Excellent journalism..... by any standard. No wonder that your otherwise beautiful country does not work. This corruption, the bribing and stealing, is absolutely devastating!
Thanks for this documentary. I am huge fan of African Uncensored. I particularly love how the channel continues to push the boundaries of investigative journalism, with a heavy focus on human interest stories. I am a journalist and an editor with a mainstream publication, so I should know the incredible work you folks are doing. However, I could not go past this first episode because the reporter has allowed 'experts' and 'talking heads' to get in between a beautiful story. I don't understand the rationale behind including the voices of Jerotich Seii and Irungu Houghton (both amazing people) early in the documentary. What value exactly do they add to the story even when we are yet to hear the voices of ordinary people living in the ghettos who are struggling with lack of basic amenities? I felt like they disrupted the flow of the story. Including expert voices is not an inherently bad thing, in fact, it is a standard practice in investigative documentaries. However, the reporter in this case should also conduct extensive research to avoid the temptation of bringing in experts to act as fillers. Experts, I believe, should be called upon to clarify issues, and this should be organic. Their views should spring from what the story is saying, not them 'leading' us to how we should interpret the story.
People in Kibera and Mathare slums should be empowered to handle their problems themselves. The area could be divided up, and a board could be formed by randomly picked persons who would be replaced also randomly every 12 months, and then given resources in form of an allowance while being on the board, plus access to get the service personnel from KPLC, and Nairobi Water to work for them. The board would make plans for what should be done, then there should be allocated sufficient funds for some work to be done, and then the board should be the judge of results. The power should be made cheaper for slum dwellers and so should water. I am myself one of those who cannot tell what the solution should be. Except that the solution should be thought out by these good people themselves and then authorities should be the ones carrying out the work. As in: If there are 3 million people settled in one of these slums, and it takes, say, 1 day to connect 8 homes properly in a structured way, then Nairobi Water could hire trainers to train other trainers in proper water connection and proper electricity connection and then have their own staff direct those locally trained people to do the last mile connections. A part of the solution could be to simply distribute small but very high quality solar panels and batteries to everyone. And on the water side - to create proper distribution points with high speed filling of jerrycans (like a 1.5 inch pressured pipe which can be operated electrically and fill a jerrycan in for instance 5 seconds without spilling (timed accurately). This would stop the queues and if the cost of Jerry canned water could be simply set to kshs 0 - free - then cartels would die out. Lastly the sewage must also be dealt with. Public toilets everywhere which are maintained clean could be a solution. Again. The people living there should be in charge. The issue I am trying to address is to avoid pipes and wires totally. Whether water, electricity or sewage. And centralize those. Lastly but not the least: The garbage must be sorted out. The garbage is actually an energy source if collected and incinerated at high temperature. As it is now it spreads disease and discomfort. Therefore garbage could be collected against payment. Garbage trucks could be stationed at the entrances to these slums and everyone who brings a can of garbage will be paid 1 kshs. Every truckload would carry some 800 canisters of garbage (20 liter Jerry cans), resembling roughly 20 tonnes of garbage. That would cost the municipality 800 Bob for the garbage and a similar amount in diesel and salaries to drive to the incinerator. The maybe 30000 to 50000 truckloads necessary to drive away could be sorted out within a couple of years and it would not cost the city much, and the way to do it could continue but at a sustainable level, when the piles have been cleared. Every household produces approximately 0.5 kilogram of garbage per day. In the slum maybe 1 million households host 3 million people, leaving thereby some 500 tonnes of garbage per day, or, 25 truck loads per day. 1 years of garbage thereby resembles some 8000 truck loads. Hence the possible clearing of some 30000 to 50000 truckloads over a few years before continuing with the maybe 25 truckloads per day. If organised a bit the necessary maybe 300 truckloads per day could be carried out with 1 truck doing 3 round trips per day, thereby occupying 100 trucks ferrying garbage every day for some years until it can be reduced to 25 or so per day.
