Showing posts with label Letter from Munich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Letter from Munich. Show all posts

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Servant leaders, not servant thieves, please

We are elated because with the promulgation of this constitution, resource devolution was facilitated. With it too is the devolution of anything that was good and bad about Nairobi. The thieves who have been roaming the capital, pulling strings and cutting deals are definitely being devolved to Kapsabet, Eldoret, Kisumu, Mombasa, Nyeri and any other County HQ. Where we say politics is local, we could as well say thieves shall be local.

With this constitution, the requirement that one must be a first rate thief to steal state largesse in order to develop his area is no longer tenable. Our society needs a Senator who's a negotiator, a (wo)man who can stand and defend the need for funding of key projects in an open and transparent manner. Governors must be (wo)men who can't deep fingers in the gravy jar. We need servant leaders, not servant thieves. So help us God.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Welcome to Nandi 2.0

As the president signs into law the new constitution of Kenya to usher in the birth of the second republic, I can't help thinking that this is the moment that Nandi 2.0 is also born alongside Kenya 2.0. Kenya 2.0 is the product of a negotiated constitution which pitted Kenyans saying YES against those saying NO. In a rare show of maturity, Kenyans cast their ballots and retreated to their homes to await the results of the plebiscite. Those of us, like me, who were outside Kenya at the time stayed glued to livestreaming TV and blogs to monitor the goings-on in Jamhuri. I was elated. Partly because I had pitched for a YES vote and said as much in several posts on this blog and on Kass FM. Partly because this vote was, for the first time as far as my memory could recollect, the most peaceful and possibly the only one whose result was accepted by both victor and loser.

Kenya has had her share of upheavals. From destruction of property and life, from bodily harm to those pluralism activists to deaths of hundreds as we fought to restore our dignity as a people, Kenya 1.0 is a stark reminder of an aborted dream. It is that missed journey that we hope will not recur again, ever. Kenya 1.0, the first republic, was characterised by anything bad about government. From excessive police force (used) against innocent Kenyans to the corruption pandemic to impunity. Kenya 1.0 is synonymous with death, corruption, hate, bitterness, nepotism, skewed resource allocation, favouritism, political marginalisation and failure. It is Misri to us. Not that Kenya 2.0 marks an abrupt departure from the sleaze of the past. No. The RED sea is crossed but we need time in the desert to allow the relics of Kenya 1.0 to die off before we reach Canaan lest they bring their bad into the promised land. Most of the purveyors of those vices associated with Kenya 1.0 are alive and they are positioning themselves to transcend the RED sea and stake a claim on the prominent roles which must re-engineer Kenya o be in sync with a new order.

Nandi County is born, welcome to Nandi 2.0. With this birth comes devolution, of resources and of corruption and vices that have been localised to Nairobi. Unless the new devolved units watch out, change the leaderships and elect responsible and responsive representatives, it shall be business as usual. What with our 'ngo samis muriat ko bo goot ne bo'. That bad and stinking rat knows what to do to evict you from your comfort. It just needs to stink, and off you bolt. Leaving behind the devolved largesse, on which fellow stinking mice will feast. It is real. Devolution of misrule, devolution of corruption or devolution to increase efficiency? We, members of Nandi Kaburwo County must choose to say NO to devolved ills and shades of misrule. Already, I hear whispers of 'he was with us, read RED' or 'he was not with us, read GREEN'. Now is the time for leadership, NOT activism.

Just the other day, someone told me. You'd make a great Senator for Nandi Kaburwo lakini you were GREEN. I considered it unwise. Kenya is ALL Green now, the new GREEN constitution is law and whether you were RED or GREEN doesn't matter no more. We are all in a GREEN Kenya 2.0. Nandi Kaburwo too is GREEN and the move to Nandi 2.0 MUST include ME. I stake claim to this new Nandi because I have been part and parcel of the struggle for fairness. Furthermore it is time to compete for office and the people of Nandi Kaburwo shall determine who stands to serve their interests. I want to be part of that team that shall usher Nandi to the new heights. I want to be part of the new Nandi 2.0, born on 27th Aug 2010. Arye we inyee! During the campaigns for or against this constitution, it was popular to say NO even if you did not know why. I refused to go the popular way. I still believe my choice of a YES campaign, which I explained in this blog, was right. I am proud to have been part of the team that was on the right side of history. That is courage. Safe politics is not necessarily right. By saying YES, I jeopardised my chances of being a prominent part of the Nandi 2.0, but that decision was borne out of the desire to see fairness in matters of squatter landrights. That is why I want to be part of the Nandi 2.0 team.

Make the wish of so many Nandi Kaburwo members come true. Support this transition to new leadership in Nandi. We cannot solve Nandi problems using the same people who created them. Nor can we be fooled any more with stories like "elect so and so because he/she is a friend of XYZ". Nandi Kaburwo must elect leaders with a clear mandate to LEAD Nandi Kaburwo FIRST. Nandi Kaburwo must believe in the abilities of her sons and daughters, the same people in whom you have invested enormous resources and time. This generation is alive to the heavy tasks ahead. But we are up to the task. We need new thinking, an assertive but dynamic leadership. Here we are.

Friday, April 30, 2010

Why I would vote YES for the Draft Constitution

My dad, Joseph Kiptarus arap Rugut died a poor tea estate labourer. He liked his job. He died on the day he had been 'promoted' to a senior supervisor. His predecessor was demoted. Dad died allegedly from alcohol intoxication, apparently because he was celebrating his promotion the only way he knew best: by drowning in the local brew. Those who picked his remains said he was strangled, his neck showing signs of strangulation. He didn't see his family break some cycle he wanted to see broken. Dad belonged to a generation whose parents considered education as a pass-time for social outcasts. His father made sure that he did not go to the Intermediate level after Kaptumo Government School (GS). His generation produced rare exceptions like Joseph Tendenei arap Letting and younger ones like Samwel Kipyebei arap Ngeny. Those were rare exceptions.


My grandfather, a senior (chongin) of the Maina age-set, somehow regretted his decision to roadblock dad's progress in education much later as he sent me away from his death-bed at Nandi Hills hospital. He made me believe he was OK, saying I should go back to my grandmother's in Uasin Gishu. He died before I reached my grandma's.


Kiprugut arap Ngeny believed that education was only necessary to enable one read the road sign posts. Beyond that, he and his generation thought, children who went to GS Kapsabet howled like hyenas. That was madness. My grandpa would have none of that madness for his sons and daughters. And he had many. He migrated from Kapngendui  in Kabirer to Kimatkei in Tindiret and then on to Sireet where he met with Bwana Robotson (Robertson), the owner of Koisagat Tea Estate. Luckily for him and his generation his daughters were married off. For each daughter who was given away, he sold the dowry, kept the money according to a strict rule, which enabled him to separate the wealth according to his two wives' daughters. Eventually, tired of "pressing blue" (teben buluu), signing with the thumb dipped in blue ink, which was a way of seeking permission to keep cattle in the reserves, he sought to buy land in the Location Seven of Kaptalam near Kabiriirsang next door to super athlete Henry Rono, Olympic champion Wilfred Kipkemboi Bungei and World champion Janeth Jepkosgei Busienei. That land was bought using the money accumulated from dowry. Each wife's daughters' dowry bought so much land, which was divided amongst the sons of each wife in keeping with the Nandi tradition of "ma amei go(t age) go(t)", literally no one home shall feed on/eat of another home. Every home is entitled to own property. My father did not want to leave his Kamelilo people to adopt a new home in Kaptalam at Kabiriirsang.

By not moving, he stayed on as a labourer at Robotson's farm (Koisagat Tea Estate). It was the case of the son inheriting servitude from his father. Talk of a vicious cycle, this is one such.

Monday, March 01, 2010

Kibaki: the guile old political hand and Kenyans love for raucous politicians

I would like to study under Emilio Mwai Kibaki. His persona is a study in contrasts between the know-all, want-to-know-all of Daniel Kapkorios Toroitich arap Moi and the control-freaks in politics as well as his 'apparent' hands-off, legs-off BUT eyes-on approach. He is probably a suave politician with little colour, or just an opportunist who saunters along ignored. A reputed economist with Alma mater like Makerere and the world renowned London School of Economics, Kibaki does not come along as 'visibly' intelligent as his contemporaries. Yet his stealth nature belies a politically deft personality and a political animal unbeknown to Kenyans. One should excuse Kenyans who are acclimatised to the noises from the Professor of politics and many of his raucous students who mistake vibe for substance. Kibaki is silence and scheming molded into a deadly roll. Here is a politician you would think is not in charge, when all he does is to keep his hands free of soil by delegating.

He had good lessons in management. And he uses them effectively.

