
They once lived the 'gangster life.' Now they tackle food insecurity in Kenya's slums
Joseph Kariaga and his friends once lived the 'gangster life' in Nairobi's Mathare slum, snatching phones, mugging people and battling police. But when Kariaga's brother was shot dead by police, the young men took stock.
'We said, 'We cannot live like this. We are going to lose our lives.' Many of our friends had died,' said Kariaga, now 27. 'I reflected on my life. I had to change.'
Now the men are farmers with a social mission. Nearly a dozen of them founded Vision Bearerz in 2017 to steer youth away from crime and address food insecurity in one of Kenya's poorest communities.
Despite challenges, Vision Bearerz makes a modest but meaningful community impact, including feeding over 150 children at lunches each week. Some residents praise the group and call the men role models.
Amid cuts to foreign funding by the United States and others, experts say local organizations like this may be the future of aid.
Vision Bearerz works on an urban farm tucked away in the muddy streets and corrugated-metal homes that make up Mathare, one of Africa's most populous slums. Estimates say about a half-million people live in this neighborhood of less than two square kilometers.
Some 2 million people, or 60% of Nairobi's population, live in informal settlements, according to CFK Africa, a non-governmental organization that runs health and poverty reduction programs in such neighborhoods and is familiar with Vision Bearerz' work.
Lack of infrastructure is a key challenge in these communities, which are growing amid sub-Saharan Africa's rapid urbanization and booming youth population, said Jeffrey Okoro, the group's executive director.
Poverty pushes youth into crime, Okoro added.
'Most folks in slums such as Mathare are not able to earn enough to buy a decent meal, and kids who are under 5 are twice as likely to be malnourished,' he said. ' One of the other major challenges affecting young people is gangs, and the promise of making a quick buck.'
The farmers of Vision Bearerz know this well.
'When you are born from this land, there is not much you have inherited, so you have to make it yourself,' said Ben Njoki, 28, whose face tattoos are reminders of a gang-affiliated past. 'You have to use violence.'
In 2017, not long after Kariaga's brother was killed, Njoki and other young men made a plan to change. More than a dozen people they grew up with had been killed, and they realized they would follow if they did not find an alternative to crime, said Moses Nyoike, 32, the chair of Vision Bearerz.
To keep busy, the group began collecting garbage and would split profits from trading vegetables, buying produce in another county and reselling it locally. They noticed a gap in the supply of vegetables to Mathare, and with permission from authorities they cleaned up a garbage dump and began planting.
Polluted soil, and water rationing, made it a tough start. Then, inspired by a TikTok account that showcased farming in a Colombian slum, Vision Bearerz tried their hand at hydroponics. With the help of an NGO that supports community enterprises, Growth4Change, they were able to get materials and training in urban farming methods.
Today, Vision Bearerz grows vegetables, raises pigs and farms tilapia in a small pond. They sell a portion of what they produce, with revenue also coming from running a car wash and public toilet.
With the earnings, the group buys maize flour to make ugali, a dough-like staple food, and beans, which supplement produce from their farm in weekly lunches for children.
Vision Bearerz also runs outreach programs to warn against drug use and crime, and has sessions where women teach girls about feminine health.
'The life I was living was a lie. It didn't add up to anything. We just lost people. Now, we are winning people in the community,' Njoki said.
Davis Gichere, 28, another founding member, called the work therapeutic.
Challenges remain. Joining Vision Bearerz requires a pledge to leave crime behind, and there have been instances of recidivism, with at least one member arrested. Lingering criminal reputations have led to police harassment in the past, and finding money to buy food for Saturday feedings is a weekly struggle.
Funding cuts across the development space, including the dismantling of the United States Agency for International Development, make the prospect of new financing dim.
At least one other group in Nairobi's Kibera slum, Human Needs Project, does similar work of urging youth away from crime and addressing food insecurity through urban farming.
It's a model that can be scaled up or copied elsewhere, said Okoro of CFK Africa.
'The future of development is locally led organizations," he said, noting they are best suited to understanding the needs of their communities.
Kariaga still feels the pain of his brother's death, but is proud of his new job.
'Farming can change the world,' he said, a silver-capped tooth glinting in the sun.
