Samburu County - iDiasporan

Samburu County

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About

About Samburu County

As findings from the shores of Lake Turkana prove, the region has been inhabited since the dawn of the very first humans. In the past few centuries, the land has been roamed by various pastoralist peoples who constantly competed for pasture, water and animals.
In 1886, the first Europeans to travel through Samburu County, on their way to Lake Turkana, were the Hungarian Count Samuel Teleki and his Austrian companion Ludwig von Höhnel who gave the biggest permanent desert lake the name ‘Lake Rudolf’ (after Prince Rudolf, then archduke of the Austria-Hungary Empire). The name stuck until the 1970s, when it was officially renamed Lake Turkana.

The next Europeans to follow Teleki and von Höhnel were big game hunters who set camp at the animal-rich banks of the Ewaso Nyiro.

Development

Much of the dry vast north has always lagged behind in terms of development, one of the carryover legacies of British administration which shut off the region.When it was still part of the Northern Frontier District in colonial Kenya, Samburu Land could only be accessed after securing a special permit, and its remoteness was the reason Kenya’s first president, Jomo Kenyatta, was detained in Maralal as the British administration and Kenyan nationalists negotiated the terms of independence.

Now that Samburu is one of the 47 semi-autonomous counties, the local control over many affairs within the region will unleash the huge economic potential of the region, most obvious with a great future in tourism, among other sectors of the economy. A new tarmac highway being built from Isiolo to Ethiopia is likely to usher in a period of greater accessibility and security, and Samburu, like all the other counties in northern Kenya, will benefit mightily from this.

The name Samburu Land refers to the Samburu people who form the majority of the population. However, there are significant populations of other communities, notably the Turkana, Rendille, Borana and Pokot; the urban centres hold a mixture of people from all over Kenya.

Samburu’s peoples are pastoralists whose life has been revolving around the wellbeing of their goats, sheep, cattle, and in the more arid areas, camels. The Samburu are culturally related to the Maasai, and show a specifically rich and picturesque heritage of artful beadwork, songs and dances. Both women and warriors wear red dresses, but it is only the moran, the young fighters, who braid their hair as the skin is smeared with ochre, displaying an unmatched beauty of traditional Africa.

The Samburu share their Nilotic roots with the Pokots, their neighbors to the west, and the Turkana to the northwest, whereas Borana in the southeast and Rendille in the northeast are both of Cushitic lineage. Yet, culturally, the Rendille are the closest to the Samburu and practice almost identical traditions.

Vision

Creating a sustainable future through building preservation, green architecture, and smart design

Mission

The Company continues to move forward in become he leading Engineering and Construction firm in the world.

Expanding Goals

To further develop our corporate strengths we have established a corporate mandate to maintain strong core values.


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  • H.E Moses LenolKulal – Samburu County Governor
    H.E Moses LenolKulal – Samburu County Governor

    Devolution and the new constitutional dispensation has opened up a new dawn and a lifetime opportunity to the Samburu people, a fact that will enable them rebuild their lives for a prosperous future.

    Past government policies did not focus or take into account the development of the pastoralist economies and this has not only marginalized the pastoralist but has also exposed them to the effects of the harsh physical environmental and climatic conditions and thus making them even more vulnerable and susceptible.

    The fatal incidences of insecurity that have on many occasions taken toll of human life and hit the national headlines are indeed some of the outcomes and manifestations of underdevelopment and historical marginalization as residents compete for the scarce resources and strive to eke a living

    Our infrastructure is currently underdeveloped and poverty is still in the upper limit compared to the national average while insecurity is still talking toll of our people and therefore negatively affecting our socio-economic development.

    My government sees a lot of potential and opportunity to turn around the state of affairs in Samburu County by putting in place measures that will resuscitate our economic performance for improved standards of living of the pastoralist population. Our land is full of un-exploited potential in terms of minerals, wildlife, arable land for agriculture and range lands for livestock production.

    To reverse the trends the Samburu County Government will work towards reducing poverty first by putting in pace immediate measures that will address food insecurity in the County. Plans are already underway to promote food production by increasing the amount of arable land that is under cultivation and distribution of quality seeds, mechanisation of farming is already be executed by the Government to this effect.

    The tarmac of the Rumuruti – Maralal road has just commenced an undertaking that is of immense significance to the success of our development agenda and also a great relief to the Samburu County transport sector.

    We will exploit the great tourist potential that is endowed in our county, and make Samburu an exceptional tourist destination. Plans are underway to establish more conservancies and promote ecotourism, refurbish the existing facilities in the county while at the same time vigorously marketing our products both within and outside our borders. We are already pursuing plans to reclaim the lost glory of the Maralal Safari Lodge.

    We pledge to create and maintain a vibrant agro-pastoral economy where value addition of our products takes centre stage. We shall establish abboteurs, tanneries, milk processing plants among others in order to ensure that we are self sustaining and reduce dependence on relief food in the county.

    Harmony and peaceful co-existence is a task that is in the top of our priorities and agenda. Our unique socio-cultural diversity should be appreciated as a strength and nor a misplaced and archaic ideologies that divide our people and serve to perpetuate violence. We will relentlessly pursue measures to bring peace and totally secure our borders in order to recover lost time and engage our people in constructive and development oriented issues.

     


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