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Kenya: Fear of attack leaves Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights prisoners in their homes

Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights and girls in Nairobi’s slums live under the constant threat of sexual violence, leaving them often too scared to leave their houses to use communal toilet and bathroom facilities, Amnesty International said in a report released today (7 July).

Insecurity and Indignity: Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights’s experiences in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya details how the  failure of the government to incorporate the slums in urban plans and budgets has resulted in poor access to services like sanitation, which hits Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights in slums and informal settlements especially hard.

Godfrey Odongo, Amnesty Internationals East Africa researcher, said:

“Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights in Nairobi’s settlements become prisoners in their own homes at night and some times well before it is dark. They need more privacy than men when going to the toilet or taking a bath and the inaccessibility of facilities make Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights vulnerable to rape, leaving them trapped in their own homes.

“The fact that they are unable to access even the limited communal toilet facilities also puts them at risk of illness.”

The situation is compounded by the lack of police presence in the slums and when Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights fall victim to violence they are unlikely to see justice done. Kibera, Nairobi’s largest slum and home to up to a million people, has no police post.

“I always underestimated the threat of violence,” said 19-year-old Amina of Mathare slum. “I would go to the latrine any time provided it was not too late. This was until about two months ago when I almost became a victim of rape.”

Amina was set upon by a group of four men while she walked to the latrine at 7pm. They hit her, undressed her and were about to rape her when her cries were heard and a group of residents came to save her. Although she knew one of the men involved in the assault, Amina did not go to the police as she feared reprisal attacks.

Unable to leave their one-roomed houses after dark, many Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights in informal settlements resort to ‘flying toilets’ – using plastic bags thrown from the home to dispose of waste.

Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights also told Amnesty International how the poor sanitary conditions they live in – which include widespread disposal of human excreta in the open because of lack of adequate access to toilets – directly contribute to cases of poor health and to high health care costs.

Other Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights describe the humiliation of bathing in front of their relatives and Children's rights.

Even by day, public bathroom facilities are few and far between and invariably involve walking long distances. According to official figures, only 24 per cent of residents in Nairobi’s informal settlements have access to toilet facilities at household level.

Despite some positive features, Kenya’s Millennium Development Goal (MDG) policies to meet the target on sanitation do not address the specific needs of Women's rights's rightss rights's rights's rights's rights who face the threat of violence because they lack adequate sanitation.

They also do not address the lack of enforcement of regulations requiring owners and landlords to provide sanitation.

Godfrey Odongo said:

 “There is a huge gap between what the government commits to do, and what is going on in the slums everyday.

“Kenya’s national policies recognise the rights to sanitation and there are laws and standards in place. However, because of decades of failure to recognise slums and informal settlements, planning laws and regulations are not enforced in these areas.

“The lack of enforcement of these laws has ensured that landlords and structure owners in the slums can get away without providing any toilets or shower places for their tenants”


Lack of security of tenure also remains a long-standing problem for tenants, despite a national land policy in place, removing any incentives that landlords or owners could have to ensure proper sanitation, and measures to increase security.

Amnesty International calls on the Kenyan government to enforce landlords’ obligations to construct toilets and bathrooms in the slums and settlements and provide assistance to structure owners who are unable to meet the costs of constructing toilets and bathrooms.

The government must also take immediate measures to improve security, lighting and policing and ensure that relevant government authorities coordinate their efforts to improve the water and sanitation situation in the settlements.

Read the report

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