@@blueisthecolor3004 they built the houses but did nothing to the slum. I saw in the news, read online. Rwanda built houses for their poor, wish our government could emulate Rwanda. But watu hawatosheki people in Rwanda complain that the government houses are far from their places of work. So gava ikiprovide housing pia inaexpectiwa iprovide source of livelihood. It seems solving one problem creates another. But its better they eliminate the slums first and worry about jobs later. This way the international media will have few negative things to say about Kenya. I saw a comment somewhere that Nigerians think Kenyans are poor n am sure it's coz of the numerous documentaries about kibera by the western media.
Can't find the Mpesa number on the description to Support Africa Uncensored. Please help pin it on chat Box or include it on the documentary description,if possible
Hi Mesh, here are the mpesa details. Pay Bill- 880100, Account number- 2511150152. We appreciate your feedback and have included it on the description. Thank You.
Can the myth that Kibera is the largest slum in Africa end??? That claim was made way back in the late 2000s by NGOs who used to claim that Kibera had nearly a million people in order to get donor funds. The last two censuses have highlighted the fact that Kibera is not only not that dense, it is not even the largest slum in Nairobi. Mukuru slums is the largest. According to the 2019 census, Kibera slum is entirely in Kibra Constituency and covers 4 of its 5 wards excluding Woodley-Golf Course estate ward. When you exclude Woodley, Kibra constituency has a total population of around 130, 000 people. Well below the 700,000-1 million claimed by some NGOs. It is also sad to see a Kenyan journalist making this claim when it has been debunked(several times now) even by our own media, the census and even by looking at things like number of voters coming from Kibera who would represent most of the adult population there.
If you belive there are 130k people in Kibera you are either high or have never stepped on Nairobi. If only 130k people lived in kibera they would each live on a quarter acre plot
@@u-know-this I literally live in Nairobi. 2. You must be extremely poor in Mathematics and have poor eyesight if you think 130k people would have a quarter acre in Kibera. All of Kibera occupies 2.38 square kilometers. This is not me who said this, this is a figure you can find on every survey of Nairobi and also something you can literally use Google Maps to measure. You can literally see the entire slum from one vantage point in Lang'ata. It really is not that big. It has a lot of people squeezed in one area but Kibera is not big. Even in terms of size, Mukuru combined with Viwandani is bigger physically. If the claim that Kibera had 700,000 people was true, it would mean that Kibera has 300,000 people per square kilometer And this is a a slum with very few buildings going above three floors. Unless the people sleep while standing and do not move whatsoever, this is an impossibility. There is no place on Earth that is that densely populated Even at 130,000 people, Kibera is more congested than many highrise slumburbia estates like Pipeline where at least it can make sense because many buildings of even to 10 floors. Kibera has 130,000 people. Unless you want to dispute 20 years of data or want to claim that Kibera occupies like all of Nairobi province
And this is where they elected a person like jalango to safe them someone with NO HISTORY of what goes on there kenya count your safe out of development in africa
If the government tries to finish this cartels, kibera and mathare would burn into chaos while they say the govt is interfiering with them because of their political stand....yani it would be politicised
There is no good planning in kenya, I have seen new water pipes coming to Nairobi but there is another story, do you know people are subdividing land even in nyandarua where we have arable land to farm
Government siku zote ijali wananchi ni God tu tutawachia juu enyewe hapa kwa dunia😂mumeshinda.yani tunasauti..iwezi kua since independence kuna getto na kila prezo akiingia anaiwacha vile ilikua…nisawa tu.niuchungu sana kuona vile binadamu wana ishi ju wenye power wamekalia nare…uiiongea unapigwa.ipo siku 🙏🏿
Hi. Av tried to support but am not yet able . Kindly directly guide me. I value ur stuff. God bless u. I know without support ur objectivity isnt guaranteed .
African uncensored deserves an award for the best documentaries and undercover journalism
Good work. How I pray that many Kenyans discover this channel. No reward is enough to mark the good work you guys do. Keep it up.
