Una notícia recent publicada per la UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs explica com la situació actual ha afectat les plantacions dels voltants de Limuru, on és Kimlea.
Blow to horticulture
The horticultural industry, which is a major employer, has also been hard hit. "There is fear all over with vehicles being burnt. Most of our clients are also not placing orders for our products," Gerrison Wachira, a grader with the horticultural farmers and exporters' organisation, said.
"We rely on produce coming in from some of the worst-affected areas, such as Eldoret, for passion fruits," Wachira said.
He said the organisation, which had already laid off casual workers, had been on the verge of closing. "We are going to ship our produce for the first time this month next week," he said.
The organisation normally ships its produce three times a month and employs at least 80 casual workers who earn 300 shillings ($4) per day. Other horticultural organisations employ hundreds of casual workers.
"Most firms have reduced their manpower," he said.
The organisation, which mainly relies on road transport by night, has been hit by the insecurity, with most stakeholders considering using local airports, which are more expensive, to transport their produce.
"The government should ensure that there is security for everyone," Wachira said. "The leaders should talk together and preach peace; they are the ones who have not communicated with the people."
According to the Secretary General of the Kenyan chapter of the Central Organisation of Trade Unions (COTU), Francis Atwoli, the crisis will have hit the broader economy.
Already, at least 60,000 people lost their jobs in tea farms in Kericho, 20,000 in Nandi hills, and 10,000 in Limuru, Atwoli said. Another 40,000 workers were let go in Naivasha, with the government providing security in the horticultural farms in the area, he said. Hundreds more had lost jobs within commerce, in banks and supermarkets, for example, after finding it unsafe to continue working in some areas, he said.
At least 400,000 people are expected to lose their jobs if the crisis continues, with a knock-on effect in neighbouring, landlocked Uganda, which relies heavily on Kenya's transport network for its imports.
Some industries in the country were not functioning as they should, with employees being laid off, Uganda's deputy prime minister, Eriya Kategaya, said on local television on 30 January. "Factories are being forced to retrench workers," Kategaya said.
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