Sunday, January 30, 2011

Who's still fooling who?

comme ci comme ca: Who's still fooling who?: "One of the many reasons Kenya has not demonstrated maturity and responsibility widely accepted to be trusted to try criminals against humani..."

Who's still fooling who?

One of the many reasons Kenya has not demonstrated maturity and responsibility widely accepted to be trusted to try criminals against humanity is that our leaders behave like disjointed warring cartels.
They all seem to regard the constitution as a personal statement to back them individually and as long as there's a clause that can be mis-interpreted, it will be; and wait to see the reaction of 'the other side'.
This time around, the move by the President to 'unilaterally' nominate officials who the constitution clearly dictates ought to be nominated in consultation with the PM, is taking the game too high up. Recent events do not mitigate for the President, specifically his apparent 'love affair' with the axis comprising the two embattled ministers in the grand coalition-those two in Ocampo's cross-hairs and his Vice President. The unholy trinity hatched under the moniker 'the KKK' alliance.
Could these (and others routing for domestic trials of the ICC suspects) have been in the kitchen cabinet that replaced names in the original nominees' list? Implying that the nominated officials are sympathetic to their cause? And so, an attempt to defeat justice?
President Kibaki, and all in power today, for that matter-should be wiser considering that events happening in our corner of the world indicate that 'leaders' cannot mislead all the people all the time. Civilians' uprising is a very real reality where the populations feel downtrodden with extravagant impunity. There is not much snow in Afrika - especially in the Sahara North Afrika, but these events have the capability of snow-balling across borders, exactly the same way sand dunes migrate. Leaders be warned.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Wake Up, Kenyans.

2012 is now in the radar screen in Kenya! The drums are rolling, and the people are being mobilised to head to the fields to ward off the elements of distraction who threaten the communities' harvests!
Those who live along the wild life reserves are looking out for animals that invade the farms and destroy the crops while in the political scene, 'the leaders' are drawing imaginary boundaries and marking off territories with a view to identify who their 'allies ' are and therefore know who their 'enemies' are. The stage is being set for another round of PEV?
GOD Forbid, NO!!!
All these alignments and re-alignments, shuffling and re-shuffling by the political class, using 'uncivil' language is bound to mislead gullible Kenyans into getting into 'fight or fight' mode. This is the last thing we need as a nation, especially before we have gotten to a closure of our last internal 'civil war'. We haven't finished sorting the good, the bad and the ugly in our Grand Coalition. I wish all Kenyans would take the wisdom of UB40's song "Who you fighting for?" and think twice before they take up any arms against each other.

".......
You do the shooting - they do the looting
You do the killing - they do the drilling
You do the dying - they do the lying
All the way to the Bank
You can hear them crying.......

.....Sell the arms, suppress the truth
Create the fear, invent the proof
Wave the flag - don't tell the youth
Who they are fighting for
.........."- UB40

While the politicians are traversing the countryside hyping up support for their political ambitions, CDF funds; millions of shillings earmarked for raising the standards of living for millions of Kenyans lie idle in the Central Bank unclaimed, thousands of innocent Kenyans are still in the cold in IDP camps, and others are living in abject poverty and squalor in our slums. The MPs are just too busy to concentrate on what they were voted into parliament for.
 At this point in time, there are politicians who are calling for a generational change in leadership. They are not telling Kenyans what the young generation of leaders will do differently from their fathers or grandfathers. They are not mentioning that some of the ills that beleaguer our nation; corruption, impunity, nepotism have become so entrenched in our psyche that they are hereditary. To quote the UB40 again..." the sins of the fathers.."
may be passed on to the sons. Started by the white colonialists handing over power to black colonialists at the dawn of our independence.
In the early 1990s Kenyans were crying about the Moi dictatorship and the rallying call was 'Moi Must Go', 'yote yawezekana bila Moi!' We lost sight of the fact that without Moi there could be 'Moi-ism' and so we pushed Moi out but retained 'Moi-ism'. Because of this, 'yote hayakuwezekana!'
What we need in Kenya is not only generational change in leadership.We need a reset to our national mindset. We need genuine national civic enlightenment. Citizens need to be educated on the consequences of their individual and communal decisions on the national level. This time around, we have a Constitution that seems well poised to facilitate the actualisation of our national dreams. We should not lose this momentum and spirit.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Siasa mbaya, maisha mbaya....?

This whole KACA/ODM/ICC/KKK circus and the national debate is displaying what I want to call hoodwinking but then again, I'm not sure it's not an attempt by our leaders to lead Kenyans on a wild goose chase or an attempt by them to draw a red herring in our search for culprits in national corruption, the next batch of parliamentarians and the new county leaders as prescribed by the new constitution.
The two principals in the Ocampo 6 have gravitated together with the current Vice President and are upbeat at convincing Kenyans that between them is the best option for president come the year 2012.
My biggest worry is that the ODM camp came up with the rebuttal for the accusations leveled at their leader and none of them mentioned the fact that those accusing the PM of misdeeds (real or imagined), some of those now gravitating towards each other in the UDM all have a common factor in their political lives; they have been accused of one or multiple misdeeds committed while in public office and none has been cleared by a court of law. Maybe this was because the leader of those issuing the rebuttal has a skeleton or two in his own closet? Skeletons which are supposed to be in a cemetery? A cemetery that never was?
Most of our politicians have lost credibility. Very few of them can be trusted. The very main reason that Kenyans overwhelmingly voted to re-write our political dispensation, our constitution- the hope that we will rid ourselves of these corruption ridden parliamentarians and bring in a new leadership with servitude.
Leaders who are selfless, leaders who are first and foremost servants of the people.
The press, especially the main-stream press should not be dragged into this game of hoodwinking and should be steadfast in putting in the spotlight (or limelight)the various issues that our politicians would like swept under the carpet because our new political mindset is one of issues and not personalities, ethnic regionalism, or who can shout the loudest. The politics of mud-slinging your opponent so that you look clean yourself despite the sins you have committed is in our past.