Overview
Country, eastern Africa.
Area: 224,961 sq mi (582,646 sq km). Population (2006 est.):
34,059,000. Capital: Nairobi. With a small group of European settlers’
descendants, there are dozens of ethnic groups, including the Kikuyu,
Luhya, Luo, Kamba, Kalenjin, and Maasai. Languages: Swahili, English
(both official), Kikuyu, Luhya, Luo, others. Religions: Christianity
(Roman Catholic, Protestant, other Christians); also traditional
beliefs, Islam. Currency: Kenya shilling. Kenya can be divided into five
regions: the Lake Victoria basin in the southwest; the vast plateau of
eastern Kenya; the 250-mi- (400-km-) long coastal belt along the Indian
Ocean; the highlands of the Mau Escarpment on the western side of the
Great Rift Valley in western Kenya; and the highlands and mountains of
the Aberdare Range on the eastern side of the Rift Valley, including
Mount Kenya. It is noted for such wildlife as lions, leopards,
elephants, buffalo, rhinoceroses, zebras, hippopotamuses, and
crocodiles. About one-tenth of the land is arable, and more than
one-third is used for grazing cattle, goats, and sheep. Agriculture
employs much of the workforce, and tea and coffee are the leading
exports. Kenya is a republic with one legislative house; its head of
state and government is the president. The coastal region was dominated
by Arabs until it was seized by the Portuguese in the 16th century. The
Maasai people held sway in the north and moved into central Kenya in the
18th century, while the Kikuyu expanded from their home region in
south-central Kenya. The interior was explored by European missionaries
in the 19th century. After the British took control, Kenya was
established as a British protectorate (1895) and a crown colony (1920).
The Mau Mau rebellion of the 1950s was directed against European
colonialism. In 1963 the country became fully independent, and a year
later a republican government under Jomo Kenyatta was elected. In 1992
Kenyan President Daniel arap Moi allowed the country’s first multiparty
elections in three decades; however, the government continued to be
marked by corruption and mismanagement. Opposition leader Mwai Kibaki
was elected president in 2002 and pledged to fight corruption, but it
continued to affect the country’s economic and political credibility.
Profile
Official name Jamhuri ya Kenya (Swahili); Republic of Kenya
(English)
Form of government unitary multiparty republic with one legislative
house (National Assembly [2241])
Head of state and government President assisted by the Prime Minister2.
Capital Nairobi
Official languages Swahili; English
Official religion none
Monetary unit Kenyan shilling (K Sh)
Population estimate (2008) 37,954,000
Total area (sq mi) 224,961
Total area (sq km) 582,646
1Includes 14 nonelective seats.
2The post of prime minister was created per two bills approved by the
National Assembly in March 2008.
Main
country in East Africa famed for its scenic landscapes and vast
wildlife preserves. Its Indian Ocean coast provided historically
important ports by which goods from Arabian and Asian traders have
entered the continent for many centuries. Along that coast, which holds
some of the finest beaches in Africa, are predominantly Muslim Swahili
cities such as Mombasa, a historic centre that has contributed much to
the musical and culinary heritage of the country. Inland are populous
highlands famed for both their tea plantations, an economic staple
during the British colonial era, and their variety of animal species,
including lions, elephants, cheetahs, rhinoceroses, and hippopotamuses.
Kenya’s western provinces, marked by lakes and rivers, are forested,
while a small portion of the north is desert and semidesert. The
country’s diverse wildlife and panoramic geography draw large numbers of
European and North American visitors, and tourism is an important
contributor to Kenya’s economy.
The capital of Kenya is Nairobi, a sprawling city that, like many
other African metropolises, is a study in contrasts, with modern
skyscrapers looking out over vast shantytowns in the distance, many
harbouring refugees fleeing civil wars in neighbouring countries. Older
neighbourhoods, some of them prosperous, tend to be ethnically mixed and
well served by utilities and other amenities, while the tents and
hastily assembled shacks that ring the city tend to be organized
tribally and even locally, inasmuch as in some instances whole rural
villages have removed themselves to the more promising city.
With a long history of musical and artistic expression, Kenya enjoys
a rich tradition of oral and written literature, including many fables
that speak to the virtues of determination and perseverance, important
and widely shared values, given the country’s experience during the
struggle for independence. Kikuyu writer Ngugi wa Thiong’o, one of the
country’s best-known authors internationally, addresses these concerns
in his remarks on one folkloric figure:
Hare being small, weak, but full of innovative wit, was our hero. We
identified with him as he struggled against the brutes of prey like
lion, leopard, and hyena. His victories were our victories and we learnt
that the apparently weak can outwit the strong.
Kenya’s many peoples are well known to outsiders, largely because of
the British colonial administration’s openness to study. Anthropologists
and other social scientists have documented for generations the lives of
the Maasai, Luhya, Luo, Kalenjin, and Kikuyu peoples, to name only some
of the groups. Adding to the country’s ethnic diversity are European and
Asian immigrants from many nations. Kenyans proudly embrace their
individual cultures and traditions, yet they are also cognizant of the
importance of national solidarity; a motto of “Harambee” (Swahili:
“Pulling together”) has been stressed by Kenya’s government since
independence.
Land
Bisected horizontally by the Equator and vertically by longitude
38° E, Kenya is bordered to the north by The Sudan and Ethiopia, to the
east by Somalia and the Indian Ocean, to the south by Tanzania, and to
the west by Lake Victoria and Uganda.
Relief
The 38th meridian divides Kenya into two halves of striking
contrast. While the eastern half slopes gently to the coral-backed
seashore, the western portion rises more abruptly through a series of
hills and plateaus to the Eastern Rift Valley, known in Kenya as the
Central Rift. West of the Rift is a westward-sloping plateau, the lowest
part of which is occupied by Lake Victoria. Within this basic framework,
Kenya is divided into the following geographic regions: the Lake
Victoria basin, the Rift Valley and associated highlands, the eastern
plateau forelands, the semiarid and arid areas of the north and south,
and the coast.
The Lake Victoria basin is part of a plateau rising eastward from the
lakeshore to the Rift highlands. The lower part, forming the lake basin
proper, is itself a plateau area lying between 3,000 and 4,000 feet (900
and 1,200 metres) above sea level. The rolling grassland of this plateau
is cut almost in half by the Kano Plain, into which an arm of the lake
known as Winam Gulf (Kavirondo Gulf) extends eastward for 50 miles (80
km). The floor of the Kano Plain merges north and south into highlands
characterized by a number of extinct volcanoes. These include Mount
Elgon, rising to 14,178 feet (4,321 metres) at the Ugandan border on the
extreme north of the basin.
The Rift Valley splits the highland region into two sections: the Mau
Escarpment to the west and the Aberdare Range to the east. The valley
itself is 30 to 80 miles (50 to 130 km) wide, and its floor rises from
about 1,500 feet (450 metres) in the north around Lake Turkana (Lake
Rudolf) to over 7,000 feet (2,100 metres) at Lake Naivasha but then
drops to 2,000 feet (600 metres) at the Tanzanian border in the south.
The floor of the Rift is occupied by a chain of shallow lakes separated
by extinct volcanoes. Lake Naivasha is the largest of these; the others
include Lakes Magadi, Nakuru, Bogoria, and Baringo. West of the valley
the diverse highland area runs from the thick lava block of the Mau
Escarpment–Mount Tinderet complex northward to the Uasin Gishu Plateau.
East of the Rift the Aberdare Range rises to nearly 10,000 feet (3,000
metres). The eastern highlands extend from the Ngong Hills and the
uplands bordering Tanzania northward to the Laikipia Escarpment. Farther
east they are linked by the Nyeri saddle to Mount Kenya, the country’s
highest peak, at 17,058 feet (5,199 metres). The relief of both
highlands is complex and includes plains, deep valleys, and mountains.
Important in the historic and economic development of Kenya, the region
was the focus of European settlement.
The eastern plateau forelands, located just east of the Rift
highlands, constitute a vast plateau of ancient rocks gently sloping to
the coastal plain. They are a region of scattered hills and striking
elevated formations, the most prominent being the hills of Taita,
Kasigau, Machakos, and Kitui. These hills, containing the area of more
favourable climate, are surrounded by regions historically prone to
famine.
The semiarid and arid areas in the north and northeast are part of a
vast region extending from the Ugandan border through Lake Rudolf to the
plateau area between the Ethiopian and Kenyan highlands. (The area from
Lake Magadi southward, though not as arid, has the same
characteristics.) Although tree and grass cover is scanty there, the
areas of true desert are limited to the Chalbi Desert east of Lake
Rudolf. The movement of people and livestock is strictly limited by the
availability of water.
The coastal plain proper, which runs for about 250 miles (400 km)
along the Indian Ocean, is a narrow strip only about 10 miles (16 km)
wide in the south, but in the Tana River lowlands to the north it
broadens to about 100 miles (160 km). Farther northeast it merges into
the lowlands of Somalia. The excellent natural harbours include that of
Mombasa, which is one of the best in East Africa.
