Thursday, 3 January 2013

This Man Kibaki..

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This man Kibaki…the good, the bad and the ugly of his leadership
President Mwai Kibaki deserves a round of applause, a myriad of roads being named after him or even the whole of Nairobi city being christened his lovely name, Kibaki city. Here is why.
This man as a life of politics, from his first time in parliament when he represented Donholm constituency in Nairobi in 1963, to 2002 when he rose to presidency, to 2012 when he must retire, thanks to the constitution, this man has done more in ten years than most people can do in half a century as leaders.
Let’s face it, for just ten years, Kibaki has built a superhighway of international standards, transformed the transport sector, built markets for hawkers, opened up a new port in Mombasa, commissioned roads in North Eastern where only cow tracks were existent, improved a mutilated economy and the big one, delivered a new constitution…and the list is endless.
However, it must be noted that Kibaki the economist from Makerere is a strategist and a darling to the rich contrary to what many may want to believe. He has clearly done little to improve the lives of the poor Kenyans, who, just like yours truly here, have seen rough days during his reign.
Believe it or not, it was during Kibaki’s tenure that many poor Kenyans lost their livelihoods, small businesses were wound up to pave way for giant highways, hawkers driven out of the streets of the city where they eked a precarious existence, houses have been demolished by heartless city council thugs, thousands have been sent to inflation to add up the worsening statistics of the jobless in this country, and the list continues, making the poor poorer.
There is no denial that the old man promised more than half a million jobs per year for the youths whose simple ideas and maneuvers to survive have been thwarted forcibly by his government, but although he openly embraces the notion of a working nation where he urges the youth to contribute in nation building he has done little to give the incentives necessary to achieve that thus remaining just that, a fumbling lip service job for the old man…..and anybody can now see the reason why we have an increment in the numbers of street muggers and gangsters in the city?
Where will these people make a living if successive governments are competing to send them to Siberia? Yes, Kibaki has done something to address this. He introduced a project that many wish to forget than remember, the Kazi kwa vijana project. Though well intentioned, the project was just another scandal as government ministers and individuals in positions of power competed in embezzling the funds and transforming the project’s name to Kazi kwa vijana, pesa kwa wazee…..what a shame that was?
Kibaki has had good intentions for this country since time immemorial, though he had been dragged by poor leadership, Moi’s dictatorial tendencies which made him (kibaki) look like Moi’s shadow for most of the 90’s and remain irrelevant in a government that ripped Kenyans in broad daylight.
The good side
Look at the roads, the GDP, regional integration, education, health projects, and the new constitution which sadly, has been mutilated, power, trade, grants, Kenya’s position in the eyes of the international community and everything else that makes up for his legacy. Thats why I said Nairobi, the epicenter of Kenya, should bear his name somewhere… Look at how greedy his predecessors were? They named almost everything to themselves, from schools to international Airports, roads to highways to estates to hospitals, to markets. How greedy? That’s why I laud Kibaki who vowed to be different, were this not the case, the man could have named everything that was left by the likes of former presidents Kenyatta and Moi after himself and we could be having places like, Kibaki hawkers market, Kibaki university, Kibaki superhighway, kibaki health center(all major hospitals have been named otherwise)