But wait.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

My personal take on Chapter 12 of the Harmonised Constitution

Now to my task as a Kenyan. I am not trained in legal matters and what I offer is basically a layman's wish. I have stayed limited to Chapters twelve (Executive) and fourteen (devolution) for now. I have some misgivings about certain matters of language such as:

Article 156 (2) The State President shall exercise the powers and perform the functions of that office on the advice of the Cabinet unless this Constitution states otherwise. Does he SEEK Cabinet advise OR does Cabinet offer such advise without prompting. I think this 'trigger' needs to be put in black and white. For example, the words: Always, constantly, regularly, etc may be juxtaposed somewhere to disambiguate this and help eliminate the Rigera-type scenarios. The president might argue, 'I didn't need the help of the cabinet' on that, and still point to the ambivalence of this loophole. Let us use a toothcomb on the language!
These are my observations and misgivings so far, which I am also sending to the CoE via email.
Presidency: Election and power.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Kiwotoosiekab Kenya

Ng'eet anyuun I wee, angu kaaga cham keng'oleech kele 24% biik alage em Kenya. Ageere ale nyolu kotuiyo kandoik tugul em Kalenjiin ak kobekchi ng'aleekchok. Amoche aleenji bikchook momi amu nee asi ke meeite kainaiikab koreet ak emeet ne ke reember ak kotesei tai ngelelyoondonoo ko saksakani emeet. Onge chamde kepchei Rift Valley, ang kaleen ki kiroo koiin age kele nga menyei wakiik che chang ko ng'olooli kipkutiinak. Ma mi ng'ala, kimuuchi keemeny komosweek che teer ak kiyopchigei ng'aleek, mitei Kass FM ak simoiisiechoo.

Tos tuiyo MPs chechook korok ak kobegeechi ole ta ki tilda emeet ama nyi Ligale ko mitweech ng'aleek? Joshua, oiin 2007 ko ki mitei Kalenjiin Professionals. Kichuus kowo anoondo? Magotiin nguno bichootok kosiir asi kogoon kandoinateet em ole ma magee kiy MP anan kansola.

Joshua, kata amoche amwa kou ni: ata MPs che tinyei Central ak ata che bo RV? Pchechii ile biik kepchechi MPs asi iroo ile biik ata em MP ageenge. Ki ke ng'aleech koek keny ak keleen ki ng'ering ko chaang' alage. Tos mi Kivuitu oloo kitesee koitoosiekab census? Aiywei ale imuuchi kochuchuuch koitoosiekab ole kimochei ketebee.

Ngot ko egoosiek che bwonei ko Constituency ne wendi ko egu korosioot ne iyumi biik ko nyolu keng'alaal em Asiistab ra.

Kongoi, betuut ne mie.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Mau Forest

Joshua,
Nga atinye teeret em sobeet asi ma amwaa che chaang ko neegit ateebe biik che echeen eng acheek Kaplelacheek ale:

Chumeechu, Saweiyeechu ak Kipkooimetyeek/Koroongorreek omwaiweech....

Tos ki kowalak kieet yetaab kochutchi biik Mau? Unee roopta em Bureti ne Tebees, Kericho, Belgut ak Naikuro yetaab komeny biik Mau ak koluul ketiik? Ngot ko kiyoomio ainoosiek, ak ko kitiginiit roopta kotoi kopispiis ago kicham koraang'u kipupumuuit eng tai ko nyolu keguut ndureruut amu ki ko er ng'ony.

Ye igeer pichaiinik agobo tororeetab Mau ak timwek alak che uu Cheroondo ko riirin moo. Agot ileet ne kimii Tindireet ko ki kou neegit ma kemwoe keleen Tindireet Chebuusia ne ngooliel kegool bai.

Arap Sang, nda ki nge koonu mbareet eng Mau kigoochi kibananiaat ta murei yeto age. Kobaate ye ki kikoitoi mbareet ko kimiitei chemoetiinik che ma ristoos mootinweek eng mbareenikab ADC, Kapchai eng Nandi/Kipsigiis and timwek alak. Kinyoor mbareenik che tioniin chemogeenik eng Mau, ki igoochi che tioniin goriikwaak, Chebaigeiinikwaak ak alak.

Ye kiwos biik eng Mau ko ng'oo ne riirei ko ng'oo ne rooriei? Ageere ale ma nyolu kinde siasa Mau, ago nyolu kemitei tai eng ripseetab kieet (environment) ngaap kiboo teeta ak mbar. Ye kesen emeet ak koesio kotiaach roopta ko chiito ne tai ne nyalili ko chichoo kwerei keeldo agoi Naikurro kotugul kocheeng'ei kiruoget ne mie. Chemogeenik ko piru simeet kityo, ma ing'eigei.

Joshua, ageere ale nyolu serikali koweech mbareenik chebo ADC asi kigoochi pichootok kimoong'u. Ma nyolu kinde piik rawang, ago mie konai kiruogik ak kandoik kole ma kiyae kumbet sobonwekab biik amu biik ko ma tuguuk. Ileenji Kalenjiin koriip laatit, nyoonei kowolokwsei emeet ak ko luk roopta.
  • Ng'o ne tinyei saw mill eng Mau?
  • Ng'o ne ki ng'u ketiikab Mau ib kotamiit?
  • Kibaniinik che kinyoor ekaiisiek 500 chiichak konyooru kibananook ekaisiek aeng?

Kongoi, betuut ne mie.

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Wanted for Kenya: a comprehensive medical insurance scheme, not free tampons and maternity fees waiver

A healthy nation is a happy nation. A healthy family is a productive family. This is a buzzword for any serious nation that recognises the need to have healthy, able-bodied walking and working nation. Kenya's independence government recognised three enemies: ignorance, disease and poverty. Over the years, many efforts have been devised to address the challenges. Obviously, various levels of success have been registered in various sectors. However, with the dawn of the last couple decades of the 20th century were characterised by emergence of newer and more draining chronic diseases. AIDS was declared a national disaster in Kenya by President Moi in November 1999. But little success has been registered in combating the pandemic because of attitude and stigmatisation. Quite a substantial percentage of the population remains unaware of their serological status. I wouldn't have dared to know either, except that it was a requirement before clearance to travel to China. Even once in China, the monstrous State Entry and Exit Quarantine Bureau ensures that you are checked again for syphilis, gonorrhoea, TB and AIDS before one gets a 'green' card or residence permit. Once aware of the status, one is relieved and the hardest part begins: rat seseet!


In Kenya, the three leading killers are malaria, AIDS and tuberculosis (TB). Malaria remains a nuisance, coming during specific periods when there is a spike in the breakout. Much effort has been made in dealing with the environmental vagaries that increase incidences of infection by malaria with some emerging resistance to treatment by the protozoa. As of now a vaccine is not yet with us, but bold efforts have been made towards evolving one and it may be that before long the trials will be with us. The economic implications of malarial infections are enormous. This is because when one is bed-ridden, the economic productivity is put to rest. In some cases the unfortunate happens and the victim is severely anaemic and dies leading to loses in productive human resource and family labour bases. The economic implications cannot, therefore, be underestimated.

HIV-AIDS remains the most scary and dreadful killer in Kenya today. According to UNAIDS in their 2005 report, this nation of 34 million people had an infection rate of 1.3 million people with 140,000 deaths so far recorded from the opportunistic diseases associated with depreciated immunity brought about by HIV-AIDS. Kenya has recorded tremendous awareness in HIV-AIDS because of availability of information. However, little is still done to address the problem of stigma. Indeed, the war on AIDS lacks a warrior. Society has always resorted to eulogising HIV-AIDS victims with niceties like '(s)he died after a long illness bravely borne'. Bravery to live through AIDS infection is necessary, however, denial remains the greatest enemy. Surely, we are all not infected but we are all affected!


Because of stigma, for example, I was told that although Mosoriot Health Centre in Nandi North District offers anti-retrovirals (ARVs) for free to the victims, some people are too scared to go for them. In dealing with social stigma and suspicion, the 'clever' victims have devised an underground mechanism to obtain the drugs. Through 'brokers' who are paid a 'fee' for taking the drugs on their behalf during the designated days, the victims live faceless lives. Should the social stigma be allowed to stand in the way of the victims acquiring the drugs? While this is happening, Kenya's most productive demographic bracket of 15-49 year-olds register an infection rate of 6.1%. One live is as important as 140,000 and every effort need to be invested to ensure a healthy nation in our lifetime.

The third nuisance is tuberculosis (TB). Worldwide, 2.5 million people die of TB annually, three-quarters of these are drawn from poverty stricken sub-Saharan Africa. Kenya has its substantial contribution to this statistic. There has been an upward growth in the infection rates of TB which is controversially linked to the HIV-AIDS infection. Apparently, due to weakened immunity, TB finds the victim whose defences weakened as good as trapped. Together with these three, Kenya has other minor problems like leprosy and other skin infections, diarrhoea and worms. Thank God, some of the 'rich man's' diseases like diabetes, obesity and others are not uncommon but they remain of little consequence compared to the aforesaid maladies.

On health, Mrs. Charity Ngilu has made several efforts to make the Ministry of Health personable and consumer friendly. With the pay-as-you-take-the-jab policy, the government strengthened cost-sharing in its health institutions. Hospitals are cleaner, the doctors and nurses, though overworked and underpaid (compared to the greedy politicians), they work as hard as ever. Probably this is because of the Hippocratic Oath that the doctors took. Without the need to stoke controversy, the health sector in Kenya has improved. But it remains a far cry from the perfect picture promulgated in the Narc manifesto that cheated Kenyans into voting for that house of Babel.

Last year, quite some heat was generated when the erratic Mama Narc launched the populist but poorly planned 'free health for all'. Mr Kibaki took over power with the now famously forgotten quip 'there is no free lunch'. However, a lot of free goodies and promises of more have been flying from the hallowed house on the hill. Who is funding these 'roadside gifts'? The Kenyan tax-payer! Don't worry that your MP does not pay a dime for the perks (s)he takes home, and they hunger for much more. Universal free health is not offered in Germany, certainly not in another socialist economy, China. I have lived in these two lands in the last five years. Their health systems are as different as the ideologies of the leaders are. The health consumers themselves fund their health through a contributory insurance scheme.

