zimbabwe’s kenya-esque election

It all sounds too familiar. Elections are held, but the government fears that the wrong people might be winning. The election officials know the results but are not releasing them for some mysterious reason. All things then break loose, with disastrous consequences.

The credibility of the election process is tarnished and everyone is left guessing who really won the election.

I am not saying that this is how Zimbabwe will pan out but I am worried at how eerily familiar the situation there seems.

Right now, with 52 constituencies counted, the government has half the seats and the opposition the other half. Tsvangirai’s party has 25 and Mutambara’s 1. A couple of Mugabe’s ministers have lost their parliamentary seats. Other results are being delayed for some mysterious reason even as Tsvangirai’s party, the MDC, continues to claim that it has won 60% of the votes cast to Mugabe’s 30%. The MDC also claims that it has won 99 seats in parliament against ZANU-PF’s 96 while 15 went to other opposition groups.

The real results have been delayed by the electoral commission …….. no prizes for guessing why. The weird part about this is that even after uncle Bob showed the world what he is capable of over the last two decades, I was still kind of optimistic that he was going to hold a relatively acceptable election (please prove me right Mugabe, please…)

To future would be African “riggers of elections” : if you have to rig, please be tactful. Do it without delaying results simply because this creates suspicion. Do it without having voter turnout being higher than voter registration. And do it in a way that half the government ministers do not lose their parliamentary seats because if they do and you still win, even the dumbest among us will smell a rat.

the truth will not be pretty

When the truth finally emerges about Kenya’s very bloody post election violence, it will not be pretty. If Human Rights Watch has it right (and I highly suspect they do), it will be established that the violence in the Rift Valley and parts of Nairobi were meticulously planned by local leaders, big name politicians and business people. More than 1500 died people in the two-month nightmare.

It perplexes me how we shall be able, as a nation, to trust our leaders after they get mentioned to have planned the killings of fellow Kenyans. How can we trust people who organized the burning of 50 people, most of them women and children, in a church? How can we trust the other leaders who in turn organized an arson attack of their own that killed 19 in Naivasha?

The other question will be, where does the investigation stop. Does it stop will the local elders in the Rift Valley or should it go all the way to the national stage where big name politicians might be implicated? Does it stop with the Mungiki leaders in the wider central Kenya or does it go all the way to those who participated in the supposed meeting at State House to plan the reprisal attacks in Nakuru and Naivasha?

Kenya’s near collapse at the beginning of the year is yet again another confirmation of Africa’s lack of serious and dedicated leadership – both within governments and the civil society groups. Why do we always settle for such inept egg heads to lead us? And where is the media on this? Where is their investigative journalism? The media should expose the killers who killed innocent Kenyans for who they are. And our civil society should stop shouting from the roof tops and actually get their hands soiled for a worthy cause. Please give names, dates, numbers, hard facts. EXPOSE THESE KILLERS.

Kenya owes the 1500-plus victims justice. For too long we’ve hid behind a culture of mediocrity and complicity with killers, thugs and rapists. 1992, 1997 and 2007 need to be cleansed from our national conscience. One way to do this would be to bring to book the real perpetrators of the violence that gave us all, as Kenyans, a bad name. The bigger their names the better.

heckling at KICC

Maragua has registered more votes cast than registered. A very worrying trend. 115% was reported, way above the number of registered voters.

Kivuitu looks very frustrated right now. There still are a number of polling centres that have not yet reported their results – especially in Central province. This is again a very disturbing development. This is a recipe for chaos. The KICC is turning into a shouting arena.

The ECK has suspended all activities until tomorrow morning (Kenyan time). Meanwhile tension is high all over the country. KBC just aired alarmist remarks by people running around causing chaos. KBC should sanitise some of this stuff before it appears on national television. Whoever is edited that report should be fired.

kenya votes

So today is the day Kenyans have been anticipating for the last several months. Beginning at 6 am. poll stations across the country will be opened so that Kenyans can go and choose their next government.

With campaigns having officially ended, the ball is now in the hands of the voters – many of whom must be glad that the season of noise and abuses is over. It is my hope that there will be a respectable voter turn out so that Kenyans choose the leader that most people prefer to be in the State House. I also hope that neither side will do anything silly that would make the loser not accept the outcome and thus drag the country through a period of uncertainty.