___
For more on Africa and development: https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse
The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
2 days ago
- Sky News
Ex-footballer appears in court charged with assaulting Sugababes singer
A former professional footballer has appeared in court charged with assaulting Sugababes singer Keisha Buchanan, as well as controlling or coercive behaviour. Taiwo Leo Atieno faces eight charges relating to his ex-girlfriend, Ms Buchanan, across an approximately 13-year period. The 39-year-old, who played for Luton Town while they were in the Conference Premier league between 2010 and 2011, appeared via video link from HMP Wormwood Scrubs wearing a suit and tie. Atieno was not asked to enter pleas and Judge Ian Bourne KC granted his release from prison on conditional bail during the Harrow Crown Court case sitting at Southwark on Thursday. Atieno, who was born in Brixton in London but played for the Kenyan national team, is charged with assaulting the founding Sugababes singer between 1 January 2012 and 1 January 2015 - causing her actual bodily harm. He is also charged with controlling or coercive behaviour against Ms Buchanan between 29 December 2015 and 1 May 2018. The charge alleges he opened Ms Buchanan's correspondences, controlled her finances and when she could go to the gym and shower, and would not let her wear red lipstick. The charge claims this caused Ms Buchanan "serious alarm or distress which had a substantial adverse effect" on her "usual day-to-day activities". He is accused of doing this "at a time when he knew or ought to have known that the behaviour will have a serious effect" on her. Atieno is also charged with six counts of breaching a non-molestation order, twice by allegedly posting information about Ms Buchanan to a third party online on 18 July and 20 July 2024. He is further accused of breaching the order by emailing Ms Buchanan on 2 August, 19 November, 19 December and 23 December 2024. His bail conditions stipulate that he must surrender his passport. The judge said: "There must not be any contact either directly or indirectly with the complainant Keisha Buchanan. "That means any form of contact, whether it be by email or other sort of social media messaging system - any contact at all". Julian Malins KC, defending, said Atieno "fully understands it, and assures the court through us that he will abide by that". Atieno was also told not to apply for international travel or to enter the London Borough of Barnet. He is due to enter pleas on 22 August. His trial is set to begin on 13 April 2026. Ms Buchanan became one of the original members of the Sugababes with Mutya Buena and Siobhan Donaghy as a teenager in 1998. Donaghy left in 2001 and was replaced by Heidi Rang, while Buena was replaced by Amelle Berrabah in 2005. Buchanan, the last remaining original member, was replaced by Jade Ewen in 2009. The founding trio regained the right to use the Sugababes name in 2019. They reunited to perform at Glastonbury Festival in 2022.


Telegraph
3 days ago
- Telegraph
Illegal immigrant can stay in UK for daughter he does not speak to
An asylum judge allowed an illegal immigrant stay in Britain despite ' contradictory findings ' that his relationship with his daughter was good – but had also broken down. Andrew Kung'u Gichuhi, from Kenya, won his appeal to remain in the country, with a new hearing pending, after an immigration judge said Mr Gichuhi could stay in the UK because he had a 'genuine and subsisting' relationship with his daughter, and it would not be right to expect her to leave Britain. But, later on in her judgment, she appeared to contradict her earlier comments, saying there had been a breakdown in the father-daughter relationship. After the Home Office argued that her findings were 'irrational', an upper tribunal judge has now ruled that Mr Gichuhi's claim should be heard again. The case, disclosed in court papers, is the latest example uncovered by The Telegraph in which illegal migrants or convicted foreign criminals have been able to remain in the UK or halt their deportations on human rights grounds. 'Irrational' ruling Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, has announced plans to kerb judges' powers to block deportations with new 'common sense' rules to clarify how they interpret the Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) article eight, which provides the right to a family life. The Home Secretary's rules are also intended to strengthen the public interest test, in which courts need to be hold themselves accountable and only grant exceptions to laws with justified reasons. Mr Gichuhi was living in the UK illegally as an unmarried partner of a British national when he applied for citizenship. The Home Office rejected his application, arguing that there were 'no insurmountable obstacles to family life with his partner continuing in Kenya'. The Home Office said he did not have a 'genuine and subsisting' relationship with his daughter, from a previous marriage. Mr Gichuhi appealed the decision to a lower-tier tribunal. The unnamed judge found that there was a 'genuine and subsisting' parental relationship between Gichuhi and his daughter, who 'could not reasonably be expected to leave the United Kingdom'. But later in the judgment, she said the relationship was 'broken down' and that there was 'no contact' between the Mr Gichuhi and his daughter. In the appeal against the 'irrational' finding, the Home Office said 'a relationship could not be both genuine and subsisting and broken down'. It added the judge had also been 'speculating about the possibility of future contact'. Those representing Mr Gichuhi argued that the judge had been 'entitled' to find that the relationship was subsisting, because he sent £100 a month to his daughter's bank account. They said he sent the money on an 'entirely voluntary basis', and his daughter had not returned the money. However, while they argued that a relationship could be 'genuine and subsisting' in 'the absence of contact', they accepted that 'subsisting was the antithesis of broken down'. For this reason, Mr Gichuhi's lawyers accepted that the judge's position was 'at least contradictory' and she had not explained how 'the contradictory positions were reconciled'. Upper Tribunal Judges Adrian Seelhoff and Sean O'Brien concluded: 'Consequently, the judge's finding at that [Mr Gichuhi's] relationship with his daughter had 'broken down' is inconsistent with her finding later in that paragraph that it was 'subsisting'. 'No attempt had been made to reconcile these contradictory findings. It follows that the judge's decision involved the making of an error of law.' They ruled that the case must be reheard afresh by another judge.


