How PS Kimotho Is Rewriting Northern Kenya’s Future
There is a dangerous habit this country has developed over the years. Whenever Northern Kenya appears in national conversation, it is usually during a crisis. A drought. A famine warning. Livestock deaths. Malnourished children on television screens. Emergency food distribution. Then the cycle repeats itself all over again the following year. Eventually, many Kenyans unconsciously accepted drought in the north as if it were permanent destiny rather than a policy failure. That may be the greatest injustice Northern Kenya has suffered. Not simply neglect, but the normalization of its suffering. Somehow, the nation became comfortable discussing Turkana, Marsabit, North Horr, Loima, or Kakuma almost exclusively through the language of emergency. Relief food became policy. Water trucking became governance. Survival became development. However, something more serious has quietly been taking shape beneath the noise of politics and daily headlines. It has not attracted dramatic national ...