The bad side
It was during his reign that the country slumped to its darkest period in history. The post election violence which claimed the lives of more than 1, 000 hapless Kenyans as the old man clinged to power and watched on the sidelines as his beloved country burnt.
Kibaki and his ilk orchestrated this. Why couldn’t the good man compromise his position in power even when there were allegations of massive rigging, he could not offer to call for another election and instead chose to be sworn in abnormally, as the president of this country regardless of widespread violence that was worsening by the minute?
One question to Kibaki, why was it so hard to relinquish power even when the lives of Kenyans were at stake? You mean you could have done nothing to salvage the situation?
The ugly.
This is interesting. A newspaper names president Kibaki among the world’s ugliest presidents, literally.
As a matter of fact, he scooped the award for the ugliest president to grace our planet as we know it today.
In as much as it is unfair to our beloved president, many might be compelled to ask, why did he not appear in the Kenyan currency notes and coins save for the much disliked “kirucy”, (the 40 bob coin) as has been the norm with other Kenyan presidents?
President Kibaki might not have the looks of a beauty geek but what is in between his two ears is unmatched in terms of quality and perhaps, quantity.
The first lady scandals
Who does not remember Lucy Kibaki in her good old fiery days when she literally controlled the house on the hill?
When journalists were slapped for asking the right questions, and when president Kibaki would be embarrassed in broad daylight?
Thanks god, someone hid Karucy from the valuable limelight that she nonchalantly basked in with sheer abandon.
The Mum kibaki
It is common knowledge that Kibaki has always remained mum in the most crucial times when his say could have changed everything. Look at the PEV. He said nothing to restore public confidence. Another speck in Kibaki’s leadership. He has been named among Kenyans who own vast chunks of land in the country.
In fact his two predecessors, presidents Moi and Kenyatta, own hundreds of thousands of acres of land.
It is sad to know they are the greatest land grabbers, why should they own so much land when we have squatters everywhere from the coast to Nyanza?
It is even more heartbreaking to learn that most of their purported lands are lying idle.
Look at Kibaki, he has vast chunks of land almost everywhere. Methinks he should be featured in the program, “Who Owns Kenya” on Citizen TV because he literally owns it. From his vast piece in Nyeri which almost runs from the Aberdares to the other end of Mt. Kenya, to his Koru farm which spurns thousands of acres.
Before he bows out of power, can the old man tell us he acquired all that land and how he feels to see all of it lying idle when hundreds of internally displaced persons sleep in the cold as he seeks to leave a rich legacy?
And what happened to IDPs resettlement? They remain in the camps five years later despite Kibaki’s re assurances.
With his exit, Kibaki goes into retirement with so many of Kenyans dark secrets.