First let me refresh our minds. Life for the Kenyan school girl is not easy with respect to the adolescent revolution and the attendant blessings of womanhood. Much less among our conservative Kalenjin families where these things are not mentioned to parents. They are as taboo as taking home your boy-friend to the parents. Apparently, parents silently applaud when the boys bring home the girl. What mean parenting this is! Some parents only get to know their daughter's love during 'kaboorunetabgei' which precedes 'kooito'. In fact some girls prefer to ask their elder sisters or cousins for the sanitary towels than ask their own mother. How long this stereotype will be sustained is not my current concern.


However, I remember when one day I went shopping at Uchumi in Eldoret and dared to buy some for a relative. You can't believe the shyness that greeted my honest effort. The relative vanished every time I arrived, as if she thought that I had an idea that she was wearing it everyday. Even if she did, what joy is there for a woman than to know that she has the 'normal' visitor every month. Lack of it could be worse! From henceforth, I'd rather give the relative money; never mind the convenience of me buying them cheaply wherever I had found them. Aside from that hiccup, one of the problems that was identified last year as a hindrance to good school performance by the Kenyan girl-child is the lack of sanitary towels. Beth Mugo said as much in 2005. Not even the zero-rating of taxes on sanitary towels guarantees availability of the same to all our school girls. Matters are not helped by the casual nature with which parents approach the girl-child's hygiene and the apparent laxity by school administrations who are ready to jump on punishing the girls any time they notice a change in behaviour. These issues may be worse in mixed schools, where boys take it as a cheeky issue. The onset of menstrual periods was even implicated in school absenteeism and pragmatism on the side of the administration is required not to make matters worse for the young victims of a natural phenomenon.

A couple of days ago Mrs. Ngilu announced that the government had waived maternity fees payment. One must welcome this as it is bound to bring with it other multiplier effects. Babies will be born in hospitals thus guaranteeing access to ante-natal healthcare, birth registration will be promoted and consequently child mortality will be reduced. But with this announcement comes another edge of the double-edged sword. It increases the pressure on the government to increase freebies in an election year. One wonders, has there been clear policy formulation on the part of government and were these things discussed soberly and budgeted for or are we seeing a government acting with too much heart and less grey matter? Isn't it possible that somebody is soon coming up with a proposal to offer mothers small goody bags as 'successful birth' gift packs or even free recuperation meals during the maternity/paternity break? Let me hasten to say that I support any effort that guarantees good and sustainable health-care provision to Kenyans. But, are free things the way forward for a government which promised that 'kila mtu kula jasho yako'? Already, the Ministry of Health in the current financial year requires 76.9 billion shillings (>US$1 billion) out of which the government provided less than half. Additionally, salaries alone guzzle more money than is available for infrastructure and expansion. How is the new 'maternity freedom' going to be funded?

Quickly to my point, to guarantee a reasonable provision for Kenyans, my country needs a comprehensive medical insurance scheme to which every Kenyan in employment contributes. This is what we do in Europe, America and any other country that cares to guarantee good health to its people. Free sanitary towels, yes: free maternity services, yes. But these should be funded from a sustainable kitty, not one which can be dropped whimsically at the behest of a politically driven decision-making. Certainly not in an election year. One only needs to look at ideas like the Nyayo (free primary school children's) milk and ask why it ended when a lot of children were benefiting. Forget that the teachers were making ndubia, tapal and tigin (was it actually 'thick'?) tea. The Nyayo milk project, a brain-child of the octogenarian Moi, helped bridge the gap between the children who had access to milk at home and those without. Don't forget that it also provided a marketing avenue for the struggling KCC, if ever the right hand paid the left hand. The project was wrapped up because it was not economically sustainable; it was driven by politics and it was ended by politics. I will not be shocked if somebody will come up with a 'free lunch for every primary school' kid sooner than later as a campaign gimmick. Trust these politicians to somersault and dive onto impossible ground!

I have decided to rebuff Ngilu's proposal because although it is important to have a hassle-free birth, other sectors of health and the economy should not be jeopardised. I remember that the choleric Ngilu had an acrimonious tug-of-war over a maligned 'free' national healthcare insurance scheme sometime ago. She even went on a shouting match with Daudi Mwiraria, if my memory serves me right. Why has the minister reneged on a personal 'pet' to bring 'free' healthcare to everybody. This scheme has the potential to make life safer for the Kenyan, reduce patronage and pressure on politicians and it will lead to another plus. Let me explain. Anybody who listens to the radio announcements does not fail to hear of somebody somewhere who died. Upon death, the deceased family members summon fund-raising committees, one in Nairobi, another in Eldoret and yet another at the village sometimes the climax being the day of the funeral/burial itself. This is 'to meet the costs of an accumulated medical bill', which was left behind by somebody who has left. That the family will not raise enough money is not a secret. Politicians make pledges, issue bouncing cheques and then there is the other strategy in the village harambees. Whenever a harambee is held in the village, the organising committee 'borrow' money from a local businessman which will be used 'to attract donations'. After the harambee, the 'borrowed money' is returned to the businessman, no penny less. The remainder is paltry and the hole is dug in the family resources. How long shall we have families being left with debts by the departed souls, that they cannot repay?

Here in Germany, for example, we have contributions to a health insurance scheme deducted from one's salary. At a premium of anything up to 130 Euros/head/month (apart from the church tax!), one is guaranteed good health care. It is not free, but you are sure of your bills not following you to the grave. In fact, some of these schemes are so comprehensive and comfortable that if, for example, I went back to Nairobi and were (God forbid) indisposed, I'd get treatment in the dream institution like Nairobi Hospital. All I need is my Insurance card/number and other paperworks. This scheme takes care of in-patient as well as out-patient services. The only exclusions are fitting of teeth-fillers and glasses/spectacles. Where one is too poor to afford, the government may pay for them an amount which takes the burden from the family and government to the able hands of the risk management system-health insurance scheme providers. Is such a scheme not feasible for the Kenyan people? Can't a tea farmer contribute his Shs. between 50 and 500 or even more/month and the family in a well-paying job contribute money to cater for treatment even abroad? Should it be only MPs who can be flown to South Africa, Israel, UK, USA and Germany while our poor relatives die in poorly equipped bug-infested Nyayo wards? I think the Kenyan healthcare consumer needs no more freebies, what is needed is a comprehensive mandatory health insurance scheme. What do you think?

Kenyans need better life. This does not come in the form of free things, the government has already provided a lot of 'free stuff'. Free things are not good for a working nation. Some people who could earn by providing what the government dolls around as the 'free services' are rendered jobless and unproductive. Free sanitary towels and maternity services are not the panacea for the Kenyan woman, it is the evolution of a well-structured and managed universal health care insurance scheme to cater for the whole family that is needed. Get down to business and don't play games with our health, Charity. We need an insurance scheme for health in Kenya to remove the barriers of access to quality healthcare. A health insurance will ensure the mental health and peace of mind for the Kenyan families. Certainly with the spiralling burden wrought by HIV-AIDS, the burden for the cost of the health care should not be left to chance, we need bold policies for Kenya that will guarantee sustainability and reliability.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Ingredients of Kalenjin Bonding: Unity in Diversity

Unity in diversity. A very ignored tenet in humanity, one of those aspects of democracy that guarantees the rights of the minority even in the face of domination by the majority. It is the strength of those who hold divergent views and yet live harmoniously. It is a well known and acclaimed fact that man, by nature, is poor at multitasking, hence the wisdom of division of labour. Even in the most basic sense, diverse ideas on salient issues like religion have the potential to dismember such sacrosanct institutions as the family. What does unity in diversity mean for Kenya's 42-plus tribes, indeed for Africa's rainbow of skin colour, religious creed, economic strata and geographical, or indeed even historical diversity? What does unity in diversity mean for the Kalenjin, a club of nine-some (nine is a magical number in Kalenjin myths) tongues unified by their similarities or pretended similarities in culture and obvious tongue as well as evolutionary or migratory attributes?


The Kalenjin were not called so at the beginning of the last century, if anything not before the 1950s. Before this time, the "Nandi-Speaking" peoples was a common reference and these facts are covered in some historical monographs and journal publications (Refer to Wikipedia) and some academic manuscripts published in the 1940 like the one by Evan-Pritchard. The emergence of the term Kalenjin seems more like a coinage of some intellectual class which was desirous to cement a political alliance as a bargaining chip.
Beginning in the 1940s, individuals from these groups who were going off to fight in World War II (1939–45) used the term kale or kole (the process of scarring the breast or the arm of a warrior who had killed an enemy in battle) to refer to themselves. During wartime radio broadcasts, an announcer, John Chemallan, used the phrase kalenjok ("I tell you," plural). Later, individuals from these groups who were attending Alliance High School formed a "Kalenjin" club. Fourteen in number, they constituted a distinct minority in this prestigious school in an area dominated by another tribe, the Gikuyu. The Kalenjin wanted an outward manifestation of identity and solidarity to distinguish them from the Gikuyu. These young high school students formed what would become the future Kalenjin elite. Kalenjin identity was consolidated with the founding of a Kalenjin Union in Eldoret in 1948, and the publication of a monthly magazine called Kalenjin in the 1950s.


