Goals
Time period
Country
Location City/State/Province
Methods in 1st segment
- planting of trees
- Planting trees on development sites.
Methods in 2nd segment
- planting of trees
- Planting trees on development sites.
Methods in 3rd segment
- planting of trees
Methods in 4th segment
- planting of trees
Methods in 5th segment
- planting of trees
Methods in 6th segment
- planting of trees
Segment Length
Leaders
Partners
External allies
Involvement of social elites
Opponents
Nonviolent responses of opponent
Campaigner violence
Repressive Violence
Cluster
Classification
Group characterization
Groups in 1st Segment
Groups in 2nd Segment
Segment Length
Success in achieving specific demands/goals
Survival
Growth
Total points
Database Narrative
The Karura forest is an urban 2500 acre forest in Nairobi.
The Kenyan government had a common practice of land grabbing or secretly
selling public lands to private companies and political allies. Wangari
Maathai, who later was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004, mobilized the
Green Belt Movement to action when developers began to clear sections of the
Karura forest to build luxury homes and offices for political allies of the
government in 1998.
On 28 September, Wangari Maathai wrote a letter to the attorney
general asking to halt destruction of the Karura forest and notified the press.
The Daily Nation newspaper hired a
helicopter to take aerial photographs of the cleared sections of the forest,
and published them on the front page.
Wangari Maathai and her organization, the Green Belt
Movement, stated to the government that they planned to reclaim the lost forest
by planting trees. On their first visit to the forest, they arrived at a
construction site where they found tractors, housing for construction workers,
and a group of young men. When they began planting trees the group of young
men attacked them with machetes and uprooted all the trees the Green Belt
Movement had planted. Construction workers arrived at the scene and saved the
Green Belt Movement demonstrators from harm.
Green Belt Movement members continued to visit the Karura
forest inviting the press to join them and established a tree nursery inside
the forest. They sometimes succeeded in persuading construction workers to let
them plant trees after explaining the environmental importance of the forest
and that it was being destroyed so the wealthy could live there; the
construction workers were victims, too.
On 7 October, Green Belt Movement members returned to the
construction site with members of the press to plant trees, and burned the
construction equipment at construction worker housing. No one was hurt.
The Green Belt Movement announced plans to return to the
forest on 17 October to water the seedlings in the nursery they established,
but were denied access by police. A fence had been erected around the forest
with a sign reading “Private Property.” Police guarded every entrance. Green
Belt Movement demonstrators entered the forest through the unguarded marsh at
the north of the forest. The police escorted the demonstrators out of the
forest allowing Wangari Maathai to finish watering the trees in the nursery.
The campaign to protect the Karura garnered international
attention and received the support of the United Nations Environment Programme.
On 5 December the Green Belt Movement invited delegates from Europe, Africa
and the Americas attending the Euro-African Green Conference in Nairobi to
visit their nursery in the Karura forest and plant trees there. They gave
notice of their visit to the police who met but did not stop the demonstrators.
The government then told those it sold land to that they
were responsible for the security of their plots. Cautious of confrontations
with armed guards, the Green Belt Movement decided not to attempt to enter the
forest, but to plant symbolic trees at the gate on 8 January 1999. Green Belt
Movement members were accompanied by journalists, Parliament members,
international observers, members of human rights watch organizations, and
affiliated organizations.
200 guards armed with machetes, whips, pangas, and
bows and arrows attacked the demonstrators and observers when they planted
trees at the gate. Green Belt Movement members instructed the group to run from
violent confrontations. The guards did not follow, but Wangari Maathai and
observers were injured, many suffering broken limbs. No one was killed.
The
police made no arrests, arguing that the demonstrators had entered private
property. It was reported that the police conversed with the guards before the
attack.
The attack was condemned by the U.S. ambassador, Kenyan clergy,
opposition members of Parliament, the press, and the United Nations. The
president countered that development of the Karura forest was the way of the
future, as the rest of Nairobi had been built on cleared forest.
Outrage over the 8 January attack provoked students at the
University of Nairobi to protest independently of the Green Belt Movement.
Students rammed the gate to the Karura forest with a tractor, and were beaten by
police even after fleeing to the United Nations Enviromental Programme
headquarters. Two students were hospitalized with serious injuries. The next
day students rioted shutting down the University.
Green Belt Movement members continued to visit the Karura
forest to plant trees. On 16 August 1999 the President banned the allocation of
public land. Development in the forest ceased and the security guards were removed.
Logging of the forest continued until a new government was elected in 2002, and
a partnership was made to restore the Karura Forest.
Influences
Earlier campaigns by Wangari Maathai: the protest against the Times Tower Complex to be built in Uhuru park (which did not use Nonviolent Direct Action), and the campaign to release political prisoners (see Kenyan mothers win release of political prisoners and press for democratic reform, 1992-1993)
Sources
"Kenya; Karura: On Whose Side Is The Government?." Africa News. (January 10, 1999 ): 379 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2013/03/14.
"ENVIRONMENT-KENYA: U.N. CHIEF CONDEMNS ASSAULT ON ECOLOGIST." IPS-Inter Press Service. (January 11, 1999 , Monday ): 716 words. LexisNexis Academic. Web. Date Accessed: 2013/03/14.
Maathai, Wangari. Unbowed. New York: Random House, Inc. 2006. p. 261-272.