Drainage
Kenya’s drainage pattern originated when a large oval dome of rock
arose in the west-central part of the country and created the Central
Rift. This dome produced a primeval watershed from which rivers once
drained eastward to the Indian Ocean and westward to the Congo River
system and the Atlantic Ocean. Still following this ancient pattern are
the Tana and Galana rivers, which rise in the eastern highlands and flow
roughly southeast to the Indian Ocean. West of the Central Rift,
however, the major streams now drain into Lake Victoria. These include
the Nzoia, Yala, Mara, and Nyando rivers. Between the eastern and
western systems, the rifting of the dome’s crust has created a complex
pattern of internal streams that feed the major lakes.
There are no major groundwater basins, and, apart from the Tana
River, most of the rivers in Kenya are short and often disappear during
the dry season. Lake Victoria, with a surface area of 26,828 square
miles (69,484 square km), is the largest lake in Africa, the second
largest freshwater body in the world, and a major reservoir of the Nile
River. Lake Rudolf, some 150 miles (240 km) long and 20 miles (30 km)
wide, is the largest of the country’s Rift Valley lakes. Other lakes are
rather small, and their surface areas fluctuate considerably.
Soils
In the Lake Victoria basin, lava deposits have produced fertile and
sandy loam soils in the plateaus north and south of Winam Bay, while the
volcanic pile of Mount Elgon produces highly fertile volcanic soils well
known for coffee and tea production. The Rift Valley and associated
highlands are composed of fertile dark brown loams developed on younger
volcanic deposits.
The most widespread soils in Kenya, however, are the sandy soils of
the semiarid regions between the coast and the Rift highlands. To the
north of the Rift are vast areas covered by red desert soils, mainly
sandy loams. Kenya’s soils are subject to widespread erosion largely
because of the lack of forest cover; overgrazing and cultivation,
especially in the arid and semiarid regions, also contribute to soil
loss.
Climate
Seasonal climatic changes are controlled by the large-scale pressure
systems of the western Indian Ocean and adjacent landmasses. From
December to March, northeast winds predominate north of the Equator,
while south to southeast winds dominate south of it. These months are
fairly dry, although rain may occur locally. The rainy season extends
from late March to May, with air flowing from the east in both
hemispheres. From June to August there is little precipitation, and
southwest winds prevail north of the Equator as southeast winds prevail
in the south.
In the Lake Victoria basin, annual precipitation varies from 40
inches (1,000 mm) around the lakeshore to more than 70 inches (1,800 mm)
in the higher elevations in the eastern areas. The lakeshore has
excellent agricultural potential because it can expect 20 to 35 inches
(500 to 900 mm) in most years. Daily maximum temperatures range from 80
°F (27 °C) in July to 90 °F (32 °C) in October and February.
In the Rift Valley, average temperatures decrease from about 84 °F
(29 °C) in the north to just over 61 °F (16 °C) around Lakes Nakuru and
Naivasha in the south. The adjacent highlands are generally moderate,
with average temperatures ranging between 56 and 65 °F (13 and 18 °C).
The floor of the Rift Valley is generally dry, while the highland areas
receive more than 30 inches (760 mm) of rain per year. The reliable
precipitation and fertile soils of the Mau Escarpment form the basis for
a thriving agricultural sector.
In the eastern plateau region, annual precipitation in most areas
averages 20 to 30 inches (500 to 760 mm), although agriculture is
hampered by extremely variable precipitation. The semiarid and arid
regions of northern, northeastern, and southern Kenya have high
temperatures but very erratic precipitation. Most places experience
average temperatures of 85 °F (29 °C) or more, while annual
precipitation is only about 10 inches (250 mm) in the north and less
than 20 inches (500 mm) in the south.
In most parts of the coast, average temperatures exceed 80 °F (27 °C)
and relative humidity is high year-round. From the humid coast, where
annual precipitation is between 30 and 50 inches (760 and 1,270 mm),
precipitation decreases westward to about 20 inches (500 mm) per year.
Only on the southern coast is precipitation reliable enough for
prosperous agriculture.
Plant and animal life
In the highlands between elevations of 7,000 and 9,000 feet (2,100
and 2,700 metres), the characteristic landscape consists of patches of
evergreen forest separated by wide expanses of short grass. Where the
forest has survived human encroachment, it includes economically
valuable trees such as cedar (Juniperus procera) and varieties of podo.
Above the forest, a zone of bamboo extends to about 10,000 feet (3,000
metres), beyond which there is mountain moorland bearing tree heaths,
tree groundsel (a foundation timber of the genus Senecio), and giant
lobelia (a widely distributed herbaceous plant). East and west of the
highlands, forests give way to low trees scattered through an even cover
of short grass.
Semidesert regions below 3,000 feet (900 metres) give rise to baobab
trees. In still drier areas of the north, desert scrub occurs, exposing
the bare ground. The vegetation of the coastal region is basically
savanna with patches of residual forests. While the northern coast still
bears remnants of forests, centuries of human occupation have virtually
destroyed them in the south. In an effort to slow the processes of
deforestation and desertification, the Green Belt Movement, an
organization founded in 1977 by environmentalist Wangari Maathai (winner
of the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize), had planted some 30 million trees by the
early 21st century.
Almost one-third of Kenya, particularly the western regions and the
coastal belt, is infested with tsetse flies and mosquitoes, which are
responsible for the spread of, respectively, sleeping sickness
(trypanosomiasis) and malaria.
Kenya’s abundant wildlife population lives mostly outside the
country’s numerous national parks and game reserves. Baboons and zebras
can be found, for instance, along the Nairobi-Nakuru highway, close to
human settlements and urban centres. This has created conflict between
people and animals that sometimes has been resolved by relocating
animals to areas where the human population is less dense. In an effort
to ameliorate the problem, a “parks beyond parks” program was introduced
in the mid-1990s by the Kenya Wildlife Service. The plan has attempted
to draw local communities into the management and distribution of the
income derived from wild animals in the vicinity, thus making people
more tolerant of the animals’ presence. The program has been somewhat
successful, and, with community involvement, incidents of poaching in
the national parks and game reserves have declined.
There is a close link between the vegetation of each region and the
differentiation and distribution of its wildlife. The highland
rainforests support a variety of large mammals, dominated by elephants
and rhinoceroses, although both species have been reduced significantly
because of poaching and deforestation. Bushbuck, colobus monkeys, and,
occasionally, galagos (bush babies) are also found. The bamboo zone
contains varieties of duiker and some species of birds. Highland
predators include lions, leopards, and wildcats.
The most-prolific animal populations are found in the extensive
grasslands between the forest zone and lower areas, principally
varieties of ungulates, such as the hartebeest, wildebeest (gnu), zebra,
and gazelle. Others include the waterbuck, impala, eland, warthog, and
buffalo. These are preyed on by lions, spotted hyenas, leopards,
cheetahs, and wild dogs. Without the interference of the forest,
birdlife is much richer there, and lakes and rivers are inhabited by
swarms of fish and occasionally by hippopotamuses and crocodiles.
In the thornbushes and thickets of the arid regions are elephants,
rhinoceroses, lions, leopards, giraffes, gerenuk, impalas, dik-diks, and
various kinds of kudu; suni antelope, buffalo, and elephants are found
in the coastal forest. Hippopotamuses, crocodiles, and many varieties of
fish are found in the large rivers, while the coastal waters contain
abundant marine life, including butterfly fish, angelfish, rock cod,
barracuda, and spiny lobsters.
People
Ethnic groups and languages
The African peoples of Kenya, who comprise virtually the entire
population, are divided into three language groups: Bantu, Nilo-Saharan,
and Afro-Asiatic. Bantu is by far the largest, and its speakers are
mainly concentrated in the southern third of the country. The Kikuyu,
Kamba, Meru, and Nyika people occupy the fertile Central Rift highlands,
while the Luhya and Gusii inhabit the Lake Victoria basin.
Nilo-Saharan—represented by the languages of Kalenjin, Luo, Maasai,
Samburu, and Turkana—is the next largest group. The rural Luo inhabit
the lower parts of the western plateau, and the Kalenjin-speaking people
occupy the higher parts of it. The Maasai are pastoral nomads in the
southern region bordering Tanzania, and the related Samburu and Turkana
pursue the same occupation in the arid northwest.
The Afro-Asiatic peoples, who inhabit the arid and semiarid regions
of the north and northeast, constitute only a tiny fraction of Kenya’s
population. They are divided between the Somali, bordering Somalia, and
the Oromo, bordering Ethiopia; both groups pursue a pastoral livelihood
in areas that are subject to famine, drought, and desertification.
Another Afro-Asiatic people is the Burji, some of whom are descended
from workers brought from Ethiopia in the 1930s to build roads in
northern Kenya.
In addition to the African population, Kenya is home to groups who
immigrated there during British colonial rule. People from India and
Pakistan began arriving in the 19th century, although many left after
independence. A substantial number remain in urban areas such as Kisumu,
Mombasa, and Nairobi, where they engage in various business activities.
European Kenyans, mostly British in origin, are the remnant of the
colonial population. Their numbers were once much larger, but most
emigrated at independence to Southern Africa, Europe, and elsewhere.
Those who remain are found in the large urban centres of Mombasa and
Nairobi.
The Swahili (mostly the products of marriages between Arabs and
Africans) live along the coast. Arabs introduced Islam into Kenya when
they entered the area from the Arabian Peninsula about the 8th century
ad. Although a wide variety of languages are spoken in Kenya, the lingua
franca is Swahili. This multipurpose language, which evolved along the
coast from elements of local Bantu languages, Arabic, Persian,
Portuguese, Hindi, and English, is the language of local trade and is
also used (along with English) as an official language in the Kenyan
legislative body, the National Assembly, and the courts.
