Now picture this. You meet the woman of your dreams. You are
captivated by her. You approach her, you throw in a few lines and she is
ensnared. She says yes. Then you date her, pay her rent for that month,
volubly praise her beauty and all her delightful qualities keeping
flaws out of the debate. You make such a passionate case that she is
even too flattered to say, “aki thanks.” After some time you are both in
love, you propose to her, investing two months’ salary on a
leviathan-sized ring. She is in tears and shouts yes. You plan a wedding
to end all weddings. Buy all the requisites even importing one or two
items on the request of ‘the apple of your eye.’ Come wedding day, all
goes according to plan, vows are read and both of you concur. The thing
is solemnized before God and family and the knot is tied. All the while
there was a ‘private investor’ working behind the scenes on the same
aim. Come the wedding night, the aforementioned character who is also
the ex- boyfriend of the lady comes into the marital home when the
husband steps out to shop for candles, lotion and ‘protection.’ He plays
his chess pieces like a seasoned professional and convinces the bride
to elope with him. Mr. X returns home bristling with excitement to have a
first bite at the conjugal cherry only to get a vacuous reception. All
his phone calls to his bride are interrupted by a ‘number busy’ error
code. ‘Torrents’ as used in this context is not a popular movie
downloading site but the amount of tears that wet this gentleman’s
pillow that night. This piece has been the script of a few high grossing
soap operas and skits over the years but sometimes fact is more
excruciating and surreal compared to fiction. People have witnessed this
scene first hand and left crest-fallen. In Kenya this has been the
tragic-comical political ode to one Raila Odinga depending on which side
of the political divide you are positioned.
But the story goes
even further. Historically, the region currently known as Kenya
consisted of slightly more than 42 neighbouring nation states. Each had
its leader. Then came silk, the Bible, some rum lubricating the path for
British Imperialism. Circa 1960, colonialism is crumbling all over
Africa. The colonial Governor plans for a smooth transition. This
succinctly put is to hand over power to Jaramogi Odinga who seems a
level-headed, venerable leader of the day and not one of the marauding
band ‘Mau-Mau’ who had given the white man so much grief. He in
nationalist sentiment; flatly turns down the offer declaring, “No Uhuru
without Kenyatta.” He receives much condemnation -- even from fellow
African members of the LEGCO, for “embracing detainees whom the
government considered to be dangerous criminals”. The statement hardened
the feelings of the Europeans in the LEGCO and outside, who began
calling Jaramogi a communist lackey. Unlikely was the rebuttal from Dr.
Julius Kiano and Hon. Jeremiah Nyaga both from the ambient of Kenyatta’s
home turf. “Jomo Kenyatta and the Mau Mau rebellion brought nothing
but misery to thousands of GEMA communities for six years and another
six years in hardship in secret oath-taking and subversion,” they
opined. Kenyatta eventually got released, formed government with
Jaramogi as his Deputy. In due course, karma came full circle. They had a
bitter fall out culminating in a vicious public clash, Jaramogi left
government seething at betrayal to form an opposition party and
eventually was detained for trumped up treason and subversive charges in
a de-facto one party state. Regrettable ungratefulness. Fast forward
to modern times, same swamp with similar mindset in the alligators in
there. Now we have the progeny of the two titans gunning for national
leadership, one being already an incumbent following in his father’s
footsteps and the other a former Prime Minister.
Let me delve into
the grouse of this piece for fear of being labeled a lopsided history
lecturer. We are all victims of failed governance in this country.
Corruption is at an all time high and heavy taxation is not even
bringing us to half a point GDP improvement. This situation should not
prevail indefinitely as we will collectively be wiped out as a populace
by the time we turn a corner. But the greatest of the ills bedeviling
this nation and which will ultimately shred our national fabric to
pieces is tribalism and ethnic parochialism cum imperialism. Even the
enlightened and young professionals, the hope of this generation
practice it with ruthless abandon.
The first among a raft of
postulated solutions to this unfortunate conundrum is a rotational
presidency, first among the remaining three of big 5 who have not put a
guy in the ‘house on the hill’ yet while keeping an eye for the best of
the rest. It is always a boon to anybody when you feel that with hard
work, perseverance, smart enterprise and sacrificial toil you can aspire
to greatness. I propose we start now so as not to afflict our progeny
with the unnecessarily preposterous burden of ending such a vile and
utterly pointless vice as ethnicity coupled with interminable external
debt. Consequent to this move many more Kenyans will start feeling more
valued and precious. The only two tribes practically existent are the
haves and have-nots or in DSTV parlance premium subscribers and the mass
market. But in the shackled Kenyan psyche we have 42 others to add to
these.