Oddly, this word was settled on to unify the communities much like the demonised GEMA conglomerated around an acronym for the tribal nouns Gikuyu, Embu, Meru and ambivalently the Akamba. Why the Kalenjin club survived where Gema dispersed is beyond the scope of the present discussion.
The Kalenjin movement was not simply the development of a people's identity. The British colonial government supported the Kalenjin movement and sponsored the Kalenjin monthly magazine out of a desire to foster anti-Gikuyu sentiments during the Mau Mau emergency. The Mau Mau movement was a mostly Gikuyu-led revolt against British colonialism that provoked an official state of emergency lasting from October 1952 to January 1960. Gikuyu conflicts both with the British and with non-Gikuyu tribes (including the Kalenjin) factored in the creation of Kalenjin solidarity and unity. Of note is that the Kalenjins are now recognised as one super-classification much in the line of thinking that informs the way in which the Luhya are amalgamated and sub-classified. By composition, the Kalenjin are made up of the Nandi (Chepng’al), Keiyo, Tugen, Kipsigis, Terik, Kony (Sebei, Sabaot), Pok (Lako), Suk (Pokwut, Pokot), Endo (not a clan of Keiyo?), Marakwet and the Kalenjin Okiek (Dorobo).


The different Kalenjin communities have had different references for each other. Thus, the Nandi were derogatively or otherwise called Chepng'al (watu wa maneno mengi!) by the other Kalenjins. There is, however, a myth that indicates that the name Nandi was given by some Arab merchants in reference to a community of vicious attackers, much like a swift bird called Nandi. It is perhaps important to mention that the term Nandi is used in the Indian language to refer to a goddess whose symbol is a bull! Does this have anything to do with the love for a cow by the Nandi and Kalenjins? It is a matter of conjecture, perhaps, but the love for a cow is found in the most flowery and unflattering language forms. "Koonyit ko toroor ko tee tany ak muren", respect is equated to a man and a cow! Ostensibly because when a man has cows, he can marry a woman and thus completely earn his respect 'koondit'.


Let’s say that history has done the Kalenjin some justice by identifying the cultural and linguistic points of convergence, and now it is upon us, this generation and the ones to come after us, to identify what divides us so that we can iron them out and model on a realistic and sustainable unity. In the Moi presidency, the Kalenjin were under the illusion that they were safe, needed not worry about multi-partyism and possibly needed no planning about the post-Moi political dispensation. That myth came crumbling on 30 Dec 2002 when the community woke up to realize that ‘Eve had no dress and I too am naked’. I need not repeat what has been repeated ad nuseum, except that a rallying of the community to counter any attempts to over-run and decimate us became the most popular effort of this community of valiant warriors. If the Kalenjin haters had succeeded in stigmatising, corralling and hoarding us into a cocoon of self-pity, the Kalenjin were to have been banished from the face of Kenya. As it were, the Kalenjin-haters' efforts came to naught, they didn’t succeed.


To not repeat the case where the community swung with Mr. Moi, we need to identify issues that unify us and those that divide us. In this case, we will avoid the case that led Njehu Gatabaki to dismiss the Kalenjin in his acidic derision that was published in the defunct yellow-journalism, the Finance magazine. I remember how every other Kalenjin kept their quiet while my cousin, Tony Kirwa, and I wrote a piece in defense of the Kalenjin (Why Gatabaki is wrong, Kenya Times, Wed 16 Nov 1994, page 7) which elicited a number of unsavoury exchanges between us and the dishonoured MP. I will post a scan of the papers elsewhere, soon. We, the Kalenjin, need to claim a deserved stake of Kenya, not as hopeless beggars at the mercy of some political god-father. No, the Kalenjin need to stand tall as proud co-owners and prominent shareholders of Kenya Inc., as a very pivotal addition without which Kenya is, but another dirty dot on a dark continent. We should know that like every citizen of Kenya: the Elmolo, the Okiek, the Giriama, the Tiriki, etc., we are an inseparable part of the Kenya socio-political fabric. Without us, this great nation will be in tatters, groan, bleed dry and wither.


The current show of Kalenjin unity may be threatened unless the tenets that bring us together are strengthened. Let me begin by saying that two things prompt me to say this. One is that the Moi presidency reversed the Kalenjin peoples’ democratisation to an extent that the Kalenjin people elected anybody he preferred as nobody dared contradict his fiat. The second reason is that while the Kalenjin position themselves to play a key role in the present political order, it is emerging that, indeed every community is angling to play the deciding or swing vote in the ever-changing political scenario. I provoke thought with a question I have asked before, should we invest in only one individual to determine our destiny as we continue to do with the ageless professor of politics, or do we need an approach that promotes a collegiate summit to manage the Kalenjin matters, much in the context of a 'Kalenjin Kokwet Council'?. Which is likely to promote a sense of ownership, a demi-god or a group that can 'weiwei' the options before plunging the community in the abyss of selfish and unconnected political expeditions?


Let me begin with a piece of tired history. After independence in 1963, the young nation needed to fuse into one massive shell, called Kenya. None of us bothered to ask what the name Kenya meant, which language it was or who had given it. I'm not sure that were we to rename this great land today, we would arrive at a consensus name given the way we are so tribally conscious! At independence, the word tribe was frowned upon as the people of Kenya embraced the nation-state and the 'growth' and well-being of Kenya became the more pressing need than abstractions like equitable distribution of national wealth. Anybody who raised a finger against the omniscient Jomo was seen as an enemy of Kenya, a 'Pumbavu', and was greeted with some unprintable platitudes. Therefore we all pretended to be Kenyans. Unwittingly, the rest of the country went to bed while Nyakinyua ran amok with land-grabbing sprees and the Chepkube menace.


The Gikuyu were eating while the rest of the communities sang the patriotic songs “ee Kanu, Kanu yajenga nchi” and 'nchi yangu ya Kenya ni nchi ya ajabu, tuungane pamoja tujenge taifa'. One only needs to listen to the patriotic songs of those days to affirm this. When Jaramogi decided to liberalise politics, the slaughter of his people in Kisumu greeted his efforts. Meanwhile, the key state corporations were being managed by the current millionaires, state companies collapsed while the company executives were becoming stinking rich ‘untouchables’. Sometimes I wonder whether my son has a role model to learn from, somebody who became a railway porter and rose on to be a millionaire by working hard, much like Tiny Rowland of the defunct Lonrho Plc. But he probably needs any, he just needs to avoid copying the ones we know.


Jomo slept, and Baba Moi inherited a system that had created a demi-god president: a primordial benefactor, the principal distributor of national wealth, farmer number one, teacher number one, family planner number one, and Kalenjin number one. To ‘speak with one voice’ was a great political philosophy and the greatest political professor considered any dissenting opinion as heretic and an insult to his consummate wisdom. On the underside, we saw communities within the Kalenjin club being branded as enemies while a select club was benefiting from state largesse, all in the name of the Kalenjin. I cannot forget an incident where I was in some audience somewhere. After being asked to identify the ‘enemy’, the audience failed to identify that the enemy was an ethnic community which is a member of the Kalenjin club! When the host pronounced the name of the enemy tribe, I blushed (well my blood became hot actually) and some in the audience turned to betray my intrusion. But it had been done. This was sustained throughout the Moi presidency with some communities being tagged as enemies, ‘berberen’, ‘kororon’, ‘choronok’, 'oribegei' etc. This should never have been allowed to begin in the first place, but Moi’s was a divide and rule regime per excellence, perfected to the core and sustained by a coterie of well-oiled sycophants.


The sad thing is that when the Kalenjin thieves were robbing the national coffers, they did it on their own, or at least for their families. When it was time to pay back, they high-tailed to the communities to seek refuge, then it was expedient for them to bundle the community into a single defence army. In a nutshell, when it was time to eat, Moi’s presidency was a closed house for only a select few court ‘eaters’. When it was pay-back time, the same exclusive eaters sought refuge in the community with the tired cliché ‘we are being haunted as a community’. We still hear these from the men and women who raped and crippled the very nerve centre of the Kalenjin economy, the KCC, KGGCU, NCPB, KIE, KNTC etc. While these corporations were going under or changing hands under the tables and being taken up by statehouse squatters, those that sustain the economies of Moi's erstwhile political enemies were thriving. Even the tea and coffee sectors were to have collapsed except that these were more controlled by Central Kenya cartels well out reach of the domineering RV Mafia.


Today, while the thieves of yesteryears enjoy the community’s protection, the protectors, you and I, walk around economically naked because of the collapse of several key agricultural-sector driving forces. The Kenyan, indeed the Kalenjin farmer was reduced to a pauper by their own government because the bubble millionaires with statehouse tentacles went on a product importation spree. Radioactive milk from Ukraine found a ready market and was safe to consume in Kenya as did Ugandan maize while the Kalenjin dairy and cereal farmer saw a collapse of the sectors at the hands of a Kalenjin government. The pride of the Kalenjin farmer was deflated irreparably by their own sons!


