Uhuru Grants Citizenship to Shonas & Tutsis Communities

Uhuru Grants Citizenship to Shonas & Tutsis Communities

Sinister

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President Uhuru Kenyatta granted Kenyan Citizenship to 1,670 members of the Shona community who relocated to Kenya from Zimbabwe between the 1930s and 1950s.

1,300 members of various Rwandese communities living in Kenya were also recognised.

The groups alongside the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) had been pushing for the recognition of the groups who migrated to Kenya, intermarried and settled for decades.

They came to Kenya as missionaries and established a church in Nairobi before settling in Kinoo, Kiambu County as illegal immigrants.

shona.jpg

88-year-old Mofat Ngwabi (Shona) poses for a photo with his wife and family in Nairobi UNHCR

"Your excellency the President of Kenya, since 1930, various groups of citizens who were not originally from our country moved and migrated into Kenya. Some of those include the Shona from Zimbabwe and some communities from Rwanda

"Further to your instructions your Excellency and pursuant to all positions of the relevant law, we are according citizenship to 1,670 members of the Shona community and 1,300 members of various Rwandese communities descendants of those who were living in our country since the 1930s and 1950s," Interior CS Fred Matiang'i announced during the Jamuhuri Day Celebrations on Friday, December 12, at Nyayo Stadium.

20 representatives of the Shona Community were presented with their citizenship documents in the presence of President Kenyatta.

In 2017, the Head of State also recognised the Makonde from Mozambique and Asians as Kenyan communities.

The KNHCR agitated for the Shona issue after its success with the Makonde, who had also been statelessness since their arrival in the 1940s as labourers in sugar and sisal plantations at the Coast.

Raouf Mazou, UNHCR director of Africa Bureau, said, “In the Great Lakes region, the main drivers of statelessness include discrimination, conflict in the law, migration before independence and lack of proof of nationality.”

Recognising Kenya's Shona community as legal citizens promotes the United Nation's goal to end statelessness by 2024.

shona 2.jpg

Members of the Shona community protest at the County Government headquarters in Kiambu in 2019
 
So they Migrated to Kenya in 1930's and granted citizenship in 2020,
Mods why are you allowing such madness in this platform,
Please delete this stupidity.
 
So they Migrated to Kenya in 1930's and granted citizenship in 2020,
Mods why are you allowing such madness in this platform,
Please delete this stupidity.
What is so complex about the explanation for the lack of recognition/documentation of the Shona and Tutsi communities as Kenyans, that you couldn't grasp? I mean, the few paragraphs in the article are all written in very simple and standard english.
 
Taarifa kama hizi hunikosha sana kwa kweli, asante Rais kwa hili, haina maana watu mnacheza nao tangu utotoni halafu ukubwani unaambiwa sio raia kisa wazazi wao walihamia miaka ya kitambo.

Nakumbuka kuna wakati kule Tanzania walikua wanapakia watu wenye asili ya Rwanda kwenye malori, yaani hadi huruma jameni, kunao walikua wanasema wameishi Tanzania hata kabla kupata uhuru ila hilo halikua linasklizwa.
 
So they Migrated to Kenya in 1930's and granted citizenship in 2020,
Mods why are you allowing such madness in this platform,
Please delete this stupidity.
Jinga wewe. This is Kenyan news. Peleka kichwa kibovu chako mahali pengine kama hupendi hii habari. This is Kenyan news, unafanya nini hapa? Si uende kwa mahaba section. Ghasia.
 
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