The Guardian
3 days ago
- The Guardian
Bikes, the Bean and Black Panthers in Chicago: Wembley to Soweto initiative 2025
The backdrop of sport has been a constant in the Wembley to Soweto Foundation's projects, and the foundation has encouraged the young photographers to reflect how their communities are shaped by football, rugby, athletics, cricket, boxing and the like. Since the 2010 Fifa World Cup in South Africa, the charity has worked alongside the Premier League, the FA, the Olympic Games, the Cricket World Cup, the RFU and now the MLS in North America. Ultimately the US cohorts will be given the opportunity to photograph at the US Soccer World Cup in 2026 and the 2028 LA Olympics. Over the past three years, the students from Los Angeles have had their work exhibited in the US and Europe and have been trained as teachers themselves. This is extraordinary given these young people are often from backgrounds of abject poverty, bypassed by formal education, employment opportunities, shelter and basic nourishment. Having already taken responsibility for teaching new groups of students in South Central LA, the young photographers have now stepped out of their comfort zone and been responsible for running projects in Chicago, notably in the southern areas of the city where gang violence is an everyday occurrence. In Chicago the programmes are run in partnership with From the Streets to the Set and the Little Village Community and Boxing Center. As part of a collaboration now in its fifth year, Leica Camera donated camera equipment to the Wembley to Soweto Foundation, which the cohort of students from Little Village, Chicago used during their training. The young students (whose work can be seen below) learned photography techniques from their LA contemporaries in a variety of locations across Chicago, from Millennium Park at the Loop to the National Museum of Mexican Art, from the Shameless House to Hampton House (home of the Black Panthers), from the streets of Cicero to the electric atmosphere of a downtown boxing gym and, of course, Soldier Field, home of the Chicago Bears. All these opportunities enabled the photographers to capture images and depict stories from their hometown Chicago landscape. Quiet Reflection – The Bean, Millennium Park. Lost Her Head – Midlothian, Illinois (above left), Preparing to Scramble – Cafe Urbano, N Elson Ave (above right). Eyes Down – Urban Coffee House, N Elston Ave (above left), Chewing the Fat – Andersonville (above right), Happy Barista – Cafe Urbano, N Elston Ave (below). Hanging in the Backstreets – Little Village. Skullduggery – Notches on the Fanbelt (above). Urban Art – Twisted Tattoo Studio, Elston Ave Formation Wheelies – Michigan Avenue (above left), The Lone Ranger – Michigan Avenue (above right), Under the Bean – reflections of the sculpture in Millennium Park (below). Melissa's Mural – Memorial at West 26th Street and South Keeler Avenue in Little Village, painted by the artist Milton Coronado to honour Melissa Ortega, eight, who was fatally shot when caught in a gang crossfire. Fred Hampton Jr explaining the history of The Black Panthers (above), Off on Patrol – Cicero, Illinois (below). Chillaxing – Little Village boxing gym. Headlines – Little Village boxing gym. City Light – Soldier Field (above), Amy the Matriarch – Little Village (below). Silver Lining – Little Village (below). Floral Tributes – Batchelor's Grove Cemetery Straw Hat – National Museum of Mexican Art (above), Into The Blue – Downtown Chicago (below). Start of the Thaw – Chicago River. Comrades – Little Village community support (above). Ricky the community leader – Little Village boxing gym (above left), Keeping Watch – Clubland, Cicero (above right), Toy Story gang-style – Little Village (below). Catching Some Rays – Little Village (above), Pensive Panther – Fred Hampton House, Maywood (below). Grazed Knuckles – Little Village At the end of the project the students had the opportunity to exhibit their work in their own communities. They have already been invited to exhibit in Las Vegas and Frankfurt at IMEX conventions in November 2025 and May 2026 respectively. A selection of the photographs shown here will also be on display at the Exchange Theatre, Twickenham on 4 and 5 July. As part of this event, the Academy Award nominee Stockard Channing's production of Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape will play simultaneously at the same venue, with all profits being donated to the Wembley to Soweto Foundation. The funds from future exhibitions will be used to take disadvantaged young people from inner cities across the UK to work with their contemporaries from LA and Chicago at the 2026 World Cup.