Fast forward to today. Mr. Moi is not in power and the Kalenjin are more solidly united and politically conscious and educated than ever. Granted, when I went to China in 2001, milk from Lessos was leaving each morning for the fresh milk market in Kisumu. Kibaki's government has tried to resuscitate the farmer's pride. Today, milk from Lessos doesn't go Cherongowards to Kisumu and Western Kenya, nay. In 2006, when I returned to Kenya, I found the milk being delivered to Kong'asiswards by the small scale farmer on a bicycle or on foot to the cooling plant in Lessos. In fact, one farmer who had forgotten his a/c number asked his son (an acquaintance of mine) to lunch at Kapsabet. The father was going to pay the bill. It brought back fond memories of the 1970s and 1980s, such a long time ago, that farmers used to drive the newest pick-ups and tractors in Eldoret town. Does any of you remember those stories of farmers going to an Indian's shop with money in a gunia, asking the Mhindi for the price of a new Ford or International tractor while the Mhindi looked at him from head to toe and back, trying to size up the rugged fellow against the price of the new tractor? Of course the Mhindi finally counted the money he needed for the tractor, much more money remained in the bag which he handed back to the nonchalant farmer. The 'kwaang'at' farmer rode his tractor back.


Those were the days when the credit facilities for farmers at AFC were available for asking, easily accessible and cheap. In Moi's Kenya, people who took these loans needed special clearance from some massive green pens, they could concoct stories like a ridiculous one I revised a long time ago. It read 'please write off my loan because lightning struck my crop of maize'. Lightning is a natural calamity, a strike of maize by lightning is creativity at its ebb. In the Moi's Kenya, brokers drove better and bigger cars, lived in better houses and put their children in better schools. The economy that was sustaining the Kalenjin was ruined by a Kalenjin ruling class while the people were reduced to beggars lining street corners for meagre pecuniary hand-outs. They were paltry when weighted against the robberies.


So much for the pain, back to the gist of my monologue, Kalenjin unity. Granted that in their magnanimity, the Kalenjin have accepted Mr. Moi's mistakes and decided to reinvent themselves as a unified house, how sustainable is the unity? One hopes that it is not a tower of cards, waiting to come down crumbling. But, is it an ephemeral coalescence driven more by fear of some unknown 'chemosiit' than a convergence of thought, or is it more reasonable than I can perceive? How about the mental ownership of 'Kalenjin', how much of Kalenjin is owned by the individual Kalenjin communities as opposed to it being owned by a few greedy 'elite' individuals with designs that are larger than your and my daily needs? Is it possible to premise the Kalenjin unity on a collection of ideological diversity but remain sustained as a unity of purpose because of some sense of importance accorded to each of the communities to that unity? Does a Sabaot in Mt. Elgon, for example, feel the same sense of mental ownership of the Kalenjin club as does a Nandi of Cherondo in Tindiret? I am aware that it is easy for anybody to imagine this as a stoking of old flames and an incitement of irrelevant issues that had better been let to rest. Ochamegei! Let's not bury our heads in the sand: by pressing the wound, the pus will come out, the wound will dry and we'll be healing it! Any other thing is an invitation to 'bulbuleni' and a Chernobyl-type explosion of a septic and contagious hatred will be inevitable. By confronting the issues that divide us, we'll be narrowing the gap, thrashing out the causes will undoubtedly help us to melt even closer. This is a viable move towards a sustainable unity of purpose.


While the emergence of the Hon. William Ruto presidential bid has given the community a new sense of identity, a semblance of freedom from the Moi clan hegemony and some security of tenure as well as the realisation that we can have a bargaining chip in the post-Moi Kenya, there are issues that need to be addressed. For example, as I asked before, is it possible for the Kalenjin to constitute a leadership summit, call it the Kalenjin Kokwet Council, out of which Ruto emerges as a leader, one among equals? This kind of arrangement will allow the Pokot to feel a sense of ownership of part of the Kalenjin club. The danger in approaching the Kalenjin unity issue as we did the approach to national unity (by demonising rather than respecting the tribe) is to promote some pretence of the absence of the undercurrents of internecine suspicions. I am not inventing these. I am aware that we are likely to face the problem of one tribe feeling excluded from a just share of the Kalenjin ‘pie’ should we be able to get recognition as a collective bloc. How certain are we that if one pretends enough to be the ‘chief’ of the Kalenjin, (s)he will not think it wise to exclude other tribes in his negotiations for positions in government.


This almost takes me off the veneer to another issue I raised elsewhere. Even if the Kalenjin seek to ‘put one of our own in statehouse’ as we always hear it sung to us ad infinitum now, are we going to be tenants in statehouse for ever? I have been of the idea that the Kalenjin did not become politically schooled because of one of their own occupying statehouse. Rather they did this only after being jolted to the perception that some crazy person in the ruling class may come knocking their door seeking retribution. Indeed while the Kalenjin were fusing and intimidating the current administration into backing off from vendetta, it emerged that the Moi clan was pursuing a more friendlier and safer approach by seeking rapprochement with the Kibaki statehouse. He was seeking his and his clan's security and survival.


The Kalenjin were magnetised in spite and in the absence from statehouse of Mr. Moi. This unity should be natured and not endangered. The first republic rubbished tribe as pumbavu, anti-development and at the same time promoted the -isms associated with it. Nepotism and clannism became the basis for getting appointments to state corporations. This was sustained by the Moi regime. Mr. Moi extended it a little to the church. Almost to a man, for example, a non-AIC adherent Nandi was perceived as an enemy of Mzee. Bishop Alexander Kipsang arap Muge was demonised because he was Anglican, Samuel Kipyebei arap Ng'eny (I would have more grouses with him because he stole Lenana School from me for his son) was never a darling of Mr. Moi even though he was among the 'Kifunguo Tatu' (sic) of 1979. Henry Kosgey never quite settled in Moi's Statehouse although he could have been helped by 'kanyiok'. Please be reminded that Kipruto arap Kirwa has never found favour before Moi, even after prostrating and apologising profusely in public. Simply because he is not AIC! Where the non-AIC leaders in Nandi were depreciated and haunted to subjugation, the clownish Barng'etuny grabbed hundreds of acres of Kimwani ADC complex for each of his sons-in-law (I wish he had another daughter for me to marry) while the poor folks at Kiptega, Kamung'ei, Sitet and Kipkures looked on agape. John Cheruiyot got a soft landing in a state corporation while Stanley Metto walked Nandi like a large colossus. David arap Bett and a new AIC-convert (I was in the meeting where he declared that he had joined AIC at Kabuson AIC Church in 1997), one Tony Ketter, supplied to KCC more toilet tissue than the milk which was delivered by the farmers.


Education was not spared either. Mr. Moi deliberately put his fingers in schools that were christened with a prefix AIC-Ng'orotionge Secondary School, any other was doomed to rot. It was during his time that we witnessed schools changing nominal church sponsors, sometimes under acrimonious circumstances as happened in in the then CPK-AIC tug of war at Lelmolok and Chepkoiyo in Uasin Gishu. The AIC church became a new tribe, a new clan if you like. It still is, for Evangelist Moi will be found in Nandi occasionally preaching! In the meantime, Moi employed three Tugen vestiges and proteges to prefect the three Nandi countries. Mark Kiptarbei arap Too was detailed to keep a tight lid on Nandi, Reuben Chesire and his agile sister, Zipporah Kitony kept an eye on Uasin-Gishu and Trans-Nzoia, respectively.


The Kibaki presidency has been even worse! Not only has this regime negated the achievements made at the demise of the Kanu behemoth in the last election. In 2002, Kenyans thought, acted sang and danced 'yote yawezekana' in the hope that tribe would be banished forever from the requirements to qualify for a state appointment. In Kibaki's government, the ministers have been given the lee-way to run their ministries without having to run scared of some village party activist with fillers at Statehouse. That is a plus. However, two sad things happened with this. The ministers have turned the ministries into tribal enclaves and reward centres. You don't need to be a genius to perceive this glaring reality; looking at any government parastatal gives one the clearest index of which tribal chief is in charge. Sadly, there aren't 42 ministries, and even if this were the case, some are class A while others are as good as ministerial departments. I do not need to belabour the second misgiving, that Kenya is a democracy best defined as 'a government of the old, by the old for all'.

In view of what the previous republics have done, Kenya and the Kalenjin need legislation to protect the citizens against mercenaries of state power so that in or out of power ‘our things’ should not be tampered with because the elaborate legislation will guarantee the rights of the weakest in the face of the menacing domineers. Community protectors need not be flesh and blood human beings who are likely to abandon the community in the high-seas. Much the same way that Kenya needs guarantee of the rights of the minority by the majority, the Kalenjin need declared and visible indices that a Sabaot will not be overrun by a Nandi in that part of their world because of their demographic strength or lack thereof. In the same way, the Terik need not be demised because of their numerical inferiority (although most of the Nandi are Terigek anyway). To guarantee this sense of collective and corporate ownership of the Kalenjin juggernaut, we need some sober thinking and not some orgasmic excitement. As the Kalenjin, we need a clear distinction between politicians and legislators including noise-makers on the one hand, and a collective Kalenjin leadership council. Can the Kalenjin offer representatives in equal proportion to constitute a supreme council that will handle and steer the community’s national aspirations? Such a council will be constituted as a semi-autonomous body made up of apolitical members representing every tribe, small or big. I hold no monopoly of ideas, certainly not of knowledge. But a robust discussion is required, not savage dismissals like are likely to greet this suggestion.


Aside from the council, the second thing is that I wish to state that it is important for all other Kalenjin tribes to respect each others' territorial interests. I am aware that this is not a very favourable topic, at least not for modern convenient thinkers. But I have taken it upon myself to broach this topic so as to slay the ghosts once and for all. Just as stated before, the Nandi should have a Nandi to represent their interests, a Keiyo should represent the Keiyo interests, even the interests of the Pokot are better represented by an ethnic Pokot. It means that it should be taken as a show of extreme insult of the Marakwet community if a Nandi should even dream of supplanting a Marakwet in the leadership of Marakwet country. This is the same for a Kipsigis in Nandi country, for in no way is a Nandi going to articulate the needs of a Tugen in Tugenland, much the same way an ethnic Kipsigis cannot be relied upon to not be tempted to devolve monies and development goodies and agenda from Nandi to a remote conclave in Kipsigisland.