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This are the documentaries we want to see exposing the real Africa
Do you watch Jim Nduruchi thank you
Excellent journalism..... by any standard.
No wonder that your otherwise beautiful country does not work.
This corruption, the bribing and stealing, is absolutely devastating!
World class journalism,Great content from Africa uncensored
CS George Magoha, I thought you kicked ule mtungi last week.
THIS IS NEWS👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
May The Entire Team Receive Their Flowers💐🖤✨
ThankYou so much for choosing to Present Truth & Enlightening Information 🌿
You are so welcome. Glad you loved the piece.
this is our home.. RIP to Eliza the kid that was electrocuted.
cartels are killing our pockets and endangering our lives
Thanks for this documentary. I am huge fan of African Uncensored. I particularly love how the channel continues to push the boundaries of investigative journalism, with a heavy focus on human interest stories. I am a journalist and an editor with a mainstream publication, so I should know the incredible work you folks are doing. However, I could not go past this first episode because the reporter has allowed 'experts' and 'talking heads' to get in between a beautiful story. I don't understand the rationale behind including the voices of Jerotich Seii and Irungu Houghton (both amazing people) early in the documentary. What value exactly do they add to the story even when we are yet to hear the voices of ordinary people living in the ghettos who are struggling with lack of basic amenities? I felt like they disrupted the flow of the story. Including expert voices is not an inherently bad thing, in fact, it is a standard practice in investigative documentaries. However, the reporter in this case should also conduct extensive research to avoid the temptation of bringing in experts to act as fillers. Experts, I believe, should be called upon to clarify issues, and this should be organic. Their views should spring from what the story is saying, not them 'leading' us to how we should interpret the story.
Do you watch Jim Nduruchi thank you
Thank you for your constructive criticism, Amol. We will look to improve on this in our next one.
you genius.
Leave my People alone go and ask Chebukati
This is eye opening cz you get to understand how things work..greed, corruption,selfishness and desperation
*I LOVE THIS CHANNEL THIS ID WHAT WE NEED KENYAN REAL STORIES DOCUMENTARY*
Lawlessness and corruption is beyond repair.
The chain goes all the way up to the guys in the top management. Impressive work. Keep it up.
People in Kibera and Mathare slums should be empowered to handle their problems themselves.
The area could be divided up, and a board could be formed by randomly picked persons who would be replaced also randomly every 12 months, and then given resources in form of an allowance while being on the board, plus access to get the service personnel from KPLC, and Nairobi Water to work for them.
The board would make plans for what should be done, then there should be allocated sufficient funds for some work to be done, and then the board should be the judge of results.
The power should be made cheaper for slum dwellers and so should water.
I am myself one of those who cannot tell what the solution should be. Except that the solution should be thought out by these good people themselves and then authorities should be the ones carrying out the work.
As in: If there are 3 million people settled in one of these slums, and it takes, say, 1 day to connect 8 homes properly in a structured way, then Nairobi Water could hire trainers to train other trainers in proper water connection and proper electricity connection and then have their own staff direct those locally trained people to do the last mile connections.
A part of the solution could be to simply distribute small but very high quality solar panels and batteries to everyone. And on the water side - to create proper distribution points with high speed filling of jerrycans (like a 1.5 inch pressured pipe which can be operated electrically and fill a jerrycan in for instance 5 seconds without spilling (timed accurately). This would stop the queues and if the cost of Jerry canned water could be simply set to kshs 0 - free - then cartels would die out.
Lastly the sewage must also be dealt with. Public toilets everywhere which are maintained clean could be a solution.
Again. The people living there should be in charge.
The issue I am trying to address is to avoid pipes and wires totally. Whether water, electricity or sewage. And centralize those.
Lastly but not the least: The garbage must be sorted out.
The garbage is actually an energy source if collected and incinerated at high temperature. As it is now it spreads disease and discomfort.
Therefore garbage could be collected against payment. Garbage trucks could be stationed at the entrances to these slums and everyone who brings a can of garbage will be paid 1 kshs.