Religion
Freedom of religion is guaranteed by the constitution. More than
two-thirds of the people are Christian, primarily attending Protestant
or Roman Catholic churches. Christianity first came to Kenya in the 15th
century through the Portuguese, but this contact ended in the 17th
century. Christianity was revived at the end of the 19th century and
expanded rapidly. African traditional religions have a concept of a
supreme being who is known by various names. Many syncretic faiths have
arisen in which the adherents borrow from Christian traditions and
African religious practices. Independent churches are numerous; one such
church, the Maria Legio of Africa, is dominated by the Luo people.
Muslims constitute a sizable minority and include both Sunni and
Shīʿites. There are also small populations of Jews, Jains, Sikhs, and
Bahaʾis. In remote areas, Christian mission stations offer educational
and medical facilities as well as religious ones.
Settlement patterns
Most of Kenya’s population is rural and lives in scattered
settlements, the location and concentration of which depend largely on
climatic and soil conditions. Before European colonization, virtually no
villages or towns existed except along the coast, while urbanization was
confined to fishing villages, Arab trading ports, and towns visited by
dhows from the Arabian Peninsula and Asia. The modern cities of Mombasa,
Lamu, and Malindi were among the preexisting urban areas that were
expanded during the colonial period. Nairobi, originally a Maasai
watering hole, became important because of its connection to the
railroad, which came through the area at the beginning of the 20th
century. Other towns, such as Eldoret, Embu, Kisumu, and Nakuru, were
established by Europeans as administrative centres, mission stations,
and markets.
The migration from rural to urban areas has accelerated since
independence, spurred by greater economic development in urban areas. In
the late 1960s about one-tenth of the national population lived in urban
areas of 1,000 or more people; by the turn of the 21st century the
figure had more than doubled. The largest coastal city is Mombasa, while
the majority of Kenyans in the interior live in the capital city,
Nairobi. The influx of people has placed a major burden on the provision
of such services as education, health and sanitation, water, and
electricity.
Demographic trends
Kenya’s accelerating population growth from the early 1960s to the
early 1980s seriously constrained the country’s social and economic
development. During the first quarter of the 20th century, the total
population was fewer than four million, largely because of famines,
wars, and disease. By the late 1940s the population had risen to more
than five million, and at independence in 1963 it was more than eight
million and growing rapidly. The population exceeded 20 million by the
mid-1980s, after which the growth rate began slowing dramatically.
Nonetheless, in the early 21st century the rate of natural increase was
still above the world average. The pressure of such a population
explosion produced limited employment opportunities; rising costs for
education, health services, and food imports; and an inability to
generate the resources to build housing in both urban and rural areas.
The most important causes of the country’s explosive growth in
population were a sharp fall in mortality rates—especially infant
mortality—and the traditional preference for large families. The slower
population growth of the late 20th and early 21st centuries occurred in
part because fertility and birth rates were lower but also because the
number of deaths from AIDS was increasing. In the early 21st century,
life expectancy in Kenya was below the world average.
Economy
Since independence was achieved in 1963, Kenya’s economy has
contained both privately owned and state-run enterprises. Most of the
country’s business is in private hands (with a large amount of foreign
investment), but the government also shapes the country’s economic
development through various regulatory powers and “parastatals,” or
enterprises that it partly or wholly owns. The aim of this policy is to
achieve economic growth and stability, generate employment, and maximize
foreign earnings by achieving high levels of agricultural exports while
substituting domestically produced goods for those that have been
imported. For a decade after independence this policy showed great
promise as rising wages, employment, and government revenue provided the
means for expanding health services, education, transportation, and
communication. But problems that arose with the rise of global oil
prices in 1973 have been aggravated by periodic drought and accelerating
population growth, and Kenya’s economy has been unable to maintain a
favourable balance of trade while addressing the problems of chronic
poverty and growing unemployment. The country’s ability to industrialize
has been hampered by, among other factors, limited domestic purchasing
power, shrinking government budgets, increased external and internal
debt, poor infrastructure, and massive governmental corruption and
mismanagement.
In an effort to decrease its dependence on volatile agricultural
markets, Kenya attempted to diversify its exports in the last decade of
the 20th century, adding horticultural products, clothing, cement, soda
ash, and fluorspar. The country also made the export of manufactured
goods such as paper and vehicles a priority. Domestic restrictions on
imports have been removed slowly, however, and this policy has been only
partially successful. Kenya’s economy, which did not grow at a constant
rate during the last two decades of the 20th century, continued to be
dominated by the external market; tourism and agricultural exports were
still the major source of foreign exchange for the country in the early
21st century.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Agriculture plays an important role in Kenya’s economy. Although its
share of gross domestic product (GDP) has declined—from more than
two-fifths in 1964 to less than one-fifth in the early 21st
century—agriculture supplies the manufacturing sector with raw materials
and generates tax revenue and foreign exchange that support the rest of
the economy. Moreover, it employs the majority of the population.
In the first years after independence, the government sought to
redistribute the land on which most of the agricultural exports were
produced. Although there are now thousands of large farms, ranches, and
plantations, the majority of the farms are smaller than five acres (two
hectares). Tea and fresh flowers are the key foreign-exchange earners.
Sisal, cotton, and fruits and vegetables also are important cash crops.
Coffee, historically an important foreign exchange earner, still
contributes to the economy but began declining in importance and
earnings in the 1990s, owing in part to market instability and
deregulation. Kenya supplies the majority of the pyrethrum (a flower
used to create the nonsynthetic pesticide pyrethrin) to the world
market; demand for this product fluctuates depending upon the level of
interest in the United States, which is the largest consumer of this
commodity. National boards that controlled key export crops such as
coffee, tea, and cotton were deregulated beginning in the early 1990s.
The major crops for domestic consumption are corn (maize) and wheat.
Sugarcane was an export crop in the 1970s and ’80s, but by the ’90s
domestic demand exceeded the supply, and it had to be imported.
Livestock (including cattle and goats) is raised and dairy goods are
produced primarily for domestic use, and the government maintains a
reserve supply of such commodities as skim milk powder, cheese, and
butter. Surplus animal and dairy products are exported.
Despite the importance of agriculture to the economic well-being of
the country, the lack of water, infrastructure, and arable land (less
than one-tenth of Kenya can be used for agriculture) seriously
constrains further expansion. Although the government has made efforts
to increase irrigation, it is estimated that only one-fifth to
one-fourth of potentially irrigable area has been developed.
Forests occupy only a small portion of the land but are extremely
important in the domestic economy. Most of the area of forest reserves
is wooded bush, bamboo, and grass; the remainder consists of planted
softwoods, which now support a domestic paper industry. Forests are
vital for conserving Kenya’s soil and water resources, but they are
increasingly threatened by a fast-growing population that constantly
demands more fuel and settlement areas. As fuel, wood is used primarily
for domestic cooking, but deforestation threatens the supply. A
tree-planting program has been initiated to grow quick-maturing
indigenous and exotic species in ecologically suitable areas.
Fish and marine products represent a small but growing portion of
Kenya’s economy and are locally important. Freshwater fish from Lakes
Victoria and Rudolf constitute the bulk of the catch. The encroaching
water hyacinth on the surface of Lake Victoria threatened this fishery
in the 1990s, although this nuisance was countered by several
strategies, including the introduction of weevils into the environment.
Most of the weed has been successfully eliminated, although the
potential for a resurgence remains.
Resources and power
Soda ash (used in glassmaking) is Kenya’s most valuable mineral
export and is quarried at Lake Magadi in the Rift Valley. Limestone
deposits at the coast and in the interior are exploited for cement
manufacture and agriculture. Vermiculite, gold, rubies, topazes, and
salt are also important, as is fluorite (also known as fluorspar and
used in metallurgy), which is mined along the Kerio River in the north.
Deposits of titanium- and zirconium-bearing sands were found in multiple
locations northeast of Mombasa and to the south of the city. Exploration
for petroleum has so far met with limited success.
Kenya’s economic development has been tied to its ability to improve
energy resources. The emphasis since independence has been on producing
hydroelectricity, but access to energy is limited in rural areas, since
the bulk of electricity is consumed by the two major urban centres of
Nairobi and Mombasa. There are hydroelectric plants located on the Tana
and Turkwel rivers. Geothermal resources in the Rift Valley have been
tapped since the early 1980s to generate electricity and have come to
supply a significant amount of Nairobi’s total needs. While the
expansion of generating capacity continued through grants from the
International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, a severe drought
occurred in the northwest part of the country at the end of the 20th
century. This led to blackouts that continued into the beginning of the
21st century.
Manufacturing
Kenya is the most industrially developed country in East Africa, but
it has not yet produced results to match its potential. Manufacturing is
based largely on processing imported goods, although the government
supports the development of export-oriented industries. Major industries
include agricultural processing, publishing and printing, and the
manufacture of textiles and clothing, cement, tires, batteries, paper,
ceramics, and leather goods. Assembly plants, which utilize imported
parts, produce various kinds of commercial and passenger vehicles and
even export a small quantity to other African countries such as Uganda,
Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi.