Tuesday, 25 December 2012

Crowd Sourced Journalism-A newdimension in Kenyan Media


TITLE: Secure neighborhoods Kenya
A Brief Background
Insecurity has always been a slippery affair that subsequent regimes have for a long time failed to address, but only handle it with kid gloves and successfully fail to nip the vice at the bud.
Murang’a County is located in Central Kenya.  Here, insecurity thrives.
Cases of motorcyclists losing their motorbikes, and sadly their lives are a near daily occurrence in this locality. Motorists are neither spared by a wave of robbery that has swept Murang’a County over the last few years.
Vigilante groups and unlawful formations continue to guard this area, for a fee, thus giving extortionist gangs like the dreaded Mungiki gang, a field day as they collect what they call “protection fees” from all and sundry, from the motorists, to motorbike taxis, commonly referred to as bodaboda, to businessmen and to the impoverished residents, despite police presence in the area.
As we take a walk into the lush green and hilly landscape of Kamune village at the heart of Mathioya District, we realize that the number of people has greatly reduced to just a few, and the graves have soared in numbers, presumably bearing the remains of the young men who lose their lives to robbery, many of whom are bodaboda operators.
At the Keni bus stop along the Murang’a –Kiria-ini road dozens of bodaboda operators are whiling away waiting for passengers, and on sighting us, they abandon whatever they are doing and ambush us, offering  to ferry us with their bikes to wherever we wished to go, of course for a dime.
After the usual pleasantries we   set out to ask them about the security situation in the area, and in their place of work. At this point, most of them are suddenly disinterested, and look at us suspiciously. In this locality, we are told, no one dares talk about insecurity fearing repercussions from the prime perpetrators of robbery and violence, The Mungiki, who are said to lurk in the area.
We talk to them about the numerous deaths that have been meted to bodaboda operators in the area, their disappearance and how they are later discovered in thickets with parts of their bodies chopped off their badly mutilated bodies,and that’s when they become interested.           
After some minutes the whole group is now surrounding us and narrating to us chilling details of how that happened to their colleagues, how they remained vulnerable to robberies. They live in fear, we learn.
They tell us how the police tried to ease the situation by providing emergency numbers  in case they cited a suspect, or in case they were in trouble, but years down the line, the problem persists.
There is need for a bottom to top approach that will incorporate and revolve on the participation of the local community that will reflect on the security situation of this part of the country.
Objectives
SENEKEN is a combination of abbreviations derived from the words, Secure Neighborhoods Kenya, which is a crowd sourcing platform that seeks to collect data from Murang’a residents for several months, Say from October- December, and come up with a conclusive report of how the bikes are stolen and the number of operators who are killed as a result in given neighborhood. 
For instance, x number of operators go missing every month, and out of those y/100 meet their death
To achieve this all the bikes at Keni stage will be fitted with Global Positioning System devices which will communicate with a small SENEKEN nerve center .Monitors at the nerve center will track the marked bikes on a 24/7 basis. Operators will then be given numbers which they can call in case of any robbery.
A qualitative analysis of the bodaboda s in the monitor list will be done after every month.
The analysis will give details of where the stolen bikes are smuggled to , and the operators will be asked the number plates of the bikes which have gone missing, after which the police will liaise with Seneken to net the culprits.
This data will be invaluable to journalists in the area who were greatly interested with this project.
The provincial administration and the Police in area were also enthusiastic about the platform and vowed to work with us.
The local community is the largest beneficiary of this project since robbery will be wiped out of their neighborhoods
Crowd sourcing tools
Several crowd sourcing tools have been used by the police and the media, which included the use of an emergency number provided to operators to alert police whenever they encountered thugs or problems
Another tool used was the community policing approach where police told locals to report cases of violence but sadly, the two approaches failed to gain any fruits, in particular was the second approach where locals feared repercussions  if the perpetrators ever knew about them, including the  threat of death.
This was a major challenge that made the two approaches fail.
To effectively deal with the shortcoming, SENEKEN intends to use short message services, SMS where a monitoring center for analyzing the SMSes will be set up.
The smses will be sent by the operators in case a bike goes missing, after which the specific bike is put under surveillance.
Safaricom, Airtel, Orange and Yu, all mobile phone service subscribers, will provide a short number for SMSes like 4040, which everyone will use to send the messages.
Expected results
After sometime, the number of robberies will significantly go down after the capture of many robbers by the police
The security situation in the area will hugely improve
The Kenya police will be empowered to act swiftly and precisely in case of any theft
Secure neighborhoods will emerge in the country and people will set up business in the area
Resources needed
-Global positioning devices
-Computers an internet
-Office space complete with stationery
-GPS mast
-Communication lines/wireless phones to reach locals/police/stakeholders
If this project is a success, it will roll to all other parts of the country, which experience similar incidences of insecurity, and will therefore create a working partnership between the police, the local population and the GPS technology to hammer the last nails into the coffin bearing the remains of the vice, INSECURITY.

Editor’s note
This proposal was presented for awards consideration at the The Big Picture Digital Journalism project for the First Crowd sourced Journalism Awards for Africa.
It might not have won any awards but I just wis our politicians could use such approaches to make Kenya a better place to live in.
Special thanks to Murang’a, Mathioya residents for coming out and stating the problem, and to the Big Picture project for inviting me for an awards dinner at the Fairview Hotel in Nairobi, Kenya, where I learnt a lot in this new concept of crowd sourced journalism in Kenya.www.facebook.com/amoxers

Monday, 24 December 2012

Not yet Uhuru!


