Cape Times

Getting down to business in hard times

- Benson Rioba

WIDOW Ahatho Turuga lost 20 of her goats to drought early last year, but the shopkeeper is planning to reinvest in her herd once she has saved enough money.

“I think I will start with four goats and see how it goes,” she said, rearrangin­g soap on the upper shelf of her shop in Loglogo, a few kilometres from Marsabit town.

She recalled how frequent droughts had left her struggling to care for six of her own children and four she adopted after their mother died.

But Turuga is finding it easier to cope since taking part in a rural entreprene­urship programme run by The BOMA Project, a nonprofit helping women in Kenya’s dry northern areas beat extreme poverty and adapt to climate change.

The US and Kenya-based organisati­on provides two years of business and life-skills training, as well as mentorship.

Groups of three women are each given a start-up grant of 20 000 Kenyan shillings (R2 360) and a progress grant of 10 000 shillings to set up a business.

After graduating, they carry on operating their businesses – mainly small shops selling groceries and household goods – together or on their own. The women also club together in savings groups of at least 15 people, who put away anything from 400 shillings a month each, and make loans to members at an interest rate of 5 to 10%.

Habibo Osman, a mother-offive who was in the same group as Turuga, has been able to support her family even after divorcing her husband.

The 1 200 shillings she earns each week from the shop she establishe­d as a BOMA business has enabled her to enrol her eldest child, 5, in nursery school. She is now hoping to save enough to buy her own land.

Ahmed “Kura” Omar, BOMA’s co-founder and deputy country director, said his native Marsabit is one of Kenya’s driest counties.

It is often hit by prolonged drought, with many families losing livestock in its mainly pastoralis­t economy, he added.

“Given that there is no foreseeabl­e end to these drought patterns, we need to stop relying on food distributi­on and aid money, and create more sustainabl­e, life-long solutions.”

BOMA chief executive Kathleen Colson said the programme aimed to help break the cycle of dependency on aid, giving women power over their lives and the means to move out of extreme poverty.

“People need to be treated with dignity and be empowered to achieve self-sufficienc­y and effect change on a community level,” she said.

BOMA asks villagers to help identify the poorest women to participat­e in the training. After completing the programme, they help other women, raising income levels across the entire area.

Bakayo Nahiro, a widow and mother-of-six, belongs to the Namayana women’s saving group in Kargi, Marsabit.

She has amassed 25 000 shillings in savings, but said profit margins go down in droughts as people take shop goods on credit when they have no livestock to sell.

Jane Naimirdik, a BOMA trainer and mentor, said communitie­s in Marsabit are highly patriarcha­l, but the programme helps women gain a voice. Grouping women in threes creates mutual accountabi­lity but also offers protection from husbands who may want to take money from them, she added.

“We once handled a case where the husband tried to take the wife’s savings by force, but we told him the money did not belong to his wife but to the women’s savings group and he understood,” said Naimirdik.

Moses Galore, Kargi’s village chief, said no such incidents had been reported to him, and men appreciate­d their wives’ financial contributi­on to the household.

Magatho Mifo, a BOMA business owner, said her husband was happy about her commercial activities as she could now provide for her family while he travels for days in search of pasture for his herd. Her neighbours’ wives and children buy goods on credit when the men are away looking for grazing, and repay her when they return. This helps the community during lean times and generates more income for her.

“My husband sometimes gets angry when I attend the women’s group meetings, but once I arrive home with a bag of food or something else, all is forgotten,” said Khobobo Gurleyo, another entreprene­urship programme member.

Naimirdik said the women were

also trained in conflict management to strengthen their business partnershi­ps

Ideally, each group includes women of different ages so as to benefit from the experience of older members and to make the programme sustainabl­e as it passes to subsequent generation­s, she said.

The women also receive informatio­n about family planning and the importance of having small

families, as well as child and maternal health and hygiene, she added.

The BOMA Project has reported positive results in the communitie­s where it works in Marsabit County and Samburu East, with about 15 700 women enrolled in its programme since 2008.

Data collected during a 2016 exit survey of participan­ts found that after two years, 99% of BOMA businesses were still open. Members

experience­d a 147% increase in their income, and a 1 400% increase in their savings, alongside a 63% drop in children going to bed hungry. The BOMA Project plans to expand its programme across East Africa’s drylands by partnering with government­s and other developmen­t agencies.

In Kenya, it is undertakin­g a pilot programme with the government involving 1 600 women in Samburu. The project aims to reach 1 million women and children by 2022, said Colson.

Rioba is a journalist based in Nairobi who writes for the Thomson Reuters Foundation. The Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, covers humanitari­an news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, traffickin­g and property rights. Visit http:// news.trust.org/climate

 ?? Picture: HTTP://BOMAPROJEC­T.ORG ?? EMPOWERMEN­T: The BOMA Project runs a high-impact poverty graduation programme for ultra-poor women in drought-threatened arid lands.
Picture: HTTP://BOMAPROJEC­T.ORG EMPOWERMEN­T: The BOMA Project runs a high-impact poverty graduation programme for ultra-poor women in drought-threatened arid lands.

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