The first beneficiary I propose should be the guy many in
this country call BABA (father). Some prefer ‘Jamaa ya vitendawili’,
others the clown who wants to defend the kraal with a gun that has only
one bullet, et-al. But hate him or love him Raila Odinga is an enigma, a
colossus in the Kenyan landscape and a national hero. Choosing him will
be such a calculated and no doubt sagacious move dealing the death
knell to ethnic vendetta and stigmatization against a certain section of
this republic. It cannot be gainsaid; we are still draped in the
archaic darkness of tribal politics. Every dawning day, I sympathize
with my friends from one side of the ethnic divide who are usually
either deservedly or by no fault of their own the target of animosity as
a consequence of their tribal kingpins thanks to war provoking,
wreckless, half-witted and inebriated pronouncements. The depth of these
people’s putrid sycophancy knows neither limits nor regard for their
constituents whom they endanger with each blast of senseless sentiment
into a microphone. They are relegated to mere militia. This nation also
has deep seated historical injustices which we cannot paper-over and
must try to remedy.
I know I will gain many allies and mint new
foes in equal measure with this pronouncement but I still stand by it. I
have a conscience and astuteness too exorbitant to ever be purchased so
no one can dare call me a hired political minion. People have done
worse things in this country. We have elected drug barons to regional
and national leadership as true testament to moral decadence and
socio-economic deification of miscreants while prostituting ourselves
for pecuniary gain in the name of poverty. Throw in the dyed-in-wool,
academic-certificate manufacturing, apocalyptically denounced false -
prophets alias ‘men of the cloth.’ I wonder how asinine or desperate one
has to be to be influenced by such deviants, thought devout but in
actual sense are far less righteous than the unworthy sinner called
yourself. This is a reproachable dereliction of one’s mental faculty
which I will surely harangue such in a future post.
A vote for
Raila will institutionalize meritocracy. Don’t you feel kind of odd when
you have a struggling company trying to win tenders but are piped to
the cherry by someone with minimal qualifications who concocts a company
just to while having the bid ‘cooked’ for them? Doesn’t it rip out your
very soul when you hear that someone took 60 million of your taxes to a
mythical quarry in the dead of the darkest night to pay some ghost
workers? That is the current state of doing business with the government
in Kenya. We all enjoy a reward for our toil and sacrifice even if
misdirected let alone focused, determined effort or achievement. Just as
when ancient Greece under Solon and Cleisthenes introduced the
philosophy of Democracy as an option to the prehistoric monarchy,
feudalism, parochialism and stone-age man dictatorship. Many years later
the Spartan King Leonidas single handedly put up a last stand with only
300 men to defend the most feasible entry point by the megalithic
Persian army led by King Xerxes into the rest of Greece and all
manifestation of freedom and free enterprise. He valiantly defended this
values held dear at Thermopylae. If God gave us freedom of choice, who
is man to defecate on these values by instituting a narrow-minded ogre
known as monarchy. This man has earned the right to be our president.
Crowning
this man president will be payment of a debt of gratitude. He has been
unfairly imprisoned, clobbered, chastised, tear-gassed among others for
advocating for the rights which we currently enjoy. He with colleagues
made the push that turned Kenya from a dejure one party state
to a full-fledged democracy. He has been consistent in advocating for
the rights of all Kenyan citizens. He has sacrificed political ambition
before, heeding to Kenyans pleas to declare ‘Kibaki tosha’ and help
remove a repressive and kleptocratic regime that overstayed its
welcome. He campaigned for a crocked Kibaki when he was down and out,
has braved whistles and castigation for naively agreeing to an MOU with a
post that was not enshrined in the constitution. He has won an
election, been rigged out, given a raw deal as ‘ceremonial’ Prime
Minister, won again but rigged out on the basis of two million members
of the electorate who only voted for his only viable rival presidential
candidate and no one else. He suffered from the rash rulling of a time
barred Supreme court who curtly brushed his evidence aside. He has been
bad mouthed by a supposed arbiter who was the IEBC Chair as a ‘perennial
loser who is a cry baby not able to stomach defeat.’ I think this is
his chance. If not for any other reason, just try him out to get him out
of our collective system and consciences. Moses died before reaching
Canaan. However, let us not allow this great son of this soil to go
aground before sitting on the presidential seat.