Steel processing for reexport and for the construction industry is a
growing sector, with about a dozen steel mills in operation. The
petroleum industry, which was deregulated in 1994, produces diesel and
jet fuel from imported crude oil at a refinery near Mombasa and provides
a major source of foreign exchange.
Finance and trade
The state-run Central Bank of Kenya, established by legislation in
1966, regulates the money supply (the monetary unit is the Kenyan
shilling), assists in the development of the monetary, credit, and
banking system, acts as banker and financial adviser to the government,
and grants short-term or seasonal loans. There also are a large number
of commercial, merchant, and foreign banks in Kenya. The Nairobi Stock
Exchange, founded in 1954, is one of the largest in sub-Saharan Africa.
Agricultural products such as tea, fresh flowers, fruits and
vegetables, and coffee constitute the greatest proportion of Kenya’s
exports. The remainder of the exports consists of petroleum products,
cement, hides and skins, and soda ash. Imports include machinery and
transport equipment, chemical products, petroleum and petroleum
products, and food and beverages. The chief trading partners are Uganda,
the countries of the European Union (notably the United Kingdom), the
United Arab Emirates, and Tanzania. Kenya is a member of the East
African Community Customs Union.
Services
Kenya is home to some of the rarest and most interesting species of
wildlife in the world. Because of this, tourism is one of the country’s
major sources of foreign exchange, with visitors coming largely from
countries of the European Union. Tourism revolves around a basic
framework of national parks, game reserves, and game sanctuaries, where
a wide variety of animals and cultural attractions can be enjoyed. The
number of tourists began to vary annually in the early 1990s, however,
following a period of political unrest and attacks on tourists, and
again in the early 2000s, owing partially to the threat of terrorism.
Labour and taxation
Following agriculture, the next largest employment sectors are
trade- and service-related industries. Women perform most of the
agricultural work, but they participate largely in the informal sector
of the economy. The Central Organization of Trade Unions was founded in
1965. Many professions are unionized, including metal workers, airline
pilots, game hunting and safari workers, jockeys and betting workers,
journalists, and textile workers. Government revenue is derived from
taxes on income and profits and on goods and services, from excise
duties, and from value-added taxes.
Transportation and telecommunications
The transportation infrastructure that developed both before and
after independence allowed Kenya to emerge as a viable state. Roads
became the major link between the urban areas and the rural hinterlands,
although they were developed in colonial times as a subsidiary to the
railway line running from Mombasa to the western parts of the country.
The heavily utilized trunk and primary roads were upgraded from dirt to
bitumen and gravel after independence. As this network was expanded,
freight traffic within Kenya as well as to Tanzania, Uganda, The Sudan,
and Ethiopia increased rapidly. The heavy traffic has severely damaged
Kenyan roads, requiring expensive repairs.
Railways, the second most important mode of transport after roads,
are operated by Kenya Railways. The main line runs northwest from
Mombasa through Nairobi, Nakuru, and Eldoret to the Ugandan border.
Major branchlines run from Nakuru to Kisumu on Lake Victoria and from
Nairobi to Nanyuki near Mount Kenya, and another goes into Tanzania.
Privatization of Kenya Railways began early in the 21st century, and
efforts were undertaken to make the railways more competitive in the
freight market. Passenger service constitutes a very small share of
railway business.
The strategic location of Kenya on the western shores of the Indian
Ocean, with easy connections to different parts of Africa, the Middle
East, and Asia, has greatly enhanced the role of the international
airports at Nairobi and Mombasa. Another international airport is
located at Eldoret. There are domestic airports at Kisumu and Malindi
and many smaller airfields throughout the country. Kenya Airways,
established in 1977, privatized its operations and financial control in
1996.
Mombasa, the country’s principal port, handles the bulk of the import
and export traffic not only of Kenya but of Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and
the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The ports of
Lamu and Malindi serve mainly the coastal trade and fisheries.
Telephone service has greatly expanded since the early 1980s, but,
while the number of telephones more than doubled between 1984 and 1995,
the great majority of the population still does not have access to local
telephone lines. Cellular telephone service experienced rapid growth
around the turn of the century, as did Internet access—by the mid-2000s,
the country had one of the highest numbers of Internet users in
sub-Saharan Africa. Like other industries in Kenya, telecommunications
were being privatized at the start of the 21st century.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Kenya became independent on Dec. 12, 1963, under a constitution that
placed the prime minister at the head of a cabinet chosen by a bicameral
National Assembly. Significant power was granted to assemblies elected
in each of the country’s regions, and multiparty contests were allowed.
Beginning in the early 1960s, however, a series of amendments abolished
the regional assemblies in favour of provincial commissions appointed by
the national government, made the National Assembly a unicameral body,
proclaimed the Kenya African National Union (KANU) the only legal
political party, and replaced the prime minister with an executive
president who has the power to dismiss at will the attorney general and
senior judges. The effect of these changes was to establish the central
government—in particular, the presidency—as the principal locus of
political power in the country. Although the constitution guarantees a
number of rights, such as the freedoms of speech, assembly, and worship,
it also allows the president to detain without trial persons who have
been deemed a threat to public security.
Constitutional reforms allowed multiparty politics once again in 1991
and granted greater freedom to political parties before the December
1997 elections. In 2008, in the aftermath of the disputed December 2007
presidential election, legislation was passed that provided for the
creation of a coalition government and amended the constitution to alter
the structure of the executive branch, allowing for the re-creation of
the prime minister post and the creation of two deputy minister posts.
Those seeking election or appointment to public office must be
members of a political party; presidential appointments are the only
exception. Several candidates from a party may contest a single office,
but any candidate who receives more than 70 percent of the vote in a
nominating election enters the final election unopposed.
The executive branch consists of the president, the prime minister,
two deputy prime ministers, and other cabinet ministers. The president,
who is elected by direct popular vote to a term of five years, must
receive a minimum of one-fourth of the votes cast in five of the eight
provinces and must be a member of the National Assembly. The president
is the head of state and commander in chief of the armed forces,
appoints the vice president, and, with the agreement of the prime
minister, selects cabinet ministers from among the members of the
National Assembly. Through the cabinet, the president exercises control
over the passage of legislation as well as over the huge bureaucracies
directing the economy and provincial affairs.
Most members of the National Assembly are elected to five-year terms
by universal adult suffrage; however, 12 members are appointed by the
president, and there are 2 ex officio members—the speaker and the
attorney general, of whom only the speaker has voting privileges.
Local government
Kenya contains eight provinces: Nyanza, Western, Rift Valley,
Central, Eastern, North Eastern, Coast, and Nairobi. All provinces,
except for Nairobi, are divided into districts. Local government
consists of appointed provincial and district commissioners, elected
county, municipal, and town councils, and elected township or municipal
authorities. The provincial commissioners are responsible for education,
transport, and health in their provinces, while the councils are
concerned with services and public works funded by local taxes and
grants from the central government.
Justice
The High Court, appointed by the president, consists of the chief
justice and at least 11 puisne, or associate, justices. The High Court
has full civil and criminal jurisdiction and rules on constitutional
matters. The Kenya Court of Appeal, consisting of the chief justice and
at least two associates, is the highest appeals court in the country. At
lower levels are resident magistrates’ and district magistrates’ courts.
Kenya’s judicial system acknowledges the validity of Islamic law and
indigenous African customs in many personal areas such as marriage,
divorce, and matters affecting dependents. To that end, the Muslim
community uses judicial venues known as Kadhis’ courts to resolve issues
concerning Islamic law.
Political process
The Kenya African National Union (KANU) has dominated Kenyan
politics since its founding in 1960. Its principal opposition, the Kenya
African Democratic Union (KADU), merged with KANU in 1964. Since Kenya’s
transformation from single-party KANU rule back into a multiparty state
in the early 1990s, many political parties have been created, often
reflecting ethnic alliances. The major parties are the Democratic Party,
the National Development Party, the Social Democratic Party (SDP), and
the Forum for the Restoration of Democracy–Kenya. In 1997 a woman,
representing the SDP, ran for president—a first for Kenya—and received
almost 8 percent of the vote. However, at the legislative level, women
constituted less than 10 percent of the National Assembly in the early
21st century.
Security
Kenya’s armed forces consist of air force, navy, and army
contingents. Military service is voluntary. Kenyan troops have
participated in several United Nations-sponsored peacekeeping missions.
Health and welfare
Together with improved housing, education, sanitation, and
nutrition, health care programs have drastically reduced mortality rates
from preindependence levels, especially for infants. High rates of
malaria, gastroenteritis, diarrhea and dysentery, trachoma, amebiasis,
and schistosomiasis continue, however, and illustrate how difficult it
is to eradicate mosquitoes and provide clean water, especially in the
countryside. By the beginning of the 21st century, AIDS had become the
major disease in Kenya and threatened to reverse the declining death
rate. Kenya, like other countries in Africa suffering under the AIDS
pandemic, has utilized a number of strategies to combat the disease,
including drug therapy. Some drug companies lowered their prices in
Kenya by more than half in the early 21st century, but this was not
enough to make drugs available to all who needed them. Inadequate supply
of drugs is also a problem.
Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi is the country’s chief referral
and teaching institution, and there are also provincial and district
hospitals. In rural areas, health centres and dispensaries offer
diagnostic services, obstetric care, and outpatient treatment, although
they often lack adequate facilities, trained personnel, and medications.
