ADD US

NEED FINANCIAL FREEDOM? THEN JOIN HELPING HANDS INTERNATIONAL TODAY! WHATSAPP: 07038136434

Pages

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Athletes trek 840-km to promote Peace

Top Kenyan athletes on Thursday completed a giant 840-kilometre (522-mile) “Walk for Peace” against ethnic violence, accompanied by cheering crowds. Former world marathon record holders Wilson Kipsang and Tegla Loroupe, as well dozens of other walkers, crossed the finish line in Kenya’s Rift Valley, where over 300 people have already been
killed clashes this year.

Rivalries between pastoralist communities competing for scarce resources, such as livestock and water, are worsened by easy access to automatic weapons and the absence of state security officers.”We have braved the sun and the rains, and even sometimes put our lives at danger,” said organiser John Kelai, a former Commonwealth marathon champion, who was inspired after he saw three of his uncles killed in cattle raids.

Wilson Kipsang
The 22-day trek, which saw communities along the route join the walk, took place through some of the hardest-hit areas. “Without peace we cannot nurture the young talent,” said Kipsang. “This area is affected so much with cattle rustling it is impacting development.”

Ethiopian running legend Haile Gebrselassie has backed the walk. Organisers had hoped we would attend the finale, but he eventually was unable to make the celebrations on Thursday. “When people are being killed and driven from their homes, it is a tragedy for all of us,” Gebrselassie said in an earlier statement.

The marathon march began in Kenya’s northern town of Lodwar in the volatile Turkana region on July 15, heading south for some 40 kilometres every day. The UN on Wednesday said at least 310 Kenyans have been killed and over 215,000 forced from their homes this year in ethnic violence in northern Kenya.

Tegla Loroupe
While violence between rival groups is common in Kenya’s northern Rift Valley regions, the number killed and forced to flee in the first six months of this year is already the same as the total for all of 2014. In May, some 75 people were killed in just four days of cattle raids and revenge attacks.


In 2014, 310 people were killed, 214 wounded and 220,000 displaced, according to the UN. The athletes, who were accompanied by communities affected by the violence in their walk, have raised over $90,000 towards funding a peace-building programme, said the Aegis Trust, which has worked to rebuild communities riven by conflict, notably in Rwanda after the 1994 genocide.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Drop your comments