Every truckload would carry some 800 canisters of garbage (20 liter Jerry cans), resembling roughly 20 tonnes of garbage. That would cost the municipality 800 Bob for the garbage and a similar amount in diesel and salaries to drive to the incinerator. The maybe 30000 to 50000 truckloads necessary to drive away could be sorted out within a couple of years and it would not cost the city much, and the way to do it could continue but at a sustainable level, when the piles have been cleared.
Every household produces approximately 0.5 kilogram of garbage per day. In the slum maybe 1 million households host 3 million people, leaving thereby some 500 tonnes of garbage per day, or, 25 truck loads per day.
1 years of garbage thereby resembles some 8000 truck loads.
Hence the possible clearing of some 30000 to 50000 truckloads over a few years before continuing with the maybe 25 truckloads per day.
If organised a bit the necessary maybe 300 truckloads per day could be carried out with 1 truck doing 3 round trips per day, thereby occupying 100 trucks ferrying garbage every day for some years until it can be reduced to 25 or so per day.
Government will never have such kind of plans
@@liznyaga5525 that project had already started, but it was politicised, kwani are you from England? Umekuja Kenya juzi?
@@blueisthecolor3004 they built the houses but did nothing to the slum. I saw in the news, read online. Rwanda built houses for their poor, wish our government could emulate Rwanda. But watu hawatosheki people in Rwanda complain that the government houses are far from their places of work. So gava ikiprovide housing pia inaexpectiwa iprovide source of livelihood. It seems solving one problem creates another. But its better they eliminate the slums first and worry about jobs later. This way the international media will have few negative things to say about Kenya. I saw a comment somewhere that Nigerians think Kenyans are poor n am sure it's coz of the numerous documentaries about kibera by the western media.
no rubbish incinerator in Africa.
This illegal electricity connection is so dangerous
Always on the front with in-depth knowledge and research...kazi poa John and the team
Hello
nice expose we need reporters like your team
For the good work John Allan Namu is doing it is my duty to contribute. I don’t have much but the little could buy a journalist a days meal
This is brilliant work!
Can't find the Mpesa number on the description to Support Africa Uncensored. Please help pin it on chat Box or include it on the documentary description,if possible
Hi Mesh, here are the mpesa details. Pay Bill- 880100, Account number- 2511150152.
We appreciate your feedback and have included it on the description. Thank You.
Thank you so much.
Excellent work. Keep up the good Journalism
No State Benefits in Kenya even for Widows or Orphans
Thank you for this.
*BEST DOCUMENTARY EVER*
The problem in kenya is the cartels...we remove all of them and we have very good country...
Where finished as a country, its a ticking bomb Hatari Sanaa!
Great investigative documentary
Very amazing documentary, keep up the good work.
Killing is killing whether through electricity or through mugging.
Kenya is immensely lawless
Seeing them put off electrical fire with water as a fire marshal 😢😢
Can the myth that Kibera is the largest slum in Africa end???
That claim was made way back in the late 2000s by NGOs who used to claim that Kibera had nearly a million people in order to get donor funds.
The last two censuses have highlighted the fact that Kibera is not only not that dense, it is not even the largest slum in Nairobi. Mukuru slums is the largest.
According to the 2019 census, Kibera slum is entirely in Kibra Constituency and covers 4 of its 5 wards excluding Woodley-Golf Course estate ward.
When you exclude Woodley, Kibra constituency has a total population of around 130, 000 people. Well below the 700,000-1 million claimed by some NGOs.
It is also sad to see a Kenyan journalist making this claim when it has been debunked(several times now) even by our own media, the census and even by looking at things like number of voters coming from Kibera who would represent most of the adult population there.
Good information
If you belive there are 130k people in Kibera you are either high or have never stepped on Nairobi. If only 130k people lived in kibera they would each live on a quarter acre plot
@@u-know-this I literally live in Nairobi.