Let us remember that, in Menjo University, for those who went there, we were told "Kiseetei kipchoi and eem bo buun". We would be educated by that paradigm to appreciate that we cannot invade fellow Kalenjins, Ongeseet Maasai ak eembo Lem etc. One of the truths that must be told is that when there is a ‘foreigner’ seeking positions of leadership in another tribe’s sphere, it will undoubtedly stoke the fires of hate and easily leads to a break-up of the Kalenjin unity. It is vexatious and gritty, however nationalist we pretend to be. Did I cease to be Chemoso's child because I woke up to realise that I am a Kalenjin? Will I name my son Cheptumo, or Chedatum just because I am an ardent Kalenjin? Hardly. I will name him according to the way the Nandi do. Only then can that make him stand out as a Kalenjin. That is why anybody who speaks Kalenjin language doesn't necessarily lay claim to Kalenjin membership. We need an entry point. Indeed, it is because of the privilege of being born a Nandi that I lay claim to my right as a Kalenjin.It is not vice-versa and to smell tribalism and any other -ism in this argument smacks of intellectual hypocrisy and ignorance of one's history. I am proud to be a Nandi, I expect any other Kalenjin to identify his/her roots and be proud of that. Stand tall as a Keiyot, Tugenin, Kipsigisin or Terigin. Don't be ashamed of this for in any case you bear indelible tribal marks, your names!


To rubbish the tribe as a unit of identity, security and nucleus about which the nation-state is cemented is to ask Kenyans to cede their surnames and adopt John Michael Joseph as a universal tag of a nation of patriotic pretenders. What a shame! To be proud of one's tribe and seek equitable distribution and a rightful share of the national cake to ensure that every tribe gets a share is to promote a sense of collective ownership of Nairobi. I will certainly not be amused if I am told that my tribe will not be represented in the Kalenjin club, much so the Kenyan association ostensibly because we are one. What balderdash! Promote and secure the units, the additive effect is that the centre will hold. God did not create Kenya, he created our tongues and consequently our tribes. Kenya is an acceptable, if irresistible, drawing of some imperialists, quite succinctly, a creation of the grabbers who were wining and dining at the remote Berlin conference.


Finally, for the collective Kalenjin representation, the prime representative emerging from the summit may come from any of the tribes either by consensus or through an electoral college. "Ma kindiitoi muren sumei". I ask again, is it possible to constitute a Kalenjin Kokwet Council? Will this enhance Kalenjin unity or not? Insult me if you can, but face the facts and discuss.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Ruto is hawking the Kalenjin

That William Samoei Kipchirchir arap Ruto is a businessman with few equals is not a secret. The former student of the immortal Kapsabet Boys High School has a nose for the shilling that is unmatched by his peers and agemates. Not many of his contemporaries have seen a million shillings, except in writing, and are unlikely to see it in their lifetime. Likewise, his rise in politics was undoubtedly as meteoric as it was highly unexpected. The former meek Christian Union (CU) and North Rift Evangelistic Team (NORET) official has confounded both friend and foe. Those who know Mr. Ruto well attest to a calculating and ambitious man, sometimes the ambition leading to serious fall-outs reminiscent of betrayals and not-entirely-over-the-table decisions. It is therefore not a wonder that he fell out of favour (or is it the other way round!) with the moneyed blue-eyed boys of the Moi Statehouse - Cyrus Jirongo and Gideon Moi. What led to their fall-outs and the fact that Mr Ruto has a near sneerish gaze at them whenever he comes face to face with them is both mysterious and tempting. But that is not the hypothesis of the present thesis.

Upon the retirement of the all-domineering Senior citizen Moi, the Kalenjin Moi Statehouse squatters were orphaned. With trepidation they lived each day, not knowing when the 'incorrigible' Kiraitu Murungi-led purge of the former official thieves could come knocking on their now porous doors. For with the departure of Mr. Moi, the deepest secrets of his side-kicks, including Mr. Ruto, were filtering through. It was then that the Kalenjin were cajoled and coerced into a cocoon of fear and scouting for a protector became inevitable. Admittedly, the first goof of the nuptial Kibaki Statehouse was a direct affront on the senior Moi who was fast gaining world-wide acclaim and local sympathies for having ceded power peacefully contrary to beliefs by the doomsayers. Nonetheless, Mr. Moi was making amends with the lynch-pins in the Kibaki Statehouse and as it became increasingly clear that he was safe, his former army of tainted poodles were running scared. Mr Ruto emerged as a noisy champion of Kalenjin 'rights to live in Kenya' and this elevated the former humble AIC-adherent to pop-status overnight. That emergence of Ruto came, perhaps by happenstance rather than design, with the emergence of the immensely popular vernacular radio station, Kass FM. Matters were to be God-sent when, unprovoked, some thinkers in the Kibaki Statehouse and particularly at the Information ministry imposed an illegitimate, if entirely unwarranted, attempt to gag the station. When Mr. Sang of Kass FM was thrown into a police cell, Ruto rallied the Kalenjin people to a free advertisement and instant elevation, of both Kass FM and Sang on the one hand and Ruto himself and a number of opposition MPs on the other, to glorified protectors of the Kalenjin against collective persecution by the Kibaki puritanists and Kalenjin-hate machine. It was therefore natural and a very logical consequence when Mr. Ruto decided to throw in the towel and offer himself as a presidential candidate in the crowded, if star-studded, ODM-Kenya. This came hot on the heels of Mr. Ruto having led his politically conscious constituency of Eldoret North to provide the highest count of 'NO' or Orange support against the mutilated and doctored constitution. Even when he was crowned as a Kalenjin elder, he still enjoyed near-hysterical support. The rest, as they say, is history.

After releasing his blue-print which was duped "A Kenya for all Kenyans", Ruto was hailed as a serious contender for Statehouse and not merely one escorting others to the gate. Although his vision was lacking in intellectual input and was massively silent on cardinal pillars of development for the 21st century and beyond (health, science and technology and anti-corruption), it was an eye-opener. That Kenya suffers political plagiarism is not unique. Many people simply take blue-prints and cover the original author's name with the sorry mistake that they forget to replace other salient items of identity. Nonetheless, Ruto promised a fair distribution of wealth, although the vision was silent on wealth creation. You cannot divide ugali equally unless you have made it! One could as well say that Raila's sterling and Hollywood-style launch was a stark revision of the preceding launch episodes. That of course is not to be taken at face-value because one may as well wish to ask why Joseph Nyaga decided to offer a comical display while he launched his with the laughable rider "I'm more educated than all the others" which only served to underline the below-par delivery of service that awaits Kenyans from President Joe Nyaga. It will be safe to imagine that Ruto evolved a highly unjustified ideation that he was as good as the 'god of the Kalenjin' with the launch. This possibly meant that he regarded the Kalenjin vote as his to lose. Suffice it to say that the Kenyan media treated the launch unjustly, offering him just but a page five three-paragraph coverage for all the evening's worth. Well that is an issue for the 'members of the fourth estate'. Notably, the Kenya Times, which Mr. Ruto is fighting a court case to take it away from Kanu members, gave him a front-page coverage. Another day we will revisit the claim that Mr. Ruto has vandalised the printing press in a bid to steal the newspaper.

Concomitant with Ruto's release of his vision and entry into the real-politik arena was a claim by the diminutive and highly experienced Kiprono Nicholas Kipyator arap Biwott's claim of Kanu. Derisively of course, Ruto et al dismissed Mr. Biwott and failed to notice the invisible hand of the senior Moi in the machinations. Soon it was to dawn on Ruto that, like Mr. Kenyatta, all of Moi's students cannot claim to graduate themselves unless the grand-master offers the green-light. He has woken up to realise in the last few weeks that he is currently party-less because Mr. Kenyatta has chickened out of the ODM-K juggernaut with the instruments of Kanu. Mr. Ruto, is therefore, in ODM-K as an individual, virtually party-less and with no bargaining chip. Although he took for granted certain undercurrents of the old Kalenjin suspicions, Ruto was to rue his wasted opportunities when the more experienced Henry Kosgey decided to openly back Raila and therefore drew a clear boundary between the ambiguity with which Mr. Ruto was moving around his politics and his resolute determination not to allow the Nandi to be 'held by the nose' for another 24 years. It is instructive that there is no love lost between Ruto and Kosgey, indeed almost any other Kalenjin leader who doesn't seem to grovel at Ruto's feet. Again things were not helped by Ruto's penchant of 'pursuing a snake to its hole' by stirring the hornet's nest each time he seemed to dismiss the senior Moi.