Not yet Uhuru!
My own rendition…..Of a bewitched Uhuru and a confused Mudavadi
Deputy Prime minister Uhuru Kenyatta is a man of many firsts. From rising to power in a record time to his latest installments of political melodrama and the list is endless.
That in 1997 he sought to represent Gatundu south in parliament is common knowledge. And that he was beaten hands down and his political ineptness exposed in spectacular fashion is something we cannot deny
But in  a period of two good years the political novice that was the son of old Jommo had risen to unprecedented heights of political power. In 1999, he had been nominated to parliament, appointed a government minister, given the chairmanship of the all powerful KANU, and it was an open secret he was been groomed to usurp the tenancy of the house on the hill, thanks to retired president Daniel Moi.
There was rightful disquiet within political circles when Uhuru Kenyatta, then a political minion, announced his intention to vie for the country’s top seat, as many wondered how fast he climbed the political ladder, again this coming as an eye opener to all and sundry as we slowly and bitterly learnt that Kenya had owners.
Needless to say the man lost to one Mwai Kibaki who, staring defeat from Moi’s all powerful and handsomely funded project, concocted a coalition with all the political heavyweights to clinch the presidency as Uhuru Kenyatta, once again, lost.
It was in the young years of the coalition that Uhuru Kenyatta was absorbed back into the government as he sought to contest the presidency in 2007, but again shelved his interests in favor of the then incumbent Mwai Kibaki who was facing stiff competition from Raila Odinga and a revamped anti government club of stalwarts who were riding high after defeating Kibaki, and the government in a referendum vote.
Lets jump to his latest installment of his political fairly tale , as he seeks once again, to commandeer the house on the hill, half a century later after his father, Mzee Jommo Kenyatta pulled the country’s strings when it was at its tender, young independent toes.
A few days ago, Uhuru Kenyatta, then the most serious presidential candidate poised to give prime minister Raila Odinga a hard time in race for presidency, cottoned up to a marriage of convenience when he teamed up with DPM Musalia Mudavadi seen as a compromise candidate and the much needed replacement for Uhuru should he and Eldoret north MP William Ruto be hauled to the Hague to answer charges leveled against them by the international criminal court.
In a  roller coaster wedding punctuated by vows of “Jubilee”, Uhuru is said to have been under duress, or whatever that is , or as he claimed, to be under the control of dark forces , maybe those of Satan or “Madimoni” and agreed to back Mudavadi for presidency.
according to Uhuru in his latest testimony to the people of Kenya, he claimed that Mudavadi told him to step down due to his impending case at the Hague that was making him a really hard to sell commodity., and Uhuru bought that, rightfully.
It was after a bit of soul searching that the son of Jommo decided not to vie and not to knock Ruto out of the running mate position.
Drama unfolded a week later when Musalia Mudavadi came out crying that he had been shortchanged in the Jubilee coalition and even wanted out. According to Mudavadi, Uhuru and Ruto drove to his riverside Drive home after realizing that Kalonzo Musyoka and Raila Odinga had teamed up to create the cord coalition, and wanted the former to enter into a collation with them where they allegedly promised him of the presidential position on a jubilee ticket.
That said , it is a shame to see how the so called leader team up to make political outfits that are not in the interest of Kenyans, but aimed at dividing Kenyans along tribal lines.
That’s why we have elected the bad leaders and locked out those leaders who could have transformed Kenya.
This philosophy muttering uhuru is the same man whose dad sowed the seeds of ethnical discord and hatred and perfected the art of dividing Kenyans along tribal lines.
It is common knowledge that Uhuru is after safeguarding their ill gotten wealth which they grabbed in broad day light,
Look at Mudavadi, he is a charming, even tempered politician who could have trounced all opposition had he been nominated as the jubilee flag bearer, but what did he do when he was in parliament? And when he was a vice president? Nothing!
Here is a list of political marriages that will never stand.

