome truth

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September 1-16, 2013

ISSUE 089

Celebrating milestones in Peace Initiative Kenya Project

A bimonthly newspaper by the Media Diversity Centre, a project of African Woman and Child Feature Service

Peace in the community begins with peace at home

…even as cases of Gender Based Violence continue to dominate headlines, at the community level, peace platforms in various informal settlements are ensuring that perpetrators face the full force of the law, writes JOYCE CHIMBI She does not know exactly what has been done to her and why, but she knows that something bad has happened and that someone is helping her dealing with it. People around her converse in low tones, their eyes glued to her. A woman, who is not her mother, is holding her hand trying to comfort her through this painful experience. Peris Awinja* was living with her parents but one day her mother left after a quarrelling with her father, leaving her behind. While many children consider the spaces they call home safe and

secure, an increasing number of children, particularly in Kenya’s informal settlements are most unsafe at home. And this is the fate of 13 year old Awinja who recently delivered a baby out of an incestuous relationship. “Before her case was taken seriously, Awinja had been living with her father alone, a man who had turned her into a wife,” says the Community Health Worker who came to her rescue amidst the glares of the media. In the shanty that she calls home, the young girl had to be covered with a lesso upon being rescued. “She and her father were both na-

ked. It was a very disturbing scene,” says the Community Health Worker. As incidences of child abuse continue to be reported, the journey towards accessing justice for the children is often very difficult. Community Health Workers are particularly concerned over the many loopholes that have made prosecuting such cases very difficult. Some of the hurdles include the requirement that one produces a birth certificate during the legal proceedings. “Here is a father who has abused a Continued on page 4

Peace platform members in a meeting in Nairobi to address challenges emerging in informal settlements in regards to GBV and peace. Below: Kariobangi peace platform members during a meeting where they shared the successes and challenges they faced in the last one year. Pictures: Courtesy FIDA

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