That some people have issues to grind with Mr. Moi because of his overbearing nature in politics is not news. However, the Kalenjin peoples' magnanimity should not be underestimated. In like manner, Ruto's tendency was spiralling fast towards the big-man syndrome and he was developing enemies among the elite in the Kalenjin community while accumulating a category of followers that are known for insults and lack of respect. This explains why he has reached where he is. At almost the same time, Mr. Ruto awoke to rude realities that the Nandi were pulling in tandem with Kosgey towards Raila, the Keiyo seem stagnant with Biwott while the Tugen are mark-timing with the cultic Moi family. These are not helped by the fact that some enigmatic Kipsigis leaders like his former schoolmate Nick Salat (who has stuck with his bakule Gideon, and Biwott) and the ebullient Kipkalya arap Kones (who, together with his Bakule Franklin Bett, are gravitating towards Raila Odinga in the ODM-K fallout) dropped Ruto's candidature like a hot potato! Consequently, Ruto has been left with a skeleton of hangers-on who have more fights on their own hands. Add these to the dilemma of a man with no secretariat for his presidential campaigns and you have a president indeed (tongue-in-cheek)!

It is important to note that the choice of an ODM-K candidate is not without pitfalls and the dangers of irreparable splits. Consensus is seemingly the most viable means at arriving at a winner. However, consensus should be guided on the principle that the most popular candidate be chosen. As matters stand in the fluid politics of Kenya, it would seem too soon to pick a candidate. One only needs to see the sharp fall of Kalonzo Musyoka from the overwhelming candidate of choice a few months ago to an also-run these days. Raila started off with a consistent sub-20% approval, he has risen now to become the only logical consensus candidate. What happens if the wave changes against him later? Raila is the man of the moment and to ask him to step down in favour of anybody else is laughable. That the Kalenjin are yearning for a consensus is no secret. That they want to support a decision that involves the winner, is without doubt, unmistakeable. It would seem natural, therefore, that our leaders need a close, even parasitic relationship with the people. For to ask Raila to step down when the gods are smiling at him is to ask the Kalenjin people to throw their caution to the wind. That is not practical and Ruto's think-thank seems to have gone on holiday the moment it appeared that he had everyone of us under wraps. 'Ma ki esee beep suuswo', the wind is blowing away that confidence with the consequence that the nakedness of the leaders are being revealed for all and sundry to see!

When Mr. Ruto, therefore, decided to pay a highly unexpected and unprovoked, if poorly thought out, tour to Nyanza MPs few of his supporters expected him to propose the ridiculous things that he did. Proposing to Mr. Odinga that they step down 'for the sake of a winning formula', Ruto got a taste of his medicine when the Nyanza entourage told him to his face to forget it. It is important that hot on the heels of this, Kass FM's fans took an unscientific but probable poll which showed that 74% of the Kalenjin would like to vote for Raila against 14% and 12% for Kalonzo and Mudavadi, respectively. The stark contrast between Mr. Ruto's alleged winning formula and the Kalenjin peoples' aspirations showed a man living on planet Mars. This is the consequence of pride and the schemes of a nakedly greedy man who lacks respect for the collective hope vested on him by the Kalenjin people. Left holding a dead baby in his hands, Ruto has refused to take counsel and retreat to seek the Kalenjin peoples' direction for the future. As I pen this argument, it is emerging that Mr. Ruto was yesterday steeped in yet another controversial effort to woo Mr. Musyoka to step down for Mudavadi. He could as well be heading to Kalonzo with the false believe that he will appear as a champion of sacrifice. What a fallacy! That Mr. Ruto was a pedestrian in the political terrain is now an open secret. That he is running from hotel to hotel hawking the Kalenjin vote and support is ridiculous and borders on the absurd. If Ruto does believe in Mr. Odinga stepping down, why didn't he contemplate asking him to step down and support the Ruto campaign? Why has Mr. Ruto not seen it wise to ask the others to step down for Raila, the overwhelmingly popular candidate at the moment? Is he serving his narrow, business-like interests with this new move or is he a Jeremiah for the Kalenjin?

It would now appear that Ruto is interested in deal-making as a means to nominating the ODM-K flag-bearer to the chagrin of Mr. Odinga and all democrats in the ODM-K. Mr. Odinga, like many ODM-K followers, believes in holding primaries to sort out the candidacy. It is important to note that the decision to back boardroom selections are reminiscent of all of Mr. Moi's 'speak with one voice' mantra. Question is, is Mr. Ruto hawking the Kalenjin for their good or for his good? Who mandated Ruto to 'do a deal' with the less popular candidates when he has not asked the Kalenjin people for the direction? The last time Ruto held a massive rally, it was at Kapkatet. At that meeting, just like on Kass FM, he had sworn to the point of telling off Mr. Moi that he was not going to give up the race. Why is he betraying the collective hope and aspirations of the Kalenjin? Why is he backing a minority candidate, when all indicators are that the Kalenjin 'koyameechin botaan keelog' to support Mr. Odinga's viable-ever bid for Statehouse. Is Mr. Ruto a mere pedestrian who wanted to use us to up his stakes in a game we least understood? Does anybody care to tell him to learn a culture of discussion and feedback so that people know why and where he is going? Or has he fallen to the old dismissive antics of 'leen nee noo?' Ko koaldeech arap Ruto, period!

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Mr. Kenyatta's Gamble with the Kalenjin Lives

Ever since Mr. Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta stepped up to inherit his late father’s flywhisk and accept the leadership challenge of Kenya’s independence party (Kanu), his life changed. Whether it was for the better or not seems increasingly irrelevant to his followers. On the other hand, Mzee Daniel Kapkorios Toroitich arap Moi has an uncanny way of surprising and intimidating his political students. All the senior politicians in Kenya safe for Mr Odinga, perhaps, have had some form of tutelage under the former herdsboy from Sacho. Having walked the Kenyan political landscape from 1955 when he joined the Legco at the behest of some AIC-leaning Nandi elders (after the disappointment with Legislators Ole Tameno and arap Chemalan), Mzee Moi has not left anything to chance. Welding into a big-man wielding a big rungu and walking with massive footsteps, the giant figure has helped imbue his erstwhile enemies with awe and admiration which cowed them to submission. If any of us has had the privilege of shaking Mzee Moi’s massive hand, then you bear witness to the grip and length of his fingers that almost tickle you! Matters are not helped by myths and talk that his red eyes and apparently blank stare seem to perform some invisible laser-type surgery on the heart and mind of whoever it falls on. The old man is an Orkoiyot in some sense.

It is not without reason therefore, that Mr. Kenyatta was brow-beaten back to Mzee Moi’s thought process and management style of Kanu. That is why the left-handed and youthful politician from Central Kenya decided to ditch the Raila-led rollercoaster that has become ODM-K. I wasn’t surprised, then, when this morning I read that Mr. Kenyatta skipped the presentation of nomination documents to the ODM-K secretariat. What this means is that, without effort, Mzee Moi drew a spanner in the works of ODM-K and threw the juggernaut into a directionless spin unless the leaders find a rhythm fast enough and intercept the self-destruction that is sure to provoke a nyama choma parley between Mzee Moi, Mzee Moody and possibly Mzee Mwai. This land of M wazees!

So much for the prelude, what does Mr. Kenyatta’s failure to submit his papers mean for the Kanu members and especially the Kalenjin community who form the bedrock of the party’s following? Does this mean that Mr. Kenyatta will run for President in what is Mzee Moi’s unpolluted Kanu? Does unpolluted Kanu have a conspiracy to gift Mzee Kibaki a second term and a guarantee for Mr. Kenyatta to succeed him after that? Does Mzee Moi intend to reward Mzee Kibaki for something that you and I don’t know? More so in the light of the fact there was no love lost between the two immediately after the latter’s electoral victory. It is a poorly guarded secret that in Mzee Moi’s long-term strategy, he wants one member of his wealthy clan as a tenant of house on the hill. How he intends to let his anointed clansman take the grand march to Statehouse, however, is something he keeps tightly rolled up in his sleeves.


Should the Kalenjin ditch Kanu and embrace ODM-K as individual members? To put it in another way, should the Kalenjin hang on the coat-tails of Mr. Kenyatta and grovel at the feet of the retired President and former student of Kapsabet High School? Does the pull of Mr. Ruto on the one hand, Mr. Kenyatta on the other and the self-styled Total Man on the other leave the Kalenjin as a fragmented community with little consequence in Kenya’s electoral process? For obvious reasons, a dismembered Kalenjin vote is a gift for Mzee Kibaki’s second election victory. What this victory means for Mzee Moi is not easy for me to figure out. However, let’s remember that Mr. Kenyatta’s backyard of Central Province is safely perched in another party and not Kanu. What Mr. Kenyatta is gambling on is Mzee Moi’s ‘delivery’ of the Rift-Valley (read Kalenjin) vote. Should the Kalenjin allow an ‘outsider’ with little value to add to our total vote to dictate how and where we cast our vote? Should we allow Mr. Kenyatta to herd us to an ineffectual Kanu candidacy, divide the opposition, gift Mzee Kibaki his final term in Statehouse and later desert us to embrace and lead the ‘forgiving’ and ‘grateful’ birds of his feathers (Central Kenya people) to Statehouse? Mundu wa nyumba, remember. These are hard questions to ponder. While it may be easy to dismiss Mzee Moi’s influence among the youth, two things struck me the other day. One is the apparent complacency on the part of a large part of the Kalenjin youth which has left a good number without either or both an ID and a voters’ card! Two is the seemingly lethargic attitude of the voters. Call it voter-fatigue or apathy, which means quite a number of the young fellows are disillusioned and are likely not to care about voting at all. How will these two aspects impact on the current regime’s stay in power? What does this mean for the Kalenjin on 01 Jan 2008?

