Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Time-Out, Please.


There are many ways to skin a cat, or so the saying goes and the cat that is Kenya definitely deserves to be skinned (if our governance could be equated to cat skin). The new constitutional disposition promises many avenues that will facilitate 'the skinning' which in my opinion is cleansing and making accountable the way we are governed, but we all should realize that this will not happen overnight. Rome, they say was not built in a day and our problems in Kenya are much more complex than the construction of a city.
Ours is the stripping of 100 years of domination, patronization and fiefdoms established through the years by the few powerful and mighty on the majority poor.

As we observe and get dazzled by the kaleidoscopic manner in which the politicians are arranging and re-arranging themselves, aligning themselves to tap the gravy train that is our sweat, we ought not be hypnotized by the drama like the snake does to its prey and get swallowed while in a stupor. All alert Kenyans need to stay focused on the goal and sensitize the rest of wananchi to 'kaa macho' otherwise it will be the same ball game all over again.

There is a move by some individuals masquerading as the representatives of Kenyans in the diaspora to urge the court to suspend the polls in march and however noble their argument is, they are playing into the already crowded 'game of thrones', of political acrobats inventing new moves and refining old ones.  Simply adding drama to an already chaotic stage. It will not bear the fruits we need at this point in time. Entrenching the spirit of political universal suffrage in Kenya should happen- and it will,  but it will definitely not happen before the next polls. There are many more Kenyans living in Kenya today and in March next year, (more than those in the diaspora) who will not be able to take part in the polls-for one reason or another. Many will be due to complex gerrymandering by our politicians, others will be due to deprivation of such basic necessities like food or water, but let us go and start the cleaning up process. The brooms might not be the best (as yet) but just let us start. A long journey starts with just one step. We will get better brooms as we go along.

There are promises by the new constitution that we should be focusing our energy on to implement, example being clauses dealing with leaders' integrity, the guaranteeing of security to all wananchi, and the facilitation of all resident Kenyans of voting age to register as voters. These are functions the government is well placed to perform and we need to hold it accountable to do so.

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