By AGGREY MUTAMBO amutambo@ke.nationmedia.com
Speaking in Nairobi on Saturday, Mr Kenyatta said
his government will continue to fish out peddlers to protect the youth
and instead involve them in environmental conservation.
“We have said that we will deal with those selling
drugs to our youth. We have also said that we will fight those selling
illicit alcohol that continues to ruin our youth,” he told a gathering
at Huruma grounds.
The President who was launching a city monthly
clean-up campaign said the Jubilee government would engage the youth in
environmental conservation projects which will also earn them a living
to distract them from drug abuse.
President Kenyatta urged the youth to join groups
to take advantage of the Sh6 billion allocated to the youth fund in the
2013-2014 budget once the government starts to disburse the money.
But those already in small businesses in the city
lamented that they were being bullied by city county authorities, being
charged heavily on licenses for garbage collection and generally lacking
premises to conduct their business.
In response, Mr Kenyatta told the crowd he would
liaise with the Nairobi county government to designate special places
for small-scale traders.
“We cannot succeed as a government if we don’t
empower our people to stand on their own. That is why we are saying
those in legal businesses should not be harassed. It is something that
irritates me,” he said.
“We want to fight criminals but those in legal
businesses should not be mistreated because doing that may turn them
into criminals. We would see to it that we have special places for them
and which we will ask them to do their businesses from.”
The city county askaris often chase down
hawkers in Nairobi streets arguing it is illegal to hawk. The hawkers
say they want to get nearer to customers.
The cleanup campaign is an initiative of the city
county to help regain Nairobi’s former glory as the ‘city in the sun.’
Under the slogan ‘my waste my responsibility’, the county seeks to have
city residents make it a tradition to clean where they stay.
“The president said “Let us all as residents of Nairobi and other towns treat cleanliness as a priority”.
And in a city where every resident produces at
least half a kilo of waste each day, it means the entire population
gives forth two tons of garbage per day, according to Nairobi Governor
Evans Kidero. Already, the county has allocated Sh700 million in its
budget for environmental conservation, but a lot still needs to be done.
In all of Nairobi rivers for example, fish cannot
survive because of the industrial and domestic waste emptied in there.
Pollution by vehicles is high, drainage poor and plastic litter all
over.
Although the programme will recur every last
Saturday of the month, the only dumpsite in Nairobi at Dandora is full
and residents want it relocated.
“This dumpsite at Dandora should be moved because it is harming our people,” said local MP George Wanjohi.
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