By having this
man as president we will have proved to have weaned ourselves from the
cyclical, self destructive and detrimental dementia of tribalism to
issue-based politics. Compared to Tanzania we look like cattle without a
herder who inadvertently let our brains go out with the dung. Their
Seminal policy after independence has proved beneficial. For Instance,
take the Post election Violence in 2007. He never called for the
killing, rape and displacement of any one. He only had a natural
spontaneous reaction to having his bride stolen on the wedding night.
Facts always trump myths. Fables are fleeting and volatile like ethylene
vapour but the truth like the rocky outcrop of an escarpment will
always prevail and retain structural integrity as testament to what is,
was and will always be a fact. He has been accused of violence, a myth
that was clinically dispelled by the ICC. It is self effacing to assume
you have monopoly over intelligence or may be sound leadership abilities
just based on your geographical genesis. Just give the man benefit of
doubt. At least choose a leader who practices what he preaches. Peace
and prosperity.
Despite many bottle-necks, the period most
democratic reform and economic development was attained in this land
uncannily coincided with the time he was in Government and later Prime
Minister. A few talk about failures of ‘Nusu-mkate’, but those are the
guys with a bigoted mind set and predominantly that same ‘nusu-mkate’
between their ears. They fail to see the pressures this man was under
swimming against the tide of a forced co-principal hell-bent on ensuring
his failure. He did not do too shabbily under those inhumane
conditions.
He has proved to be one of the cleaner political
operators. Despite the filth associated with politics, this one here has
kept his head above the murk. He is yet to be implicated or dragged to
court for a mega scandal. He has a clean moral rap sheet declaring time
and again he is as white as fleece.
When one system fails
institute another. When you have a ruler who leads a decrepit government
so inept as to cry about corruption in the opposition ranks instead of
using his authority to arrest perpetrators. A pretender statesman who
trades insults with the opposition while he is president instead of
taking cues and finding solutions lost me at ‘mugoroci’. When did the
consummate statesman Barrack Obama ever trade insults with the
Republicans throughout his 8 years in power yet he has our blood? To add
insult to injury a guy who publically gloats about ‘kula nyama wengine
wakimeza mate’ yet the jurisdiction he presides has neither mechanisms
nor foresight to deal with the cyclical yet predictable phenomena like
famine & cattle rustling but insists on depending on divine
providence and rain-fed agriculture, we have the classic case of a
failed system. To paraphrase Miguna Miguna if it quacks, walks and looks
like a duck then it is one. Why put this guy through the rigmarole of
serving a lame duck presidency when we have a more experienced, humane,
able and no doubt popular man ready to take charge?
We will not
hear the end of the pride associated with our lake side kinsmen if their
man ascends to state house, but so what? First Oliech then Obama, then
Odinga… jamaneni? But we are a resilient people. We can deal with it.
From diversity stems our strength, heritage and coagulant as Kenyans.
All
in all know that the only driver of your destiny is yourself. Problems
are to humans as rotting is to corpses. We cannot eradicate all social
ills, but national inclusivity and a spirit of brotherhood will make our
afflictions more palatable. Vote with your conscience my brother.
Tribalism is a Cancer.
Monday, 27 February 2017
Saturday, 4 February 2017
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE IEBC
M
|
any of us who are keen followers of the English
Premier league are aware of the name Mike Dean. In times gone by he was the
envy of his peers. Viewed as the paragon of integrity and fairness coupled with
athletic flair and some degree of theatrics from time
to time was his trade
mark. A top level professional, he was given most of the high profile matches
to play the crucial role of arbiter. He has also been feted by no less the same
peers as the referee of the season for many a campaign, an equivocally great
honour. Then it all unraveled before his eyes in ways even he could not ever
have fathomed. In recent times his standards have been gradually slipping. But
things came to a head when West Ham hosted Manchester United in January. Dean
sent off Sofiane Feghouli for a challenge on Phil Jones which was later
rescinded. This culminated in the official attracting
an immeasurable torrent of criticism for
his shocking performance. Dean awarded more penalties than any
other league referee this season with ten. Remarkably, five of the last six red
cards he has shown have been rescinded. EPL could no longer stomach such a
horror movie actor. Ultimately, his credibility was sempiternally tainted by
that fiasco. Punitively, he has been demoted to the lower tier known as the
English Championship with less glamour and more ‘windy nights in Staffordshire’
and cattle track playing surfaces. This may be purgatory for him or in
pessimistic Russian speak, “he may have let the Pierogi Burn.” How great the
mighty tumble. Key word ‘credibility.’ Sorry, digression things!