The race is going to be tight. According to the polls, Raila and Kibaki are in a statistical tie for the presidential vote. A high voter turnout could swing it either way. The parliamentary races are also going to be hotly contested. Even Raila is not so sure about his Lang’ata seat. Other doubtables are Mudavadi and a host of other outgoing MPs in the city.

All in all may it all go well so that come the 28th of December all Kenyans can forget about their political differences and come together to work for a better united Kenya.

ubuntu

Ubuntu is a Bantu concept that forms the foundation of relations among Africans – well, most of them that live South of jangwa Sahara and still have some sense of who they really are (Utu). It is a Bantu ideology that conceptualizes the African philosophy of existence. It can be interpreted in several ways but the closest would be “a person is because of other persons”.

In Bantu philosophy, unlike in Western philosophy, the individual is not like a leaf dangling in the air, detached from the “shackles of societal belonging” and fiercely independent. The individual owes his existence to society. One acquires his humanity only through his society and associations therein. In other words, one exists only because others exist and can be defined only relative to those close to him. It is no wonder that south of the Sahara, there are no great “heroes” except for exceptional cases like of the mythical hero Luanda Magere and of course the famous Zulu warrior Chaka (pronounced Shaka). All achievements of the individual are seen as the achievements of his people. The individual is just an agent.

Unfortunately, the one thing that the West did not import from piny Jorotenge is Ubuntu. Apparently, gold, diamonds, cash crops and sons and daughters of the soil gave better returns. I keep thinking of how wonderful life on earth would be if all people embraced this way of life – that I am because you are and so your pain is my pain and my brothers’ troubles are my troubles.

However, I realise that human nature can and has been corrupted in so many ways and that it is unlikely that all people will embrace Ubuntu – sadly enough even in the motherland some have shed off Ubuntu and engaged in acts that have angered Chukwu (may be this is why people are still dying of hunger in the 21st century, just may be).

A first step towards Ubuntu could be to instill in all of us the idea that life is not linear, it is cyclical. What goes around comes around, maybe not in our lifetime but in the lifetime of our descendants – who incidentally, according to Ubuntu, are us.

Always keep in mind that: Umuntu Ngumuntu Ngabantu (Zulu) – a person is a person through other persons.

proudly Kenyan

So Kenya is having general elections later this year. So far the campaigns seem to be going on without much trouble, except in a few isolated cases. I am glad that the Kenyan political arena is showing the signs of democratic consolidation that are so vital in the quest for economic and social stability.

All I can say is may the best candidate/party win – and the best candidate should be the one that will guarantee all Kenyans a chance at a better life; faster economic growth, job creation and general improvement in the standards of living.

new beginning

So the big news coming out of Africa right now is the case of the aid workers that kidnapped a bunch of Chadian children. Darfur has taken a back seat for now as Sarkozy rushed to Chad to have some of the accused released.

It is sad that in this day and age people still think that anything goes in Africa – from real old-school piracy off the coast of Somalia to taking of so many children out of the country with complete abandon of due process.

No doubt, a better life awaited the children in France. They would surely not live under the constant threat of hunger, disease or violent death from the many clashes that define the Chadian-Sudanese border. But this alone does not give foreigners a right to take away children to Europe to grant them a better life.

This case is a clear example of the age old way of solving Africa’s problems – running away from the problem. Africa’s most talented people who cannot stomach the endemic corruption and crumbling infrastructure run away, celebrities whisk children away in front of flashing cameras and in this latest example, poor African children were almost smuggled into Europe. Everybody seems to be eager to leave. But who will remain to repair the roads? Who will man the hospitals?
The children may not have been aware of what the aid workers were crafting, but I bet that some of their parents might have conspired with the aid workers to have their children taken to Europe where they would be guaranteed a more humane livelihood. Africans take risky boat rides every year in an attempt to reach European soil.

It is high time Africans of all ages came to the realisation that running away will not solve Africa’s problems. Instead, Africans should be bold enough to face the problems and provide solutions to them. Europe has not always been so rosy – at least relatively. It had its dark centuries, but Europeans did not run away. They faced the challenges, conquered them and then went ahead and conquered the rest of the world.

That said, remaining on the continent does not mean that we should not interact with non-Africans. On the contrary, we should have a complete thirst for what is going on beyond the continent. We should borrow as much as we can and be willing and bold enough to drop our own practices that are “backward.” We are not Africans because of our elaborate funeral rituals or spirit beliefs but because we are passionate and full of Ubuntu consciousness.

next time we shall be looking at the meaning of Ubuntu……