1. Uhuru/Mudavadi/Ruto’s Jubilee
People with the same malady are known to gang up together as they console each other of their misfortune. Look at how they poor love to hang out with the poor? Uhuru and Ruto are such for obvious reasons. That was why their political marriage with Mudavadi could not see the light of the day as the later was a clueless outsider who was to be used for their political gains. Who knows if he won the presidency on a jubilee ticket, maybe he would be hauled out of the top seat by a well orchestrated vote of no confidence or he could even be coup de tat’d or even go missing. Go Musalia go! This was not for you. But before you go Mr. Musalia, looks like you have a penchant for freebies? That will never work for you in this country. Go well my brother.
More gloom is however set to rock the jubilee house. An Uhuru presidency is doomed to fall considering the ICC bagaage and the political arithmetics of tribal politics that Kenyans have perfected.
It is an open secret that most Kenyans will not vote in another kikuyu president when the outgoing one is a Kikuyu and while the first president was a kikuyu.
A Mudavadi presidency, a non Kikuyu, was seen by pundits as the winning formulae and the best poised to compete with the organized house that is the Cord comprising of Raila  Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka. And with their mention let’s look at the marriage number two that is doomed.

2. Raila and Kalonzo’s Cord.
The storm before a storm.who does not know Kalonzo is the King of Vigeugeus? Or the biggest and freshest water melon around? He is a reknowned fence sitter who knows just how well to pita kati kati yao.
Now that he gave Raila a chance to bear the flag of Cord and agreed to play second fiddle to raila, and now that he has been annihilated by his own arch rival in the battle of the watermelons, this clearly remains a breeze before the storm, there is no way the Tseikuru man can allow such capitulation even after swearing by his mother’s name that his name must be at the ballot. Let’s wait and see the drama as it unfolds. Yours truly will be on the sidelines to bring you the latest developments as Kalonzo departs from the norm and reclaims his position as the king! Hail the king of all water melons.
Prime mister Raila Odinga is another kettle of fish altogether. He is a political schemer, and has a thick skin for your information. Who was not astounded when the self proclaimed reformer joined Moi in 1998 after his party merged with Moi’s.
Raila cuts the mien of a good leader, but his supporters will cost him the  leadership of this country. Who wants a government where some villains will refuse to pay taxes, rent, fare, bills, etc because they dad Raila is the president. This man has done little to remove the speck that his fans have permanently fixed in is character, fatally destroying his credentials to govern.

3. The Tuju/ Kenneth alliance of Eagles
Billed as the best coalition that could have been voted in by a landslide were the main protagonists able to woo voters with their speckles lives in politics and their issue based campaigns, this group remains  a clueless bunch of politicians who do not know what they want. The best thing remaining fir them is to seek lesser seats where they will triumph effortlessly as they reengineer their 2017 campaigns.
As for Kenneth, we love you very much, but for now, get a small seat, maybe a senatorial seat before its too late, otherwise you are well positioned to scoop a ticket ro political oblivion for another five cool years, out of the much needed limelight for 2017 and thereafter.

4. Kamencu and any other aspirant
Whoever gangs up with Kingwa Kamencu in the name of political marriages that have rocked this country is deemed to ear n outright condemnation and embarrassment.
How will you convince Kenyans to vote you and you will ensure they will no longer wear underwear? Someone called this the influence of bhang and a concoction of other drugs that I will not name.
Yesterday, Uhuru kenyata was named the Jubilee alliance candidate to face off with Raila Odinga in what is billed as the most temperamental political contest in the country since independence. According to me, and let me reiterate here, this is my own honest opinion, this is a done deal. You might want to say opinions never count, nor do opinion polls in this country, but truth be told, from what we saw yesterday at Kasarani, Raila will laugh all the way to the revered house on the hill come March 5, or 6. The duo, both suspects at the international criminal court had clearly nothing to tell Kenyans other than to attack Raila and his ilk. No wonder the jeers outnumbered the cheers and this says a lot.
Thats why Kenyans from Kacheliba to Kabartorjo, Kilifi to Kakamega, Othaya to Siaya are becoming increasingly corded faster than Uhuru says jubilee. The voices of most Kenyans remain, NOT YET UHURU, whether you like it or not. Enough said.