Nattydread
Elder Lister
In 2015, DW News did a documentary where they followed the lives of ordinary citizens doing business on Kangemi bridge for a year. It was a painful documentary to watch and I did a post on it then.
My friend Victor Milito Omosh has alerted me to another documentary done by DW News in 2020 where they revisited the same people featured in the story.
I have watched the story with incredible pain. All those people who were featured then were worse off in 2020 than in 2015.
One of the saddest part is on a guy who graduated in 2015 with a degree in journalism. When he was interviewed then, he had a lot of hopes of getting a job and leaving the tough slum life in Kangemi.
When DW News traced him in 2020, he was still jobless and had moved to his rural home in Western Kenya to engage in small scale farming. He was the first to graduate in a family of 11 kids. His family had invested so much in his education even selling a cow to finance his studies.
It is unbearable to see such a young life wasting this way. To see such a huge investment count for nothing is heart wrenching. To witness so much hope and many aspirations crushed that brutally is beyond painful.
When DW News revisited the bridge in 2020, more micro-enterprises had since set up shop in the crowded space. To make matters worse the bridge was about to be demolished to make way for the James Gichuru Rd-Rironi highway under construction.
In June 2015, the country's debt stood at KShs 2.8 Trillion. By June 2020, the debt had risen to a whopping KShs 6.7 Trillion. Yet during this period, the lives of most Kenyans had gotten worse.
This demonstrates the foolishness of those who keep yapping about Jubilee's infrastructure. What is the value of the infrastructure if it does not improve the lives of the people? Why have we borrowed so much yet there is little impact if any on our lives?
My friend Victor Milito Omosh has alerted me to another documentary done by DW News in 2020 where they revisited the same people featured in the story.
I have watched the story with incredible pain. All those people who were featured then were worse off in 2020 than in 2015.
One of the saddest part is on a guy who graduated in 2015 with a degree in journalism. When he was interviewed then, he had a lot of hopes of getting a job and leaving the tough slum life in Kangemi.
When DW News traced him in 2020, he was still jobless and had moved to his rural home in Western Kenya to engage in small scale farming. He was the first to graduate in a family of 11 kids. His family had invested so much in his education even selling a cow to finance his studies.
It is unbearable to see such a young life wasting this way. To see such a huge investment count for nothing is heart wrenching. To witness so much hope and many aspirations crushed that brutally is beyond painful.
When DW News revisited the bridge in 2020, more micro-enterprises had since set up shop in the crowded space. To make matters worse the bridge was about to be demolished to make way for the James Gichuru Rd-Rironi highway under construction.
In June 2015, the country's debt stood at KShs 2.8 Trillion. By June 2020, the debt had risen to a whopping KShs 6.7 Trillion. Yet during this period, the lives of most Kenyans had gotten worse.
This demonstrates the foolishness of those who keep yapping about Jubilee's infrastructure. What is the value of the infrastructure if it does not improve the lives of the people? Why have we borrowed so much yet there is little impact if any on our lives?