2. You must be extremely poor in Mathematics and have poor eyesight if you think 130k people would have a quarter acre in Kibera.
All of Kibera occupies 2.38 square kilometers. This is not me who said this, this is a figure you can find on every survey of Nairobi and also something you can literally use Google Maps to measure.
You can literally see the entire slum from one vantage point in Lang'ata. It really is not that big.
It has a lot of people squeezed in one area but Kibera is not big. Even in terms of size, Mukuru combined with Viwandani is bigger physically.
If the claim that Kibera had 700,000 people was true, it would mean that Kibera has 300,000 people per square kilometer
And this is a a slum with very few buildings going above three floors.
Unless the people sleep while standing and do not move whatsoever, this is an impossibility.
There is no place on Earth that is that densely populated
Even at 130,000 people, Kibera is more congested than many highrise slumburbia estates like Pipeline where at least it can make sense because many buildings of even to 10 floors.
Kibera has 130,000 people.
Unless you want to dispute 20 years of data or want to claim that Kibera occupies like all of Nairobi province
blame NGo.
Early this month the cartels connected Langata estates with sewer so they can supply the water using water bowsers,
Wacha nikae ushago 🤮🤮
good job, interesting
Thank you! Cheers!
When we see these residents travelling upcountry, it means they likely left arable land for this life?
Let the government build affordable houses and put everything in order that is the only way this can stop
I just hope someone in authority sees the plight of Kenyas and does something asap... Everyone has the constitutional right to basic necessities...
No one is going to come and rescue Kenyans, power concedes nothing unless pushed. Kenyans must unite and take back the country from the minority.
And this is where they elected a person like jalango to safe them someone with NO HISTORY of what goes on there kenya count your safe out of development in africa
WE LOVE YOU
I live in kibera makina this is what real happening there bt government don't care
Hata nani aseme, we don't love our country. The love of money is killing us, slowly but surely.
Good content ☺️
Do you know SHOFCO?
If the government tries to finish this cartels, kibera and mathare would burn into chaos while they say the govt is interfiering with them because of their political stand....yani it would be politicised
Where is Sakaja??????
There is no good planning in kenya, I have seen new water pipes coming to Nairobi but there is another story, do you know people are subdividing land even in nyandarua where we have arable land to farm
I like Jeroh says it as it ought to be
People are SLEEPING on this channel bro. Who will save Kenya surely?
The President does not know?
I am not surprised hii ni Kenya
They are called KPLC. Kibera power.
What is the solution?
why are they uising water to put out fire caused by electricity
And the opposition leader is against Slum upgrading program
Where is UKAid? USAid?
mpaka imewekwa kwa news, wizi wa maji
Kennedy Odede?
Can you see Save the Children? Amref? Comic Relief?
Kenyatta a Multi Billionaire did nothing
hapo kwa pipes naona duct za fiber hahaH,,the purple ones are stolen from liquid telecom, green ones safaricom and the white ones are from GOK(nofbi)
Alafu mwana siasa anaenda kujipiga kifua mbele ya umati
Am a living witness this is not new to me
Government siku zote ijali wananchi ni God tu tutawachia juu enyewe hapa kwa dunia😂mumeshinda.yani tunasauti..iwezi kua since independence kuna getto na kila prezo akiingia anaiwacha vile ilikua…nisawa tu.niuchungu sana kuona vile binadamu wana ishi ju wenye power wamekalia nare…uiiongea unapigwa.ipo siku 🙏🏿
Babu for president
Very interesting and necessary exposé. Would have been a 10/10 were it not for the narrators questionable accent.
This video is very missleading especially about kibra
It's called Slumic state
Sequestered in poverty
Hi. Av tried to support but am not yet able . Kindly directly guide me. I value ur stuff. God bless u. I know without support ur objectivity isnt guaranteed .
Hi, sorry for that. You can send us an M-Pesa on the below details
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Rats! Human Waste!
How people play god is disgusting
The title should be gava mwitu😁