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Commentary
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Lessons from Kenya Electoral Crisis
James Shikwati
I am an angry Kenyan; I am angry at myself and my countrymen for
putting too much faith in good people. We all watch, listen and
read in disbelief when our media channels parade government
officials who talk about “things are back to normal!” The
business sector suffers as religious leaders and middle class
angle themselves for recognition from their tribal kings. What
lessons does the Kenyan political situation give to Africa?
First Lesson; the essence of law and constitution ought to be to
tame the insatiable, brutish human actions and instincts. It is
very clear that our constitution and legal system failed to
recognize this basic fact and put too much trust on “good
people”…I even remember during the 2005 constitutional debate,
some writers argued that President Kibaki was good and different
from Moi and hence there was no need to change the constitution;
now its clear that a human person is just that - human. We must
learn from the current crisis that our constitution and legal
system ought to treat each Kenyan with great suspicion such that
all our laws ought to be written with an express objective to
turn devils into angels.
Second Lesson; many commentaries are criticizing tribalism as
the main cause of the present crisis in Kenya. Tribalism is
innocent, why should it be a big issue when Kenyan consumers do
not seek to find out which tribe manufactured what type of
product? Political elites having strangled the democratic
process and religious leaders having joined the company of
political elites, common Kenyans have no other choice but to
transform tribalism into a cultic movement. The evil committed
in the name of tribe is executed at a level where tribalism has
assumed a cultic nature. Modern Kenyan tribes do not cherish the
killing and destruction of property; after all they have
intermarried and engage in business and are basically
interdependent economically. Kenya is faced with tribal cults as
a resultant effect of having a corrupt constitution and legal
system that trusts the good nature of man to such an extent that
one person is given too much discretionary power, devoid of
effective checks and balances.
Third Lesson; it’s the national cake - stupid! Our constitution
is designed in such a way that the winner takes it all! The
current bitterness exhibited in Kenya is partly informed by the
fact that whereas 36 million Kenyans bake the national cake
either directly or indirectly; a community that produces a
president hogs the lion’s share of the cake. The key lesson here
is; we must creatively come up with a system to make individual
Kenyans bake their own cakes instead of relying on central cake
handouts such as jobs, and business contracts. Alternatively,
the constitution should be revised to enable all Kenyans to be
seen to partake of the cake by putting restriction to a single
group using the law to monopolize the cake of the nation.
Fourth Lesson; late last year I asked readers to help me
understand whether one ceases to be African when he converts to
Christianity or Islam. I had wanted to know whose interests
faith based leaders represent when they appear in international
trade forums to talk against profit! The Kenyan crisis has
helped bring out the evil in the ‘toga’ clad individuals. It is
now clear that religious leaders have taken sides; they are even
more tribal than the politicians – whenever any member of the
clergy opens his/her mouth, you can guess what will spew out of
his mouth by virtue of their tribal affiliation. Now its clear
why cultic movement rise up in trouble torn parts of Africa;
when men of God take sides, become agents of death and
disharmony, the people seek refuge in alternative means of
spirituality. Religious leaders have put God on trial!
Fifth Lesson; Foreign aid! If Kenyans were in control of the
government purse, they could still exercise their democratic
rights by starving the beast whenever one emerges from the
political elites. Political elites can only listen to the will
of Kenyans if we successfully take charge of paying politician’s
bills. All strategies on governance will come to naught if
donors itching to release money keep subsidizing poor governance
in the name of development projects at the expense of ensuring
that the Kenyan ballot is backed up by Kenyan tax. Developed
nations’ focus on broader regional interests might find it
strategic to disburse aid to a government whose people feel
cheated. Africa shall never develop good governance if Africans
do not pay for the upkeep of their governments.
“The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to
do nothing” – Edmund Burke (January 12, 1729 - July 1, 1797)
James Shikwati is the Director of Inter Region Economic
Network james@irenkenya.org
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Lessons from Kenya Electoral Crisis
Commentary, Jan 17, Ghanadot - First Lesson; the
essence of law and constitution ought to be to tame the
insatiable, brutish human actions and instincts. It is very
clear that our constitution and legal system failed to
recognize this basic fact and put too much trust on “good
people”…..........More
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Ghana's democratic roots capable of preventing election
anarchy - Bagbin
Ho, Jan 17, Ghanadot/GNA - Mr Alban Bagbin, Minority
Leader in Parliament has said that, Ghana's resolve to chart
the path of democracy was so deep rooted to make the Kenyan
type political debacle hardly possible here.
...More |
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Akufo-Addo insists on transparency for 2008 elections
Accra, Jan. 05, GhanadotGNA - Acceptable results of
the 2008 elections must be born out of a transparent, free
and fair electoral process which should not be forfeited,
Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, New Patriotic Party (NPP)
Presidential candidate, said on Saturday. .....More
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In Global
Battle on AIDS, Bush Creates Legacy
Washington, NYTimes, Jan 5 - Dr. Jean W. Pape
did not know what to expect in early January 2003, when he
slipped away from his work treating AIDS patients in Haiti
and flew to Washington for a secret meeting with President
Bush......
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