The leaves on the tea bushes in the plantations of the Kenyan region of Kericho are a sickly shade of green. In the small town of Narok, the river has become toe-deep, a giant puddle that residents use as a communal car wash. Sun-beaten rhinoceroses loaf across Nakuru national park, their ribs jutting out from thinning bodies.
All three – cash crops, rivers and wildlife– are crucial to Kenya’s long-term viability. But they are being starved of moisture because of the degradation of the Mau forest that serves as the drainage basin at the country’s ecological heart.

Kenya in turmoil 