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Little to expect from Biwott-Ruto meet

While it is sensible to applaud the apparent melt-down of the wall that divides the Kalenjin leaders (Ruto vs Biwott), one cannot help but inquire into the genesis of their feud in the first place. It is no secret that William Ruto has no time for the old school of Biwott-Moi and to some extent and even other Kalenjin or if you like Nandi leaders like Kosgey and Kirwa and that is not without reason. On the other hand, the old-timers believe that they are not done with the Kalenjin and none is ready to give up wagging the big rungu. Ruto's impatience is informed by the urgency of the new-blood to take over leadership. This conflict provokes two questions that beg for answers. Forgive the simplicity of these questions, but they may hold the key to unravelling the reasons behind the bad blood between Ruto on the one hand and the old folk on the other.

Question number one: Are their differences ideological or are they based on mere supremacy and turf conflicts. Were Ruto not enigmatically a contender for the presidency (whether he goes far or not is neither here nor there), could the opportunity have offered itself for one of the old players to mortgage the Kalenjin community to the incumbent government ,for much less selfish interests like state favours? Indeed, allow me to entertain a fanciful thought: does Ruto's apparent grip on the Rift Valley vote (seemingly without the Nandi, Keiyo and Tugen blocs) bode good or bad for the community's collective future?

Question number two: Whereas Biwott's group and Ruto's group are dancing towards each other, are the main protagonists (read Ruto and Biwott) really party to this gesture or have the MPs merely realised that the thunder was stolen from Ruto's schemes (and the wind taken from his sails) when the Nandi, together with Kosgey, made a rather brave about-turn the other day at Kapsabet and openly backed the Raila campaign? Are they waking up, or to put it mildly, are they privy to more than we know? Consequently, if the protagonists are hurrying to close ranks, what does this mean for the ODM-K election machine. Please understand this against the background that Mr. Biwott, the self-proclaimed Total Man, (a) has no time for Mr Kenyatta and (b) Mr Kenyatta's foiled scheme to pull Kanu out of the ODM-K honeymoon seems to play right into Mr. Biwott's large play-game. How would this help Ruto et al, since they seemed to have saved the ODM-K juggernaut from collapse by outwitting Mr. Kenyatta?

I would also like to ask a third question while being consciously informed of the Kalenjin philosophy. If these two factions are closing ranks, who is fooling who? Ng'o ne nyoonei tuiyeet ak ng'oomkong'natet? Who is willing to play second fiddle to another? Will Biwott climb down from his mogoiyweet for Ruto and conversely, will Ruto climb down from his Mt. Ararat and yield space to Biwott? While I could be dismissed as over-interpreting a simple gesture, please permit me to make a not-too-wise claim: That those alignments have largely been driven by financial considerations and nothing less. Each of the perceived camp leader is bankrolling MPs allied to them. Could it be that the coffers are dry(ing)? Maybe not, but the meetings are likely to take the Kalenjin voter for a ride...albeit closer to a very powerful voting machine. However, don't forget that the MPs have hitherto been benefiting from this division and mistrust of the main contestants in the feud- so long as camps were being sustained with heavy monetary consequences.

Finally, without giving away a hint of being a pessimist (chi ne ki ko bar soeet ko ang' kooro tany ne tuui ko mweei) I would caution us "tomo ke eesei ama tien Koilegei". It will not disappoint me if all these will add up to nothing more than another red herring!

Friday, March 30, 2007

Calling for Regional Academies of Science

An economy grows on the shoulders of thinkers and innovators. Look at the established as well as the emerging economies of the world and you'll not fail to notice the place of science and technology and research and development in their economic strides, poverty alleviation and elimination and improvement of the well-being of the citizens. Leading research-dependent economies like the USA, Japan and Germany put more effort as governments and from the private sector to support research at the centres of innovations. Thus, the emergence of universities as leading incubators of knowledge and generators of innovations is not without the deliberate governmental intervention. That is why China is emerging from the ashes of seclusion and exclusion to threaten the traditional balance of power. It is because the institutions in that massive land are doing nothing else, they are involved in cut-throat competition with each other to innovate, publish the innovations, patent the same and therefore exert influence in the scientific community.

Innovations are borne of a well-funded effort to utilise fully the human abilities to create. Science and Technology and specifically research in biotechnology and drug-innovations related areas are the main focus of research. These branches are the driving force of the developed world (USA, UK, Germany, Japan etc) and it's the reason behind the successes of third world economies like China and India as well as Korea and South Africa! The strength of any society is the wealth and experience of a well trained human resource. Training is a painstaking effort that requires inputs from several sectors of society. Kenya does not lack the capacity that is expressed in the well-trained and disciplined academia. What is lacking is the deliberate thinking by the government and subsidy by the private sector to oil the machinery involved in research. No wonder then that research in our universities is moribund, professors have no published scientific papers to show for their decorations while the government watches as we are tempted with opportunities to innovate and research in foreign lands at the expense of our motherland. It pains me to think that the money that the government of Kenya invested in educating me is not coming back back soon enough in terms of an immediate contribution to scientific development. Not that we're happy abroad, we all wish to live better lives. Yet the truth be told, successive governments have NEVER deemed it necessary to invest in research and development, not least science and technology.

A look around Kenya reveals a glaring need for a well co-ordinated effort by those of us who are blessed with opportunities of whatever kind to plough back to the society some of whatever we can lay our hands. I imagine the countless young men and women who are struggling to make it through our gruelling academic system and appreciate that there is a way we can localise and nationalise our collective and individual efforts towards helping them. I have benefitted from society's generosity and continued fight to help and alleviate poverty. As one great and revered neurosurgeon (Benny Carson) teaches in 'Gifted Hands', education is the only equaliser. We need to deliberately devise means and methods of bequeathing to our society a heritage that will not expire. By organising ourselves into viable units of support, we should be able to supplement the government in providing relevant support for our researchers and young-up-and-coming academics.

I'm calling upon the Kenyans in diaspora to move towards supporting our National academies of science and art. I do not speak for the Kenya National Academy of Science, but it would be important that we who are fairly well linked outside the country should think of how we can help co-ordinate funding to at least afford a scientific journal published by the academy. Obviously, I'm dreaming for this may not be a priority for the people in that body yet! But we cannot swing in our arm-chairs and enjoy the little comforts that we have and finally imagine to run home to retire into public service (read politics).

I have noticed an unproductive, if dangerous, trend whereby those of us who have lived out of our land for decades and neither interacted with anybody other than their family nor took part in improving the lives of their next-door neighbours are flocking back home to seek positions of leadership. Let me hasten to say that I hold no grudge against anybody seeking an elective office in our land. That's is your democratic right. However, Kenya needs partners for development. Obviously one need not be a politician to expound on those beautiful ideas of the tired lines of 'development consciousness'. Someone who was able to facilitate educational opportunities for his/her siblings has shown that he doesn't need to be an elected leader to 'air-lift' other members of the extended society. Indeed, gone are the days when the population was mesmerised by high-flying, twanging sons and daughters out to impress anybody with their fanciful 'whatevers'. I'd advise anybody who cares to make their contribution to the society as a partner of development irrespective of their positions inleadership. It would be foolhardy, wouldn't it, for somebody who has ONLY shipped abroad his siblings to imagine that the society would be over-awed to the extent of groveling before him. It is time to think of how to support those who can't make it without a helping hand. Those hands are yours and mine, not so much because we seek anything in return. More so because we aspire to say 'kongoi' to society for providing support when we needed most.

Help for the fellows back home may be done for example through localised effort where, for example, the proposed Nandi Academy of Science takes the lead in championing the promotion of science education the local schools in the Nandi country. A more networked system could evolve into the Kalenjin Academy of Science and eventually these may be affiliated to a reinvigorated Kenya National Academy of Science. In the same vein, an annual event may be promoted to honour 'scientist of the year' at regional and finally at national level so as to inspire competition and broad collaboration.

Objectives for the Nandi Academy of Science may include but are not limited to:
  1. Sponsorship of a scientific competition (say an annual Maths, Physics or Chemistry test) which will be administered, say, at Kapsabet Boys High School. The top three candidates (separate for male and female in order to get the top three in each category) may be given token cash prizes as inducements and incentives to encourage competition.
  2. Support of science learning in schools that are underdeveloped by organising donation of computers and other learning materials.
  3. When enough strength and wherewithal will have been accumulated, the members may deem it necessary to run a sponsorship to support brilliant children who can't afford fees.
  4. In league with the major research institutions of the West where we are priviledged to work, deliberate encouragement to invest in local research initiatives to tap into the cheap but well trained human resource as well as the immense natural resources (I'm talking about our plants such as Aloe vera which has huge potentials in the cosmetics and functional foods industry!) that are being spirited away to their well equipped labs may be explored. An obvious method could be to study possibilities of sandwich research arrangements for our postgraduates in order to afford the excellent research environments for those who get these opportunities.
  5. These ideas are submitted as working challenges only and I hope to provoke some thinking in order to re-examine their merits and demerits. Therefore, other additions are welcome.
Consequently, the professionals in the art-related disciplines are encouraged to come up with a similar arrangement (say the Kipsigis Academy of Social Sciences, for example). Additionally, other Kalenjins are encouraged to form their own local entities (say Marakwet Academy of Science, for example) and eventually a more expanded and well co-ordinated Kalenjin Academy of Science will be born. This way we'll be able to take a closer stock of our community's challenges and achievements and develop a structured way of solving the problems that emerge. Then science education will be encouraged in our schools and the fruits realised.

'Nge roobchin nyiritook koegu ndaara'

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