Kenya's Interior Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho updates journalists
on the ongoing national census, at Teleposta in the capital Nairobi on
August 26, 2019. The working period for enumerators has been extended.
PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The Kenyan government has extended working hours for census
personnel across the country in order to speed up the process amid
concerns that many households were yet to be reached.
An
interministerial committee led by Interior Principal Secretary Karanja
Kibicho on Monday extended the enumeration time in populous urban
centres from 6am to 10pm.
It will end at 9pm in the rest of the country. Initially, the headcount was to begin at 6am and end at 6pm countrywide.
“Kenyans
think it’s taking too long for them to be counted. We have agreed to
extend the working hours, especially in the urban areas because they are
concentrated, from 6am to 10pm.
"This means that
enumerators in Nairobi, Mombasa Nakuru, Eldoret, Kisumu Kakamega, Nyeri,
Kiambu, Thika, Machakos and Kisii will stop knocking on your doors at
10pm,” Dr Kibicho said.
He was accompanied by his counterparts Saitoti Torome (Ministry of Planning), Jerome Ochieng (ICT) and Joe Okuda (Tourism).
IMPEDIMENTS
Kenyans online
took the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) to task, accusing
the agency of keeping them waiting in their houses in vain.
Aware
of the concerns, the committee also redeployed 10,000 enumerators who
had been assigned special areas like prisons, street families and hotels
to back up their colleagues counting people at home to speed up the
exercise.
“Those who have not been reached yet, we are
coming and we have time. Before the 31st, all households will have been
reached,” Dr Kibicho said.
The principal secretaries said the count had been running smoothly and had done better on Sunday.
However,
they regretted cases of insecurity and obstruction, with 35 such cases
recorded across the country. Sixteen people are already in court for
obstructing enumerators while the rest are being processed.
“It’s
against the law for anyone to impede their work. This borders on
criminality,” Dr Kibicho said. “We have not only arrested civilians, but
also some of our own officers who are hampering smooth flow, including
chiefs and KNBS staff.”
RURAL HOME
Prof
Torome appealed to enumerators who have not been paid the initial
Sh2,100 stipend to be patient, saying they were in the process of
sending them the money.
MPs, in a campaign to have
their constituents enumerated in their rural homes, led by example. The
leaders want to avoid having the boundaries of their constituencies
reviewed.
“I was counted at Mukurwe-ini together with our family. I have done my part in serving Mukurwe-ini,” local MP Anthony Kiai said.
Interior
Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i had cautioned politicians against
instructing urban dwellers to travel to their rural homes for the
census.
In Nyeri, former President Mwai Kibaki was the
first to be counted at his retirement home in Mweiga, Kieni
Constituency. For a long time, he preferred his Muthaiga home.
ICT
Cabinet Secretary Joe Mucheru was also counted at his Chaka home in
Kieni East. “This is home. It is a weekend and I like to come here often
to relax,” he said.
ALL INCLUDED
Regional Commissioner Wilfred Nyangwanga said people likely to be overlooked were also been included.
“Street
families, hospitals and prisons are what we call the special categories
and we prioritised them by counting them on the first night alongside
the VIPs in the region who include, governors, MPs, and Cabinet
secretaries,”
The nationwide census began on August 24 and will end on August 31.
The government has assured citizens of data privacy, saying it will be used strictly for planning.
By Anita Chepkoech Nicholas Komu, Regina Kinogu and Cynthia Wambugu
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