Housing
In rural areas, the average home consists of a two-room dwelling
made with wood siding and a roof of sheet iron; for the very poor,
simple grass-thatched huts are typical. In urban areas, the
representative middle-class home has two bedrooms, indoor plumbing, a
kitchen, and a living area.
Providing housing for the urban poor has been increasingly difficult
since independence. Most of the urban population lives in informal
housing areas not recognized by the government, which often razes slums
without warning. In an effort to provide better-quality affordable
housing, new building materials are being developed. One such product is
brick made from a combination of water, soil, and a small amount of
cement.
Education
The national educational system consists of three levels: eight
years of compulsory primary education (beginning at age six), four years
at the secondary level, and four years of higher education. The
government provides free primary and secondary education. Entrance into
secondary school is contingent upon obtaining the Kenyan Certificate of
Primary Education by passing a national exam.
Education for the indigenous population was not a priority of the
British colonial government. After independence, however, primary and
secondary school enrollment expanded markedly. Jomo Kenyatta, Kenya’s
first president, promised free primary education to all citizens in
1963, a promise only partially fulfilled when fees for the first four
years of primary school were abolished in 1974. One consequence of this
educational expansion was that underemployment and unemployment
increased as better-educated citizens entered the job market. The
government responded by expanding the civil service beginning in the
late 1970s, but by the early 1990s it could no longer absorb this
population. The problem was compounded as the number of secondary
schools grew. Because the government could not provide enough
government-funded schools, community-built harambee secondary schools
were developed. These schools were supposed to receive government
assistance to provide for teachers and learning materials, but such
support did not always materialize. The government simultaneously
pursued a policy of “education for self-reliance,” whereby education was
oriented toward preparing students for employment in agriculture as well
as in business. Universal free education was introduced for all years of
primary schooling in 2002. In the following years, primary schools were
not able to accommodate the increased demand for services and faced such
problems as overcrowding and a lack of resources.
Education is still highly valued in Kenya, with many of the students
pursuing strategies such as “shadow education” (after-school and weekend
tutoring) and remaining in a grade more than one year in order to pass
the Certificate of Primary Education exam. Because of the country’s
continuing economic problems, however, many of these students have not
been able to attend school beyond the primary level; free secondary
schooling was introduced in 2008 to help address this issue. Kenya’s
literacy rate, at more than four-fifths of the population, is high for
sub-Saharan Africa.
Public universities include the University of Nairobi (1956) and
Kenyatta University (1972) in Nairobi, Moi University (1984) in Eldoret,
and Egerton University (1939) in Njoro, as well as the Jomo Kenyatta
University of Agriculture and Technology (1981) in Nairobi. Specialized
colleges include Kenya Conservatoire of Music (1944), Kenya Medical
Training College (1924), and Kenya Polytechnic (1961) in Nairobi and
Rift Valley Institute of Science and Technology (1972) in Nakuru.
Cultural life
Daily life and social customs
As is true of many developing African countries, there is a marked
contrast between urban and rural culture in Kenya. Attracting people
from all over the country, Kenya’s cities are characterized by a more
cosmopolitan population whose tastes reflect practices that combine the
local with the global. Nairobi’s nightlife, for instance, caters to
youth interested in music that varies from American rhythm and blues,
hip-hop, and rock to Congolese rumba. The city contains movie theatres
and numerous nightclubs where patrons can dance or shoot pool; for
children there are water parks and family amusement centres.
For all the modernization and urbanization of Kenya, however,
traditional practices remain important. Rituals and customs are very
well documented, owing to the intense anthropological study of Kenya’s
peoples during the period of British colonial rule; oral literature is
safeguarded, and several publishing houses publish traditional folktales
and ethnographies.
Kenyan cooking reflects British, Arab, and Indian influences. Foods
common throughout Kenya include ugali, a mush made from corn (maize) and
often served with such greens as spinach and kale. Chapati, a fried
pitalike bread of Indian origin, is served with vegetables and stew;
rice is also popular. Seafood and freshwater fish are eaten in most
parts of the country and provide an important source of protein. Many
vegetable stews are flavoured with coconut, spices, and chilies.
Although meat traditionally is not eaten every day or is eaten only in
small quantities, grilled meat and all-you-can-eat buffets specializing
in game, or “bush meat,” are popular. Many people utilize shambas
(vegetable gardens) to supplement purchased foods. In areas inhabited by
the Kikuyu, irio, a stew of peas, corn, and potatoes, is common. The
Maasai, known for their herds of livestock, avoid killing their cows and
instead prefer to use products yielded by the animal while it is alive,
including blood drained from nonlethal wounds. They generally drink
milk, often mixed with cow’s blood, and eat the meat of sheep or goats
rather than cows.
Urban life in Kenya is by no means uniform. For example, as a Muslim
town, Mombasa stands in contrast to Nairobi. Although there are numerous
restaurants, bars, and clubs in Mombasa, there are also many mosques,
and women dressed in bui buis (loose-fitting garments that cover married
Muslim women from head to toe) are common.
Rural life is oriented in two directions—toward the lifestyles of
rural inhabitants, who still constitute the majority of Kenya’s
population, and toward foreign tourists who come to visit the many
national parks and reserves. Although agricultural duties occupy most of
the time of rural dwellers, they still find occasion to visit markets
and shopping centres, where some frequent beer halls. Mobile cinemas
also provide entertainment for the rural population.
Kenya observes most Christian holidays, as well as the Muslim
festival ʿId al-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan. Jamhuri, or
Independence Day, is celebrated on December 12. Moi Day (recognizing
Daniel arap Moi) and Kenyatta Day, both in October, honour two of the
country’s presidents, while Madaraka (Swahili: Government) Day (June 1)
celebrates Kenya’s attainment of self-governance in 1964.
The arts
The Kenya National Theatre, a part of the Kenya Cultural Centre, is
the country’s premier venue for drama. The affiliated National Theatre
School (founded 1968) provides professional training for Kenyan
playwrights and performers of traditional music and dance. Independent
art facilities, such as the GoDown Arts Centre in Nairobi, offer
alternative spaces for artists to express themselves.
Kenya’s pop music is among the most varied in Africa, drawing on
diverse sources, including African rumba, traditional Indian musical
forms, and a wide range of European and American styles. Popular since
the 1960s is an indigenous pop style that emerged in the area around
Lake Victoria inhabited by the Luo; called benga, it is perhaps the most
distinctly Kenyan form in the musical repertoire. Taarab, a popular
music of the eastern coastal region heavily influenced by Arabic styles,
is also played throughout the country.
Kenyan literature includes a large body of oral and written folklore,
much of the latter collected by British anthropologists. During the
colonial era, writers of European origin residing in Kenya, such as
Elspeth Huxley (The Flame Trees of Thika, 1959) and Isak Dinesen (Out of
Africa, 1937), introduced indigenous themes and settings to broad
audiences. The Swahili literary tradition (see also Swahili literature),
both oral and written, dates to the 18th century and is represented by
authors such as Muyaka bin Haji al-Ghassaniy and Kupona Mwana.
Contemporary novelists, including Ngugi wa Thiong’o, Grace Ogot, Meja
Mwangi, Hilary Ngweno, Margaret Ogola, and R. Mugo Gatheru, address
problems in colonial and postcolonial society. Many of these writers
publish in English, although Thiong’o has insisted on publishing first
in his native Kikuyu, saying:
Only by a return to the roots of our being in the languages and
cultures and heroic histories of the Kenyan people can we rise up to the
challenge of helping in the creation of a Kenyan patriotic national
literature and culture that will be the envy of many foreigners and the
pride of Kenyans.
Visual arts are largely confined to the mass production of wood
sculpture and Maasai beadwork. Elimo Njau, Etale Sukuro, and Kivuthi
Mbuno are noted Kenyan artists employing a variety of mediums. The
country’s film industry is small but growing, though viewings of
indigenous films are usually confined to theatres in the cities; in
smaller towns and villages, film fare is likely to come from either
Hollywood or India. Many foreign productions have been filmed in
Kenya—such as Out of Africa (1985), To Walk with Lions (1999), Nowhere
in Africa (2001), and The Constant Gardener (2005)—owing to its scenic,
varied landscapes and generally clement weather.
Cultural institutions
Perhaps Kenya’s greatest cultural legacy is in its national parks
and reserves. The annual wildebeest migration is best observed at the
Maasai Mara National Reserve, which also includes a Maasai village.
Amboseli National Park, a former home of the Maasai, lies at the foot of
Mount Kilimanjaro. Marsabit National Park and Reserve in the north is
noted for its populations of large mammals such as lions, elephants,
rhinoceroses, zebras, and giraffes. Tsavo East and Tsavo West National
Parks are noted for their abundant wildlife and diverse landscapes.
Mzima Springs, found in Tsavo West, are clear pools of fresh water that
provide ideal conditions for viewing hippopotamuses, crocodiles, and
fish. Sibiloi National Park, in the far northern part of the country,
contains sites where scientists from the University of Nairobi
(including Richard Leakey) have excavated hominid remains since 1968.
Mount Kenya National Park was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in
1997. The Lake Turkana National Parks, comprising three national parks
in Eastern province, were named World Heritage sites beginning in 1997.
