Issues Archive

Issues filters
Search
  • The Somali Wire 273
  • The Ethiopian Cable 30
  • The Horn Edition 30
Archive
Filter by tags
Search
  • The Somali Wire 273
  • The Ethiopian Cable 30
  • The Horn Edition 30
Archive
Filter by tags
  • Published June 5, 2025

    For decades, much of Northern Kenya has wrestled with cyclical violence rooted in pastoralist competition over livestock and grazing land. But what was once culturally regulated pastoralist raiding has gradually devolved into a militarised, profit-driven enterprise. Intersecting with both food security and climate change, banditry and cattle rustling are intensifying, with an August 2024 report by the National Crime Research Centre documenting a sharp rise in the past year, resulting in over 300 fatalities and many thousands more displaced or impoverished. The government's attempts to stifle the violence have further struggled in the face of Kenya's cost-of-living crisis, as well as the participation of corrupt, vested political interests in Nairobi.

Scroll