West Pokot District, formerly known as West Suk or Kacheliba District, was an administrative district in the Rift Valley Province of Kenya. Its capital town was Kapenguria.[1]
History
Before the transfer of portions of Uganda to British East Africa in 1902, the area that formed West Suk District, also known as West Pokot District, was initially administered as part of Baringo District. Upon the transfer the West Pokot was combined with South Turkana District to form Turkana District of Naivasha Province. In 1918, South Turkana came into direct military administration and West Suk (West Pokot) was established as a district of Naivasha Province, then Kerio Province in 1921, and under the newly created Turkana Province from 1929. In 1941, West Suk was transferred to Rift Valley Province, and administered jointly with Trans Nzoia District. In 1942, they were separated and West Pokot administered from Kapenguria. West Pokot District was one of the districts of Kenya, 1963.[2]
By 2005, West Pokot had been split into three; with two smaller additional districts of Pokot North and Pokot Central. The district's had a combine population of 512,690. The three districts also had a population that was predominantly considered rural with whole population of Pokot Central and Pokot North being rural, and the population 138,367 of 181,063 in West Pokot District considered rural.[3]
In 2010, after the promulgation of the new constitution of Kenya, counties were to be created based on the districts of Kenya that existed as at 1992. This effectively led to the creation of West Pokot County.
District subdivisions
Local authorities (councils) | |||
Authority | Type | Population* | Urban pop.* |
---|---|---|---|
Kapenguria | Municipality | 56,019 | 12,984 |
Chepareria | Town | 8,212 | 901 |
Pokot | County | 243,855 | 0 |
Total | - | 308,086 | 13,885 |
* 1999 census. Source: |
The district had four constituencies:
References
- ↑ "Kenya Districts". www.statoids.com. Retrieved 2023-09-21.
- ↑ "description of the districts and provinces". Syracuse University. p. 4. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- ↑ "The 2009 Kenya Population and Housing Census" (PDF). Amazonaws. p. 146. Retrieved 28 September 2023.