Lamu Old Town, in Coast province, contains beautiful examples of Swahili
architecture; it became a World Heritage site in 2001. In 2008 the
Sacred Mijikenda Kaya Forests—several forests containing the remains of
villages (kaya) once inhabited by the Mijikenda (Nyika) people and now
considered sacred—were collectively designated a World Heritage site.
The Kenya National Archives and Documentation Service in Nairobi,
housed in a building that was originally the Bank of India, holds an
increasing number of government and historical documents and also
contains exhibits of arts and crafts and photographs. A national library
service board has been established to equip, maintain, and develop
libraries in Kenya, including a branch library service. The McMillan
Memorial Library in Nairobi has holdings of books as well as newspapers
and a parliamentary archive. The National Museum, also in Nairobi,
contains archaeological remains and objects of traditional material
culture.
Sports and recreation
Football (soccer) is the most popular sport in Kenya, although the
national team, the Harambee Stars, has had little international success.
Basketball, volleyball, and netball are also popular sports. Social
clubs often offer the opportunity for Kenyans to play football and
volleyball. Netball is played exclusively by women. Internationally,
Kenyan athletes are known for their dominance of distance running. Since
the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City, at which Kip Keino, Naftali Temu,
and Amos Biwott all won gold medals, Kenyan distance runners have
continually won Olympic medals and major races throughout the world.
Catherine Ndereba, for example, repeatedly won marathons in Boston and
Chicago.
Media and publishing
The media have flourished in Kenya as the economy has become more
liberalized. Rigid state restrictions on radio and television
broadcasting were gradually loosened in the 1990s, and commercial radio
has become an integral part of Kenyan popular culture. The Daily Nation
and the East African Standard are among the daily newspapers; daily
papers are also published in African languages such as Luo and Kikuyu.
Kenya has numerous weekly and monthly periodicals.
Simeon Hongo Ominde
Mwenda Ntarangwi
History
It is known that human history in Kenya dates back millions of
years, because it is there that some of the earliest fossilized remains
of hominids have been discovered. Among the best-known finds are those
by anthropologist Richard Leakey and others in the Koobi Fora area along
the shore of Lake Rudolf that have included portions of Australopithecus
boisei and Homo habilis skeletons. The following discussion, however,
covers the history of Kenya only from the 18th century. For coverage of
earlier periods and for a treatment of the country in its regional
context, see Eastern Africa.
The 18th and 19th centuries
Maasai and Kikuyu
The Maasai moved into what is now central Kenya from an area north
of Lake Rudolf sometime in the mid-18th century. Their southward advance
was checked about 1830 by the Hehe people from what is now Tanzania, but
their raiding parties continued to range widely and even reached the
coast south of Mombasa in 1859. The Maasai moran (“warrior”) prepared
for war under the spiritual direction of the laibon (“medicine man”).
Although not particularly numerous, the Maasai were able to dominate a
considerable region because the Bantu-speaking inhabitants offered
little effective resistance to their raids. The Nandi, who inhabited the
escarpment to the west of the Maasai, were equally warlike and were
relatively undisturbed by their predatory neighbours. Another group, the
Taveta, took refuge in the forest on the eastern slopes of Mount
Kilimanjaro, while the Taita, who were farther east, used the natural
strongholds provided by their mountainous homeland to resist the Maasai
raiders.
The Kikuyu, who were far more numerous than the Maasai, also looked
to the mountains and forests for protection against Maasai war parties.
The Kikuyu had expanded northward, westward, and southward from their
territory in the Fort Hall area of present-day Central province, where
they cleared the forests to provide themselves with agricultural land.
Toward the end of the 19th century, however, they had reached the limits
imposed by the presence of the Maasai to the north and south and by the
upper slopes of the Aberdare Range to the west.
Famine and smallpox in the 1890s compelled the Kikuyu to vacate much
of the land in what is now Kiambu district (in Central province) as they
withdrew northward. The Maasai too were passing through a difficult
period. An outbreak of disease, either pleuropneumonia or rinderpest,
attacked their cattle in 1883; further infestations in 1889–90 continued
to decimate their herds, while the Maasai themselves were overwhelmed by
epidemics of smallpox. Simultaneously, the death of Mbatian, their great
laibon, split the group into warring factions, and it was some time
before his younger son, Lenana, was able to restore order. power was
never revived, however, since their problems coincided with the arrival
of European traders and administrators who eventually gained control of
the region.
Control of the interior
Trading relations had existed for centuries between southern Arabia
and the coastline of what is now Kenya; some of the Arab traders
remained in the area and contributed to the language that came to be
known as Swahili. During the 19th century Arab and Swahili caravans in
search of ivory penetrated the interior. One route went from Mombasa to
Kilimanjaro and Lake Victoria and then toward Mount Elgon, but this
route was not as popular as the caravan trails farther south, both
because of the difficulty of crossing the desert country of the Taru
Plain and because of the hostility of the Maasai. The first Europeans to
penetrate the interior were two German agents of the Church Missionary
Society, Johann Ludwig Krapf and Johannes Rebmann. They established a
mission station at Rabai, a short distance inland from Mombasa. In 1848
Rebmann became the first European to see Kilimanjaro, and in 1849 Krapf
ventured still farther inland and saw Mount Kenya. These were isolated
journeys, however, and more than 30 years elapsed before any other
Europeans attempted to explore the country dominated by the Maasai.
The British East Africa Company
As Germany, Britain, and France were carving up East Africa in
the mid-1880s, they recognized the authority of the sultan of Zanzibar
over a coastal strip 10 miles (16 km) wide between the Tana (in Kenya)
and Ruvuma (in Tanzania) rivers. The hinterland, however, was divided
between Britain and Germany: the British took the area north of a line
running from the mouth of the Umba River, opposite Pemba Island, and
skirting north of Kilimanjaro to a point where latitude 1° S cut the
eastern shore of Lake Victoria; the German sphere, Tanganyika
(present-day Tanzania), lay to the south of that line. In 1887 the
sultan’s territory on the mainland was conceded to the British East
Africa Association (later Company) for a 50-year period; this was later
made a permanent grant. Because the British government was reluctant to
become involved in the administration of East Africa, in 1888 it granted
the company a royal charter that authorized it to accept existing and
future grants and concessions relevant to the administration and
development of the British sphere in that part of the world. The
financial resources of the company, however, were inadequate for any
large-scale development of the region. The company also administered
territory in what is now Uganda; when it became involved with the
kingdoms of Buganda and Bunyoro, it incurred a great debt and therefore
was forced to limit its activities to regions nearer the coast. This
financial problem was finally resolved in 1895 when the British
government made Buganda a protectorate and paid the company £250,000 to
surrender its charter to the area that is now Kenya. The East Africa
Protectorate was then proclaimed, with Sir Arthur Hardinge as the first
commissioner. Initially the British government did not attach much
importance to the new protectorate because Hardinge continued to reside
in Zanzibar, where he already functioned as the consul general.
The East Africa Protectorate
Resistance to European rule and early administration
During the early years the new administration largely focused on
asserting authority over the territory. The Mazrui family (a Swahili
family) along the coast actively resisted the usurpation of its
authority by the British administrators, as did the Kikuyu and the
Kamba. Farther west the Nandi did not accept their new overlords until
1905, after a series of British military columns had ranged through
their territory. The Maasai were one of the few groups who offered no
resistance to British authority, and they even served in the military
during the British campaigns against the Kikuyu. Although this caused
lasting enmity between the two groups, the Maasai behaved as they did
largely because they had been so devastated by disease at the end of the
19th century.
The extension of British administration into the more remote areas of
the protectorate was slowed by the lack of communication infrastructure
and the limited financial resources available. When administration was
introduced, though, it was direct rule because the British did not find
the centralized African political system that had existed in other parts
of Africa that they came to control.
The Uganda railway and European settlement
The East Africa Protectorate was valued by Europeans as a
corridor to the fertile land around Lake Victoria, but the government’s
offer to lease land to British settlers was initially not popular. Two
factors, however, changed this negative attitude: a railway was
constructed from the coast to Lake Victoria, and the western highlands
were transferred from Uganda (where regulations made it impossible to
lease land to Europeans) to the East Africa Protectorate in 1902. Work
on the railway began at Mombasa in December 1895, and the first
locomotive reached Kisumu on Lake Victoria in December 1901; the entire
line was completed by 1903. The protectorate was responsible for making
the railway profitable, and the export of cash crops seemed to provide
the perfect solution for generating revenue. Sir Charles Eliot, who
became commissioner of the protectorate in 1901, invited South Africans
to settle in the protectorate when European settlers were less than
enthusiastic about the proposal, but they too were uninterested. At
first only small areas of land in Kiambu district, which had formerly
been occupied by Africans and which the Kikuyu regarded as part of their
legitimate area of expansion, were allocated to European settlers, but
by 1906 more than 1,550 square miles (4,000 square km) had been leased
or sold. Some Africans, such as the Maasai, were confined to reserves;
by 1911 the Maasai reserve extended south of the railway to the
present-day border with Tanzania.
As more Africans were separated from their land and as more European
settlers entered the region, the Europeans became concerned with
maintaining an adequate supply of African labour. Because few Africans
voluntarily chose whether or not to work for Europeans, the settlers
wanted the government to institute a system that would compel Africans
to offer their services to European farmers. Successive commissioners
and governors responded in varying degrees to the settlers’ demands, and
it was not until immediately after World War I, and largely as a result
of public outcry in Britain, that compulsory labour on either public or
private projects was strictly forbidden.
