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Old 27th April 2008, 03:43 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tako la fisi View Post
who cares if ndungu report is released? it should be released for the whole world to see. You will notice a pattern, kenyatta, moi, kibaki, ruto, biwott,kosgey etc...are birds of a feather. You miss the point; kaleos are killing and displacing legitimate land owners under the pretense of illegal allocated land. This is a fight you cant win because it will set a dangerous precedence. You can use central province as a scapegoat but kalenjins are slowly and systematically isolating themselves. They are exposing themselves for the nimrods they are with retarded arguments. First they claimed the blood thirsty killing rampage was about election fraud a grand coalition was formed. Your time is up kalenjins; you cant disguise your savagery any longer. Don't pile the blame on central when you had moi for 24 yrs. Kalenjins cant use marginalization card when they kept voting for moi overwhelming on the expense of other kenyans sufferings. Orengo will just expose your backwardness and frivolous claims.

kibaki, uhuru, moi have enough land to settle the idp's(mau mau veteran's families between them- this is rediculus!!


the extended kenyatta family alone owns an estimated 500,000 acres — approximately the size of nyanza province — according to estimates by independent surveyors and ministry of lands officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The kibaki and moi families also own large tracts of land though most of the moi family land is held in the names of his sons and daughters and other close family members. Most of the holders of the huge parcels of land are concentrated within the 17.2 per cent part of the country that is arable.

The remaining 80 per cent is mostly arid and semi arid land. In fact, according to the kenya land alliance, more than a half of the arable land in the country is in the hands of only 20 per cent of the 30 million kenyans.

That has left up to 13 per cent of the population absolutely landless while another 67 per cent on average own less than an acre per person.
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