Yesterday I posted a news article "Wrangle Over Quarry Hurts Nairobi-Dar Road Project". After reading the article I was fuming and had to shut my computer off and try to calm down a bit. 24 hours later I am still angry and wonder if any other bushdrummers feel the same.
There is no question that the roads in that area need to be fixed. Last August while driving from Amboseli to Tsavo East I found the Kimana Road extremely dangerous. Before you get to the intersection where you would go straight to Oloitokitok or turn left for Tsavo West, there were huge crevasses in the middle of the road going 3 - 4 feet deep (huge gulleys). Thus in the article I do concur with the need to fix the roads.
However, building the quarry right in the middle of a wildlife corridor is totally insane. It is obvious from the article that making money is a huge part of this deal with little care of the wildlife, both on the part of the construction team and also on the part of the Maasai owner who is leasing the property to the Chinese road crew. The road construction crews insist it is the \"best rock\" to use. Are they in fact using that excuse so they can poach more wildlife? Why haven\'t NEMA and KWS arrested the DC, who moved the local .police in to prevent those who oppose the quarry at that site? He was obstructing the ruling of NEMA and KWS.
? paid off?
The Amboseli-Kimana area is full with unattractive volcanic rocks probably blown from Kilimanjaro when she last erupted thousands of years ago. Why can\'t these rocks be collected to fill the crevasses in the roads instead of dynamiting a quarry in a wildlife corridor? It would certainly make the places look more attractive, allow grass to grow where the rocks have been and would keep the Chinese road crews away from the wildlife corridor.
I know Kenya has a rule that NOTHING can be removed from a park or reserve. I can certainly understand that ruling if we are talking animal carcasses, wood - things that would break down and put minerals into the earth. However, if the volcanic rocks have been there for thousands of years it would appear they are not contributing much to the soil and could be moved to another area where needed.
Anyone else upset about this as I am?