Thousands of Indian labourers were brought into the protectorate to
construct the railway. Although most of these labourers returned to
India after their contracts were completed, some remained. The opening
of the railway encouraged Indian traders who had been living nearer the
coast to penetrate farther into the interior, even ahead of the
administration. Other Indians hoped to obtain land, but European
settlers consistently opposed the Indians’ claim to land and to
political and economic equality.
Prior to the outbreak of World War I in 1914, European participation
in political affairs was limited mainly to creating pressure groups. The
most prominent of these was the Convention of Associations, which had
developed in 1911 from earlier European settler organizations. An
Executive Council was appointed in 1905, and the first Legislative
Council convened in 1907. When the protectorate was transferred from the
Foreign Office to the Colonial Office in April 1905 and the settlers did
not gain the increased responsibility they had desired, they launched a
campaign in 1913 to elect their own representatives to the Legislative
Council. The outbreak of World War I temporarily limited the settlers’
legislative prospects, but the War Council, which was concerned with the
effects of the war on the protectorate and included settlers, satisfied
some of their desire to have elected representation in the legislature.
World War I and its aftermath
Germany had hoped that no battles with Britain would be fought on
African soil during World War I, but Britain was concerned with its
communications with India and with the safety of the Ugandan railway.
Britain initiated hostilities, to which Germany responded, with Britain
ultimately prevailing in East Africa. The conflict caused great
hardships for the African population. Thousands of Africans were forced
to serve as porters and soldiers, often with disastrous results, and a
large number of Africans died, mostly from disease. The entire East
African economic structure was affected, as food production became
geared solely to supplying the troops. The burden of providing this food
fell largely on African women, who did most of the farming anyway. Women
were forced to use the same plots of land repeatedly, thereby depleting
the soil, because most able-bodied men, who were responsible for
clearing new land, had been conscripted. Droughts and famines recurred.
Most of the European settlers quickly joined the armed forces; they
left their farms to be looked after by their wives, or else the farms
were abandoned. An attempt was made immediately after the war to revive
the settler sector by introducing a “soldier settler” scheme, but the
hopes of prosperity encouraged by the postwar demand for agricultural
produce received a severe setback in the early 1920s when a worldwide
economic recession brought bankruptcy to many of those who had started
out with inadequate capital or had relied on credit from the banks.
Stability was further delayed by the replacement of the rupee currency
with East African shillings. By the mid-1920s Kenya’s economy had wholly
revived, although the Great Depression of the 1930s brought further
economic difficulties to East Africa.
Rail communications had been improved when branch lines were opened
to Thika and to the soda deposits at Lake Magadi in 1913; during the war
a link was made between the main line and the German railway system to
the south. The most important postwar project was the building of a new
extension of the main line across the Uasin Gishu Plateau to tap the
agricultural wealth of the highlands and then to Uganda in order to
provide an outlet for the cotton crops of that protectorate. The line
was eventually completed from Nakuru to Jinja in January 1928 and was
carried on to Kampala, which it reached in January 1931.
Kenya colony
Political movements
In 1920 the East Africa Protectorate was turned into a colony and
renamed Kenya, for its highest mountain. The colonial government began
to concern itself with the plight of African peoples; in 1923 the
colonial secretary issued a White Paper in which he indicated that
African interests in the colony had to be paramount, although his
declaration did not immediately result in any great improvement in
conditions. One area that definitely needed improvement was education
for Africans; up to that point nearly all African schooling had been
provided by missionaries. Those Africans who did manage to receive a
Western education, though, found no place in Kenya’s legislature, their
interests being represented officially by the members of the appointed
council and by a European unofficial member, usually a missionary.
As more Africans worked on European farms and in urban areas such as
Nairobi, they began to imitate political techniques used by European
settlers as they attempted to gain more direct representation in
colonial politics. At the outset, political pressure groups developed
along ethnic lines, the first one being the Young Kikuyu Association
(later the East African Association), established in 1921, with Harry
Thuku as its first president. The group, which received most of its
support from young men and was not supported by most of the older
chiefs, demanded African representation in the legislature and won
support among the Kikuyu when it complained about low wages, the
prohibition of coffee growing by Africans, and the condemnation by
Christian missionaries of such traditional practices as female genital
cutting. At a protest in March 1922 Thuku was arrested, and eventually
he was exiled for more than eight years. Although its attempts to win
the support of other ethnic groups failed because of their unwillingness
to accept Kikuyu leadership, the association was an important beginning
in the African search for greater participation in the political
process.
Throughout the 1920s and ’30s European settlers continued to oppose
Indian demands for greater representation on the Legislative Council.
Another concern among European settlers was the proposal, first made
toward the end of World War I, to introduce some form of closer union
with Uganda and Tanganyika (which had become a British possession after
World War I). At first the European settlers of Kenya opposed closer
union with the other territories because they feared African domination,
but, in light of the British government’s determination on this issue,
they agreed by the late 1920s to a compromise that would protect their
political status in Kenya. By the 1930s they actively supported union
with Tanganyika as a protection against Germany’s claims to its former
overseas dependencies.
World War II to independence
The outbreak of World War II forced the colony to focus on its
borders; with the entry of Italy into the war, Kenya’s northern border
with Ethiopia and Somaliland was briefly threatened. The colonial
government then turned its attention to African political
representation, and in 1944 Kenya became the first East African
territory to include an African on its Legislative Council. The number
was increased to two in 1946, four in 1948, and eight in 1951, although
all were appointed by the governor from a list of names submitted by
local governments. This, however, did not satisfy African demands for
political equality. While the East African Association had been banned
after Thuku’s arrest, a new organization, the Kikuyu Central
Association, emerged with Jomo Kenyatta as its general secretary
beginning in 1928. Kenyatta, who advocated a peaceful transition to
African majority rule, traveled widely in Europe and returned in 1946 to
become the president of the Kenya African Union (KAU; founded in 1944 as
the Kenya African Study Union), which attempted to gain a mass African
following. There were, however, Africans in the colony who felt that
Kenyatta’s tactics were not producing enough concrete results. One such
group, which advocated a violent approach, became known as the Mau Mau.
The actions attributed to the Mau Mau caused the colonial government to
proclaim a state of emergency from October 1952 until 1960 and also
resulted in a massive relocation of Africans, particularly Kikuyu.
Kenyatta and other Africans were charged with directing the Mau Mau
movement and sentenced in 1953 to seven years’ imprisonment; Kenyatta
was released from prison in 1959 but was then confined to his home.
Numerous economic and social changes resulted either directly or
indirectly from the Mau Mau uprising. A land-consolidation program
centralized the Kikuyu into large villages. This plan was also extended
to the area near Lake Victoria in the Nyanza province, and many
thousands of Africans in Nairobi were resettled in rural detention
camps. At the same time, the Swynnerton Plan (a proposal to strengthen
the development of African agriculture) provided Africans more
opportunities to cultivate cash crops such as coffee. Throughout the
1950s, foreign investment in Kenya continued, and limited industrial
development occurred along with agricultural expansion.
Although the leadership of the KAU had been arrested, the party was
not immediately banned, because the government hoped that new party
leadership might provide a more moderate approach. However, this was not
forthcoming, and the party was banned by mid-1953; African political
organizations were not allowed again until 1960. The Kenya African
National Union (KANU), founded in May of that year and favouring a
strong centralized government, was built around Kenyatta, who was still
in detention. Nevertheless, in June two of KANU’s founding members,
Ronald Ngala and Daniel arap Moi, created their own organization, the
Kenya African Democratic Union (KADU). KADU’s position was that ethnic
interests could best be addressed through a decentralized government; it
was also concerned about Kikuyu domination. KANU won more seats than
KADU in elections held in February 1961, but both parties called for the
release of Kenyatta, who was finally freed from house detention in
August. A coalition government of the two parties was formed in 1962,
and after elections in May 1963 Kenyatta became prime minister under a
constitution that gave Kenya self-government. Following further
discussions in London, Kenya became fully independent on Dec. 12, 1963.
A year later, when Kenya became a republic (with Kenyatta as its first
president and Oginga Odinga as vice president), most KADU members had
transferred their allegiance to KANU, and KADU ceased to exist.
The Republic of Kenya
Kenyatta’s rule
In 1964 Kenyatta sought the help of British troops to suppress a
mutiny by the army. The president then introduced better service
conditions and promotion prospects to the army, although the proportion
of Kenyatta’s own Kikuyu people in the officer corps steadily increased.
At the same time, to forestall any new opposition, Kenyatta tried
consistently to appoint members of different ethnic groups to official
posts, with all the patronage such appointments conferred. Ideological
differences led to disagreements with Vice President Odinga, whom
Kenyatta had appointed to satisfy the powerful Luo. Odinga believed
that, by adopting a pro-Western, essentially capitalist economic policy,
the government was neglecting the interests of poorer people. He broke
with KANU to form a new opposition party, the Kenya People’s Union
(KPU), but his position was weakened by legislation that required
elected officials who switched parties to resign their seats and run for
reelection. By contrast, Kenyatta’s authority was strengthened because
greater powers had been given to the office of president.
