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Elburgon Land Wars — How Armed Goons Are Driving Legal Landowners From Their Homes While Local Leaders Watch

Nyakundi Report newsroom · Updated Jun 9
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· Apr 25

Elburgon Land Wars — How Armed Goons Are Driving Legal Landowners From Their Homes While Local Leaders Watch

In Elburgon, Nakuru County, a violent and organized campaign is stripping legal land owners of their property. Families who bought land decades ago and built their lives there are now sleeping in rented rooms in town, unable to return to their own farms. Armed attackers, emboldened by the silence of local leaders, have torched homes and blocked access to farmland. The victims are not squatters or encroachers — they are legal owners with title deeds. Their only crime, they say, is belonging to the wrong tribe. The Elburgon land wars are tearing communities apart, and the government is doing almost nothing to stop it. Homes reduced to ashes and families forced to flee—the brutal reality of the Elburgon land wars that have left legal owners homeless.

How the Elburgon Land Wars Turned Legal Owners Into Refugees in Their Own County

Mzee William Omweri came to Elburgon Kapsita, Seat 5, in 2001. He did not grab the land. He did not settle illegally. He searched, negotiated, paid, and got a title deed. He built a home, planted crops, and raised his family on that land for over two decades. Today, Mzee Omweri lives in a rented house in Elburgon town, locked out of the farm he legally owns and too afraid to return.

Mzee Omweri is Kisii by origin, and that fact alone has made him a target. About four years ago, coordinated attacks began against him and his family. Assailants stormed his compound, destroyed property, and issued clear warnings—leave or face worse. The attacks were not random. They were deliberate, calculated, and repeated.

What makes this situation even more outrageous is who these attackers are. They are not descendants of the families who originally sold the land to Mzee Omweri and other settlers. They have no legal claim, no ancestral connection, and no historical grievance tied to that specific land. They are, simply, people who hate the idea of non-Kalenjin communities owning property in the area — and they have decided to do something about it.

Since 2024, Entire Families Cannot Access Their Own Farms

Since early 2024, Mzee Omweri and many other affected families have been completely cut off from their properties. They cannot access their homes. They cannot tend their farms. They cannot harvest their crops. For families whose only source of income is the land they own and cultivate, this is not just displacement—it is economic strangulation.

Several families have watched helplessly as goons occupied their farms and grazed livestock on their shambas. Some have returned to find their homes reduced to ashes. The attackers burn down structures to ensure families have nothing to come back to, erasing years of hard work in a single night.

These are not poor families who can easily absorb the losses. Many are older residents who invested their life savings into their Elburgon properties. Paying rent in town while watching their farms go to waste is draining them financially. Every month that passes pushes them deeper into hardship, while the goons who chased them away suffer no consequences whatsoever.

A Rogue Local MCA Has Sided Openly With the Attackers

What turns this story from a criminal matter into a full-blown political scandal is the role of the local Member of the County Assembly. The affected families say the area's MCA has openly aligned himself with the goons terrorizing them. Instead of defending the rights of all residents in his ward, he has chosen to back those driving legal landowners away.

An elected representative who takes sides with lawbreakers against taxpaying, title-deed-holding citizens is not just failing in his duty — he is actively participating in a crime. The MCA's stance has given the attackers a shield of perceived legitimacy. The goons know they have political cover, and that knowledge makes them bolder and more ruthless with every passing week.

The pattern is familiar across Kenya's history of land conflicts—local political actors stoke or ignore eth…

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· Apr 25

Elburgon Land Wars — How Armed Goons Are Driving Legal Landowners From Their Homes While Local Leaders Watch

In Elburgon, Nakuru County, a violent and organized campaign is stripping legal land owners of their property. Families who bought land decades ago and built their lives there are now sleeping in rented rooms in town, unable to return to their own farms. Armed attackers, emboldened by the silence of local leaders, have torched homes and blocked access to farmland. The victims are not squatters or encroachers — they are legal owners with title deeds. Their only crime, they say, is belonging to the wrong tribe. The Elburgon land wars are tearing communities apart, and the government is doing almost nothing to stop it. Homes reduced to ashes and families forced to flee—the brutal reality of the Elburgon land wars that have left legal owners homeless.

How the Elburgon Land Wars Turned Legal Owners Into Refugees in Their Own County

Mzee William Omweri came to Elburgon Kapsita, Seat 5, in 2001. He did not grab the land. He did not settle illegally. He searched, negotiated, paid, and got a title deed. He built a home, planted crops, and raised his family on that land for over two decades. Today, Mzee Omweri lives in a rented house in Elburgon town, locked out of the farm he legally owns and too afraid to return.

Mzee Omweri is Kisii by origin, and that fact alone has made him a target. About four years ago, coordinated attacks began against him and his family. Assailants stormed his compound, destroyed property, and issued clear warnings—leave or face worse. The attacks were not random. They were deliberate, calculated, and repeated.

What makes this situation even more outrageous is who these attackers are. They are not descendants of the families who originally sold the land to Mzee Omweri and other settlers. They have no legal claim, no ancestral connection, and no historical grievance tied to that specific land. They are, simply, people who hate the idea of non-Kalenjin communities owning property in the area — and they have decided to do something about it.

Since 2024, Entire Families Cannot Access Their Own Farms

Since early 2024, Mzee Omweri and many other affected families have been completely cut off from their properties. They cannot access their homes. They cannot tend their farms. They cannot harvest their crops. For families whose only source of income is the land they own and cultivate, this is not just displacement—it is economic strangulation.

Several families have watched helplessly as goons occupied their farms and grazed livestock on their shambas. Some have returned to find their homes reduced to ashes. The attackers burn down structures to ensure families have nothing to come back to, erasing years of hard work in a single night.

These are not poor families who can easily absorb the losses. Many are older residents who invested their life savings into their Elburgon properties. Paying rent in town while watching their farms go to waste is draining them financially. Every month that passes pushes them deeper into hardship, while the goons who chased them away suffer no consequences whatsoever.

A Rogue Local MCA Has Sided Openly With the Attackers

What turns this story from a criminal matter into a full-blown political scandal is the role of the local Member of the County Assembly. The affected families say the area's MCA has openly aligned himself with the goons terrorizing them. Instead of defending the rights of all residents in his ward, he has chosen to back those driving legal landowners away.

An elected representative who takes sides with lawbreakers against taxpaying, title-deed-holding citizens is not just failing in his duty — he is actively participating in a crime. The MCA's stance has given the attackers a shield of perceived legitimacy. The goons know they have political cover, and that knowledge makes them bolder and more ruthless with every passing week.

The pattern is familiar across Kenya's history of land conflicts—local political actors stoke or ignore eth…

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