Flower farmers threaten to leave Kenya after killings
International flower farmers threatened to leave Kenya today, hours after another armed attack on a European manager carrying cash to pay plantation workers.
Naivasha is the centre of Kenya’s multimillion pound flower export industry and was an important farming region for European settlers during the colonial period. The region also has a growing tourism industry, which has suffered because of a recent crime wave.
Investors and managers of businesses involved in international trade from the area met police and local officials today after a gunman fired into a vehicle carrying one of their colleagues.
One suspected robber was killed and two police officers wounded in the foiled attack, police said.
The farmers, mostly from Europe, where almost all of the flowers are sold, threatened to shut down their plantations, which employ more than 20,000 people around Naivasha, 50 miles north-west of Nairobi, said Mark Kariuki, a leading hotelier in the area.
The farmers said they would consider moving to neighbouring Ethiopia if the attacks focusing on white farm managers did not end, he said.
The businessmen agreed at the meeting to hire a private security consultant to work with police to reduce the attacks, which have left two European farmers dead since August, Kariuki said.
Naivasha police chief Simon Kiragu said that he had agreed to work with the flower farmers.
“This is community policing, which we have been advocating for in a bid to fight the menace,” Kiragu said. But he said he was not convinced the farmers were being targeted any more than anyone else in the area.
Police arrested hotelier Ann Wambui Ribiru, 38, in connection with the murders of Dutch farmer Lloyd Schraven and British farmer John Christian Martin Palmer, from Devon where his father was chief executive with South Hams District Council. She allegedly gathered information about the farmers and then sent armed men to rob and kill them, police said.




