Nairobi, Kenya -
Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, stands empty and
surrounded by a high steel fence. A few bullet holes dot the pale
orange paintwork, but little else remains of the carnage of the
second-worst attack in Kenyan history.
Al-Shabab, the armed group in neighbouring Somalia, quickly claimed responsibility for the attack, stating it was their response to the Kenyan military's intervention in their country.
Stephen Juma Injusi, 32, formerly stationed at Westgate, survived the attack in 2013 [Juozas Cernius/Al Jazeera]
Now through
gaps in the fence, gardeners can be seen tending manicured flowerbeds.
One year on, the atmosphere is that of quiet refurbishment rather than
the horrors of a massacre that killed at least 67 people. Shops and bars
in the vicinity of Westgate are full and thriving, and the mall is
expected to reopen soon.
A world away from the affluence of the Westland neighbourhood, where the shopping centre is located, is a small one-room home in the Kawangware slum in the west of Nairobi. Two
children sit on a sofa - Michael, 11, is engrossed in a game on a
mobile phone and his eight-year-old sister, Gloria, keeps smiling shyly
and hiding behind the curtain that separates the sofa from the sleeping
quarters.
Their father, Maurice Adembesa Ombisa, was a 35-year-old private
security guard employed by Securex and contracted by Westgate Mall. He
was Westgate's site supervisor and, on September 21, 2013, upon hearing a
commotion in the mall, headed towards it and was gunned down.
Like
other private security guards in Nairobi, Ombisa worked 12-hour shifts,
six days a week for the minimum wage of 10,912 shillings ($123) -
without overtime or sick pay. It was a thankless job that ultimately cost him his life.
In a world that focuses on the rich or white foreign victims of such attacks, Ombisa's photo, laid carefully on the table in the family home, is a reminder of all the people who never make the headlines after such attacks.
Earning a pittance
The
children's mother and Ombisa's widow is Eunice Adembesa Ombisa. It is
understandably hard for her to talk about the day she lost her husband.
She said her husband reported feeling unsafe at work, and he feared he
was going to die while on duty.
After Ombisa's death, Eunice began working as a cleaner, travelling into central Nairobi and
earning a wage that barely covers the rent and the children's school
fees. "Life is hard," she told Al Jazeera. "It is just so hard now."
Private
security guards are everywhere in Nairobi. They stand outside banks and
office blocks, searching bags before people enter hotels or mini-marts,
shepherding people through metal detectors (which may or may not work),
and guarding ATM machines.
Security guards are the first line of defence in any incident.
Terrorism is here to stay, it is not vanishing tomorrow, so we must
prepare ourselves.
- Isaac Andabwa, Kenya National Private Security Workers Union
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According to the Kenya National Private Security Workers Union (KNPSWU), the
number of guards has mushroomed since the attack, and there are now
about 300,000 employed by some 429 private security firms - vastly
outnumbering Kenya's police force of 60,000.
Employers range from giants such as G4S to "briefcase" companies that have no office and just contract out casual employees on wages as low as 6,000 shillings ($68) a
month. Kenyans, both those working in the industry and those hiring
guards, acknowledge that much of the industry is providing "security
theatre" - a show rather than actual protection.
Referring to his uniform and baton, Dennis Wanjala, a guard who has worked in Nairobi's private security industry for more than eight years, asked: "How can you protect a bank with only a shirt and a stick?"
One firm with a strong presence in Nairobi is Securex, which employed Ombisa. A heavily branded firm, its guards
wear distinctive navy blue uniforms decorated with red and yellow. At
the busy company headquarters, cars marked with the company brand are
lined up in the parking lot and guards come in for their assignments.
One
such guard is Stephen Juma Injusi, a tall, quiet man from the west of
Kenya. He worked at Westgate for six years and was on duty on the day of
the attack. He described his supervisor Ombisa as a friend.
Injusi survived Westgate, waiting
an hour for reinforcements as he guided people to safety. He received
two weeks of counselling after the attack before being sent back to work
as a guard at a different site. Injusi described the horror of Westgate
as something he cannot forget. Asked what he had to protect himself
with against the gunmen, he pointed to his top pocket and said, "My
whistle." He then pointed to his side and added, "And my baton."
While
the question of providing guns for guards on specific sites is
controversial, the issuing of protective stab and bullet proof vests
could easily be routine. It is something the KNPSWU is campaigning for.
Isaac Andabwa,
general secretary of KNPSWU, said if Ombisa had had been wearing a
bullet-proof vest, "maybe he could have taken cover, and maybe he would
be alive today".
Protective gear
While security firm G4S does supply sections of its workforce with body armour, smaller
companies do not because of the cost. "Smaller firms are locally based
and their income per capita is low so it is a question of costs,"
explained Colins Luvai, head of
investigations and compliance at G4S Kenya. "These security gadgets are
costly and they don't have the financial muscle to invest in them ...
They don't want to spend, they want to make profit."
It is
a cost-based analysis that rates body armour more expensive than human
life - especially when there is no legislation to allow the families of
the dead guards to claim compensation.
But
after the deadly siege on Westgate, private security companies may soon
be unable to gamble with the lives of their employees. The era of
woefully underequipped, underpaid, and undertrained private security
guards faces a serious challenge from the KNPSWU, which is pushing for a
law to provide structure and standards in this dangerously deregulated
industry.
Andabwa
outlined the need for security provisions to be regulated and
professionalised. "Security guards are the first line of defence in any
incident. Terrorism is here to stay, it is not vanishing tomorrow, so we
must prepare ourselves."
Without
controls on who is setting up security firms and what they are training
people in, Andabwa pointed out, the industry could become its own
threat to state security.
"Training
will create professionalism. Once we have professionalism we can
improve standards and the quality of our service to the client. This in
turn will affect pay, which benefits the whole of society as guards are
able to better provide for their dependants. But to get this we have to
be organised in the union," Andabwa told Al Jazeera.
The
union's recruitment drive since the attack has been supported by global
trade union UniGlobal and has seen membership in the KNPSWU increase by
more than 8,500 in the past year. It is now the second-largest union in
Kenya, and a force to be taken seriously.
Across
Kenya, private security guards continue to check bags, cars, raise the
alarm and thanklessly die in defence of life and property. At Westgate
and thousands of other sites, they are now also agitating for basic
rights and respect.
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