Kenyatta responded to Odinga’s claims about his neglect of the poor
by redistributing hundreds of thousands of small landholdings to
Africans; this was made possible by a satisfactory financial settlement
with European farmers who were prepared to leave the country amicably.
Not all the new landowners were successful, but living standards
improved widely enough to ensure continued support for the government.
The assassination in July 1969 of Tom Mboya, a KANU founder who had
been serving as minister of economic planning and development, widened
still further the serious ethnic gap that had already emerged as a
result of Odinga’s fall from grace. Mboya, like Odinga, was a Luo,
though neither had pursued ethnic goals. Their supporters among the Luo,
however, believed there was a Kikuyu plot, centred on Kenyatta, that
threatened Luo interests. The division grew greater after October 1969,
when Odinga and some of his leading party members were arrested and the
KPU was banned. The arrested men were subsequently released, and Odinga
himself was freed in 1971 when the president endeavoured to achieve a
measure of reconciliation and national unity. The transfer of more than
1,500,000 acres (600,000 hectares) of government land to a group of
wealthy Kenyans, many of whom were Kikuyu, proved to be less profitable
than had been hoped, largely because the new owners were bad managers.
This and similar actions only provided more fuel for those, like Odinga,
who accused the government of self-interest and for those who believed
there was an ethnic plot to benefit the Kikuyu at the expense of other
ethnic groups.
Another coup attempt was defused in 1971, and in its wake Kenyatta
once again responded by improving the pay and conditions of military
service, but, at the same time, he made sure that the army remained
small in size. Odinga and other former KPU leaders were prevented from
running in the parliamentary elections of 1974 by new regulations that
forbade the candidacy of anyone who had not been a member of KANU for
the previous three years. The challenge to Kenyatta was then taken up in
the National Assembly by Josiah Mwangi Kariuki, another former supporter
of KANU. Kariuki was critical of growing corruption in the government,
and he won considerable support when increasing oil prices and the
consequent worldwide inflation caused hardship among the poorer members
of the community. His murder in March 1975, which the government tried
to cover up, aroused angry protests, particularly among younger members
of the parliament, whose criticisms of the government came to have
increasing significance.
The question of who should succeed the aging president exacerbated
the disagreements already existing among the country’s leaders. Kenyatta
himself encouraged no one to claim the inheritance, but leading Kikuyu
who had benefited greatly under his leadership plotted to secure a
complaisant successor. The attorney general, Charles Njonjo, though
himself a Kikuyu, opposed such a plan, as did another Kikuyu, the
minister of finance, Mwai Kibaki. Together the two ensured that, upon
Kenyatta’s death in August 1978, he was succeeded by his deputy, Daniel
arap Moi, a member of the minority Kalenjin people. Moi was elected
president in October, while Kibaki became vice president.
Moi’s rule
Misgivings about what would happen with the departure of such a
dominant figure as Kenyatta were soon dispelled. The transfer of power
took place smoothly, owing mainly to the skillful leadership of Njonjo
and Kibaki, but the transition was also helped by a boom in coffee
prices that eased the country’s economic problems to a considerable
extent. At first, Moi followed Kenyatta’s policy of distributing offices
among as many different ethnic groups as possible, but over the years
members of his own Kalenjin group acquired a disproportionate number of
appointments. Odinga was still critical of the government, and
university students supported him on idealistic grounds—and also because
they saw little prospect in the near future of being able to supplant
those holding the limited number of lucrative offices.
Moi felt most threatened by Njonjo. Exercising his almost
unassailable presidential powers, Moi began a campaign to discredit the
former kingmaker, who traded his appointment as attorney general for the
more vulnerable office of a cabinet minister in the newly created
Ministry of Constitutional Affairs. Njonjo’s responsibilities were cut,
as were those of Kibaki, who was considered by Moi to have become too
powerful because he commanded widespread Kikuyu support. Although Kenya
had been a de facto one-party state since 1969 (when the KPU was
banned), KANU’s power—as well as Moi’s—was reinforced in 1982 when the
KANU-dominated National Assembly amended the constitution, officially
designating KANU the only legal political party in the country. Moi’s
position was further bolstered when the army loyally rallied to suppress
an attempted coup later that same year by some of the lower-ranking
officers in the air force. A number of the leaders of the rebellion were
Luo, and many university students took part in the disturbances. Ethnic,
idealistic, and economic motives were thus joined together in
unsuccessful opposition to the government. Eager to prevent the students
from becoming effective leaders of discontented groups of ethnic or
impoverished minorities, Moi closed the universities temporarily when
opposition was voiced. Njonjo, meanwhile, was rendered ineffective when
he was found guilty of involvement in treason or subversion, although he
was pardoned because of his earlier services to the country. Odinga
continued to be subjected to periodic restrictions.
Generous financial support that had come from the Western powers
since independence was an important factor in ensuring that Kenya’s
precarious economy survived the traumas of inflation. Moi followed
Kenyatta’s example by continuing to align his country with the West. The
enormous increase in landownership among Africans in the
postindependence period also helped to create a modestly prosperous
class that was anxious to avoid revolutionary change, while the powers
vested in the presidency made successful opposition an unlikely
prospect.
Increasingly, however, Western financial aid came to be tied to
demands for political and economic reforms. It was for this reason that
in December 1991 Moi finally accepted a constitutional amendment that
reinstated multiparty elections. When elections were held the following
December, however, Moi was reelected, and, with the opposition divided,
KANU won a strong majority in the National Assembly. One opposition
party, Forum for the Restoration of Democracy (FORD), had been founded
in 1991 but by 1992 had split into two factions: FORD-Kenya, led by
Odinga until his death in 1994, and FORD-Asili, headed by Kenneth
Matiba.
Kibaki, who had left the government late in 1991, became the official
leader of the opposition after elections in 1997. Many Kenyans had hoped
that the various opposition parties would cooperate and field a single
candidate who would oust Moi, but there were more than eight on the
ballot. Moi, the incumbent, used the preexisting political network and
won by a large margin. Kibaki challenged the results in court, but his
case was dismissed. When appointing his cabinet, Moi selected KANU
members and continued to ignore the opposition. However, in July 1999,
in an apparent change of heart, Moi made Njonjo chairman of the Kenya
Wildlife Services and Richard Leakey head of the civil service and
permanent secretary to the cabinet. Leakey’s popularity was cited as the
main reason Moi appointed him to this post; the appointment was also
seen as Moi’s way of showing Kenya’s commitment to tackling the issues
of corruption and gross mismanagement in the government.
Kenya in the 21st century
Moi announced in 2002 that he would not run again for the
presidency, and Uhuru Kenyatta, son of Jomo Kenyatta, was chosen to be
KANU’s presidential candidate. Kibaki, this time representing a
coalition of opposition groups (the National Rainbow Coalition [NARC]),
soundly defeated Kenyatta in the 2002 presidential elections, thus
ending KANU’s long period of uninterrupted rule.
Although Kibaki pledged to fight the corruption that had plagued
Kenya under KANU’s rule, it continued to affect the country’s economic
and political credibility in the 21st century. In 2005 his
administration was embroiled in a corruption scandal, and later that
year a draft of a new constitution championed by Kibaki was defeated in
a national referendum; the defeat was largely perceived as protest
against Kibaki’s administration. The debate over the constitution
spawned a powerful new coalition of political parties, the Orange
Democratic Movement (ODM), which included KANU. In 2007 dissension
caused a rift within ODM, resulting in the formation of an additional
coalition group, the Orange Democratic Movement–Kenya (ODM-K).
Kibaki prepared for the December 2007 presidential and parliamentary
elections by forming a new coalition, the Party of National Unity (PNU),
which included some of the political parties that had previously formed
his NARC coalition. Surprisingly, PNU also included KANU despite its
position as an opposition party. There were several challengers to
Kibaki for the presidency, including Raila Odinga of ODM and Kalonzo
Musyoka of ODM-K. The election boasted a record-high voter turnout and
was one of the closest in Kenya’s history. The provisional results
indicated that Odinga would be victorious, but, when the final election
results were released after a delay, Kibaki was declared the winner by a
narrow margin. Odinga immediately disputed the outcome, and
international observers questioned the validity of the final results.
Widespread protests ensued throughout the country and degenerated into
horrific acts of violence involving some of Kenya’s many ethnic groups,
most notable of which were the Kikuyu (Kibaki’s group) and the Luo
(Odinga’s group); both groups were victims as well as perpetrators. More
than 1,000 people were killed and more than 600,000 were displaced in
the election’s violent aftermath as efforts to resolve the political
impasse between Kibaki and Odinga (including mediation attempts by
former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan) were not immediately successful.
On Feb. 28, 2008, Kibaki and Odinga agreed to a power-sharing plan
brokered by Annan and Jakaya Kikwete, the president of Tanzania and
chairman of the African Union. The plan called for the formation of a
coalition government between PNU and ODM and the creation of several new
positions, with Kibaki to remain president and Odinga to hold the newly
created post of prime minister. Despite the agreement, however, conflict
persisted over the distribution of posts. After several weeks of talks,
settlement on the allocation of cabinet positions between PNU and ODM
members was reached, and on April 13, 2008, President Kibaki named the
coalition government.
Kenneth Ingham
Mwenda Ntarangwi
Ed.