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Kenya Fact Sheet
Mount Kenya is the second highest mountain in Africa. (Mount Kilimanjaro, which is in Tanzania along the Kenyan border, is the highest peak on the continent).1
Around 25,000 species of animal and 7,000 plants have so far been recorded, along with at least 2,000 fungi and bacteria.2
The current population of Kenya is 34,707,817, with nearly 43% being children under the age of 15.3
Kenya is struggling with chronic rural poverty. Over 16 million Kenyans survive on less than $1 a day, with rural areas accounting for about 90% of Kenya's poor.4
Over 2 million people in Kenya are HIV positive, while 1.5 million have already died from AIDS.5
In 2002, around 15,000 Somalis fled civil conflict in south-west Somalia, across the border into Mandera, leaving thousands of street kids and orphans to fend for themselves.6
Statistics reveal that Kenya has the worst forms of Child labour with over 1.9 million children in Nairobi alone living on the street, with a considerable proportion engaged in child labour.7
According to estimates by the Women�s Health Organisation, approximately 10% of the population has a disability.8
On 26 December 2004, a quake occurred under the sea near Aceh in north Indonesia (8.9 on the Richter scale); this produced tsunamis causing flooding and destruction in Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Maldives, Myanmar, Thailand, Seychelles, Sri Lanka and the east coast of Africa (Kenya and Somalia).9
1Mount Kenya
2Kenya � Biodiversity and Protected Areas
3Kenya Demographics
4Islamic Relief � Kenyan Programmes
5Some facts and statistical data on HIV/AIDS
6Islamic Relief � Kenyan Programmes
7Is There Hope for Child Labourers
8Disability and Poverty in Kenya
9Rough Guides
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