I would like to take this chance to congratulate and
cordially welcome the newly appointed IEBC Chairman Mr. Wafula Chebukati and
his team to the hot seat! The above statement is not a misnomer but a candid
assessment of the challenges ahead of this team. It will be an interesting
chance and great honour for them to offer their skill, competence even
eccentricities to the progression and success of this vital national
institution. The task ahead of them is by no means a walk in the park. Ensuring
a just, free, fair, accurate, verifiable,
credible, accountable; hence, peaceful 2017 General Election is the first item
on their in tray.
From low voter turnout (apathy), inadequate voter education to understaffing in the institution, these tribulations continue to gnaw at the fabric of the organization like a very hungry louse. The apathy could two pronged. Famine related as people have moved elsewhere in such of survival and general disillusionment of the populace with the current thieving, chameleonistic & ‘dead-beat dad’ current crop. Greater challenges include the failure of the biometric voter registration kit, instances of multiple identities registered under one identity card number already witnessed for two high level dignitaries, mix up of details in these kits as seen for one opposition leader, irregular distribution of the kits, incorporation of foreigners into the voter register. Reports of the conscription of National Intelligence Service Agents into the voter registration process has reared a very ugly head into an already ghastly mix. To add insult to injury, an open attack on the independence of the institution by the edict issued by the Interior Cabinet Secretary to all county administrators that they jeopardize their tenure if they assist in the voter registration in the opposition strong holds has sullied the process further. A member of the ruling coalition recently by the skin-of-the-teeth escaped arrest in a neighbouring country leaving behind what may prima facie appear to be voter registration materials. What the hell were they even doing with these? Even the once noble National Youth Service registration of biometrics has been integrated into the voter register. These would no doubt present an arduous cogency challenge even for veterans in the job let alone one still in the internship phase of his / her posting.
The former Kenyan Prime Minister and irrevocably venerable citizen of this country has in recent time made some disparaging accusations against this institution. What steps are being made to disabuse his fears and render them moot? According to the empirical, logical and internationally acclaimed scientific norm in testing a hypothesis, one is usually adduced. Then you get a sample size for testing, collect data on the basis of this hypothesis, compare results obtained on the import of the hypothesis then you finally declare the null hypothesis a truth or fallacy. Have steps been taken with regard to this?
From low voter turnout (apathy), inadequate voter education to understaffing in the institution, these tribulations continue to gnaw at the fabric of the organization like a very hungry louse. The apathy could two pronged. Famine related as people have moved elsewhere in such of survival and general disillusionment of the populace with the current thieving, chameleonistic & ‘dead-beat dad’ current crop. Greater challenges include the failure of the biometric voter registration kit, instances of multiple identities registered under one identity card number already witnessed for two high level dignitaries, mix up of details in these kits as seen for one opposition leader, irregular distribution of the kits, incorporation of foreigners into the voter register. Reports of the conscription of National Intelligence Service Agents into the voter registration process has reared a very ugly head into an already ghastly mix. To add insult to injury, an open attack on the independence of the institution by the edict issued by the Interior Cabinet Secretary to all county administrators that they jeopardize their tenure if they assist in the voter registration in the opposition strong holds has sullied the process further. A member of the ruling coalition recently by the skin-of-the-teeth escaped arrest in a neighbouring country leaving behind what may prima facie appear to be voter registration materials. What the hell were they even doing with these? Even the once noble National Youth Service registration of biometrics has been integrated into the voter register. These would no doubt present an arduous cogency challenge even for veterans in the job let alone one still in the internship phase of his / her posting.
The former Kenyan Prime Minister and irrevocably venerable citizen of this country has in recent time made some disparaging accusations against this institution. What steps are being made to disabuse his fears and render them moot? According to the empirical, logical and internationally acclaimed scientific norm in testing a hypothesis, one is usually adduced. Then you get a sample size for testing, collect data on the basis of this hypothesis, compare results obtained on the import of the hypothesis then you finally declare the null hypothesis a truth or fallacy. Have steps been taken with regard to this?
I have personally experienced an anomaly in the
verification process. When I took the responsibility of going to confirm if my bio-metrics had been captured; the wide-eyed beauty (whose father must be very
proud of) on call for that day gave me the obligatory precursory salutation.
She then proceeded to ask a visibly animated ‘yours truly’ for my Identity
Card. She keyed in the number and out spewed forth my name and polling centre
from the last elections among other details. When I casually asked why none of
my biometric features had been used to identify me, I was casually dismissed
with a smile. All the while getting chided by the queue behind me who thought I
was unnecessarily holding up progress with this apparently infernal flirting.
Forgive me for expressing sentiments of concern. Is the technology being
insulated from failure?
The
failures of the recently disbanded Ahmed Issack Hassan-led commission and the
now defunct Kivuitu-led Electoral
Commission of Kenya were mainly due to a glaring lack of independence. Among
other obstacles this can only be a recipe for disaster when in the eyes of the
electorate credibility is not apparent. The Kenyan populace is sufficiently
high-tech to know when they are being taken for the beat about the bush. In
the logical back drop of all this, will Kenyans believe and accept the outcome
of this year’s presidential elections? Let us put to the death knell this
ethnic colonialism / dictatorship that is glossed over as the much vaunted
‘Tyranny of numbers’ by our current ruling class. Why does one want bloodshed
in this great land of ours? No amount of intimidation will bludgeon Kenyans to
accept the result of a tainted process and just move on. Frustration like a raw
wound will continue to fester on the collective body of the citizenry. What conscience
will the victor of such a flawed process have to celebrate a pre-doctored
outcome? Will such a person ever have any legitimacy as a national leader?
Not one to complain, I will attempt to concoct a few
remedies:
1.
Revolutionary as it may seem, it will be
a wonderful idea to scrap the entire voter register and create a new list from
scratch. It may seem a time consuming and soul sapping venture but will
ultimately be worthwhile in mending the torn credibility fabric. Kenyan peace
is also on the line if this is not addressed.
2.
Visionary leadership from the current
president. Call to order your Interior Cabinet secretary and inform him that
voter registration and poking elbows on the ribs of the referee body is severely
frowned and has no room in your administration. NIS should also be read the
riot act and be made to know better and stick to their lane. Otherwise, we will
view him as just another African despot complicit in this and keen to profit
from the attendant lapse in autonomy, all the while abusing state resources.
3.
The IEBC secretariat and field staff should be reorganized as a
matter of urgency. A renaissance is required in the human resource in the
registration and Technical departments. The kits cannot be maintained by
amateurs if the cataclysmic failure envisaged by our Attorney general is to be
eschewed. Logistical support in technical and infrastructure is mandatory. They
are many knowledgeable but unemployed youths. Gainfully engage them.
4.
Have
an independent IEBC system server not breached by outside influence or
co-hosting other things. This is too important a function to be co-hosted with
some other cock-and-bull organization under the guise of cost-cutting. We all
remember the events of last elections that one Dennis Itumbi had to labouriously
yet unconvincingly justify. Also edify the polling clerks on the requisite
passwords and PINs for the software to work the system. Also remember to carry
to the polling stations spare batteries, chargers, solar charging systems, UPS
and all that pertains.
5.
Rein
in on politicians engaging in voter bribery, hate speech and violent posturing.
You have the mechanisms to deem these unfortunate characters ineligible for the
polls. Wield that axe now. This country is for us all and not just for
somebody’s mum.
6.
No
more ‘Chicken-gate’ type scandals in IEBC procurement.
7.
Voter
Education is key. This should be your obligation and not a public service
gimmick. Enlighten the citizenry both on the need to vote and facilitate the
process.
8.
Take
action on genuine complaints from all parties. Some may seem like perennial
cry-babies but are raising reasonable qualms. Prevention is better than cure.
This will be good for the non-partisan image.
Why should Kenya; previously viewed as a harbinger
of democracy, be left to slip down to such a level as to have the likes of Nigeria,
Ghana, Cote D’Ivoire, Senegal, Malawi, Tanzania and even backwater Gambia in
front of us as more mature democracies where an incumbent can lose the
elections and make no attempt to influence the poll? All of us must jealously
guard our position as a constitution abiding democracy and one of the better
students of good governance.
My parting
shot to Mr. Chebukati, do not fall victim to compromise and blackmail.
Jealously guard your independence and fiercely enforce it. The
elephant in the room. A few attribute your rise to prominence to an attempt by
the ruling coalition to eat into a major part of the constituency regarded as
an opposition stronghold in Bungoma and TransNzoia by selecting you to hoodwink
your community of government ‘favour’ together with Wabukhala and Chiloba. My
advice; even if you got this position through patronage, I dare aver without
fear of contrition and an unmatched conviction that Kenya is greater than the
progenitor of your being in this position. As such even if favoured, show
yourself as your own man and exercise an unbridled streak of independence in
the execution of your mandate. You could have been set up to fail but shame the
Devil. The ball is now in your court.
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