FEATURE: Where and when will Kenya and Africa get able and truly patriotic leaders?

Most of our leaders in Kenya, and also in Africa, have proven inept in managing and caring about the welfafre the people they are meant to serve. Our leaders have proved incapable comprehending essence of justice, the grave importance adequate security and stability in fostering social, cultural and economic development.Kenya and most of Africa abounds with wealth and untapped resources. Yet, it is rather perplexing that even though most of our leaders are well educated, they still fail to grasp the importance of rational utililization of our abundant national and continental resources.Our leaders lack integrity and credibility. And many of our leader are so biased against other tribes and communities.

Honestly, how do you lead or govern people whom you do not care about? And, if this is the mindset of our Kenyan and African leaders, then tell me what business do we have voting for them and tolerating their impudence?

Today, Kenya is hanging by a thin thread of hope. Our leaders are way too self-centred and arrogant to put national interest first. Soon, when we begin burying our dead, our leaders will begin to shed crocodile tears. They honestly do not seem to care about the many Kenyans who are suffering and dying.

What is the point of being a president or prime minister of dead people?

Yes, hopefully, some of us will be lucky to be alive and well when all this cruelty and wanton madness ends. Many of our hearts will be bleeding. Many of us and our children will be traumatised. For many of us, we will be hurting so bad, deep inside. Our souls and spirits will almost dead, numb with pain and agony.

After moaning and burying our own dead relatives, friends and neigbours, Kenyans will surely have little faith in democracy, government or our leaders.

Today, some of our leaders are fence-sitting. Honestly, with all the fence-sitting, bickering, and jostling for power, we will never arrive at an objective view or even a single rational solution to the problems Kenyans are facing.

It is amazing how apt our leaders where to troop, like ants as the scent of sweet sugar or bees homing in on yummy necar. We watched all the drama, as our leaders streamed to the Kenyan Parliament to be sworn in as elected members of parliament. For a moment they all shared a room together, and did what they needed to do, so that they could start being paid their fat paycheques.

I wonder what happened to that same corporate spirit, albeit lack of humility? What happened to the oath that all our honourable members of parliament (yes, even Mwai Kibaki is the Member of Parliament for Othaya constituency), swore in parliament, in the name of God, to uphold in order to serve our nation? They swore to serve and protect the people of Kenya.

Or did our MPs simply swear by oath, in order to be placed on the payroll, that is financed by the poor Kenyan tax payers?

Anyway, let us move on to something else…

With all due respect to all our past and current leaders, none of them has been remarkable in leadership and management/governance. If we, the Honourable people of Kenya, were to grade our leaders, it is with no appology, that I confidently say that none of them would get a perfect “A” GRADE. Very few will be lucky, if they even managed to squeeze out a weak GRADE “C”. Because, it is obvious, barely one month into their terms as honourable members of parliament, that their leadership and governance skills are wanting.

The majority of our leaders and politicians are mere opportunists. Self centered ( “tumbo-mbele” ) politicians. Full of empty rehtoric and not much results to show for it.

Let me illustrate what I mean… Let us have a look at, and appraise some of our leaders, starting with Raila Odinga

1. RAILA ODINGA: Let us have an honest look at Raila. During his career in politics Raila has developed charm and some charisma. Yet, if we look at the majority of the people in Kibera – Raila Odinga’s constituency–we will see hungry, naked, and sick children. Most of the people in Kibera constituency are the wretched of the earth – very poor.

2. MWAI KIBAKI: Kibaki, in his previous term, helped to improve the Kenyan economy. Now let as look at majority of the people in Othaya where President Mwai Kibaki has been an MP for about 30 years. Majority of the people in Othaya constituency are poor. Luckily, the Kikuyu, Embu, and the Meru blessed with very fertile land at the slopes of Mount Kenya. Also, the Kikuyu are very enterprising and have been able to initiate and thrive in business, with or without the help of the Kenyan Government. Still many more Kikuyus, Embus and Merus live in poverty and have merely enough subsistence to survive.

3. DANIEL ARAP MOI: As the second president of Kenya, Moi’s story is like a fairy tale. He rose from grass to grace. He seemed very humble, pious and charismatic. People seemed to enjoy listening to him. But let us look a little futher. Let us look at the people in Baringo Central, where the former President Daniel Arap Moi was MP for over 30 years–a constituency that his corrupt son Gideon inherited for a while. Today, the Tugen (Moi’s tribe), are among the poorest tribes in Kenya. Mainly because their land is not very fertile. Even after many years of Daniel Arap Moi’s long rule, the majority of the Tugens and majority of the Kalenjin (Tugen, Kipsigis, Nandi, Elgon Maasai, and Pokot) and the Kamatusa (Kalenjin, Maasai, Turkana, Samburu, and Rendile) tribes are still extemely poor. Many Kalenins and Kamatusas still survive by relying on ancestral land that is getting smaller and smaller as it is subdivided among sons. Their pride, cattle, are also reducing in number with the reduced grazing land. Illiteracy, infant mortality, marternal-related deaths, are all very high, despite the former President Daniel Arap Moi being head of state for 24 long years and his community being percieved to have “eaten” a large share of the Kenyan national cake.

4. JOMO KENYATTA: Jomo Kenyatta was our founding father. He was widely respected among Kenyans and abroad. Let us look at Gatundu. Jomo Kenyatta was the MP of Gatundu (now Gatundu North and Gatundu South) for 15 years. His son Uhuru inherited the Gatundu South constituency. However, many of the people of Gatundu are still poor. Jomo Kenyatta’s story is intertwined with Kibaki’s story. For two reason: (1) Jomo Kenyatta and Kibaki are from the same Kikuyu tribe, and (2) Kibaki was Jomo Kenyatta’s protegee and “blue eyed boy.” It was Kenyatta who offered Mwai Kibaki his first job with the new government of Kenya, shortly after Kenya’s independence.

5. Musalia Mudavadi: Musalia seems very rational and full of potential. He was once choosen as the Kenyan Vice President in Moi’s government. Yet, Musalia is one other person who inherited his wealth and political constituency from his father. Musalia like many other Kenyan leaders has not done much for the people of his province and region, Western Kenya. Musalia comes from the Luhya tribe in western Kenya. And, like most other Kenyans, many of the Luyhas are poor and struggling to survive, both in the rural areas and in the cities and towns of all over Kenya.

6. Kalonzo Musyoka: He has been an MP and a Cabinet Minister for over 15 years, for many of those years he was a cabinet minister. And yet, his constituency and people, the Kamba, are extremely poor.

7. Dr. Oburu Odinga:  Raila’s brother inherited his father’s (Jaramogi O. Odinga) constituency but the people in that constituency and the whole of Nyanza province are still very, very poor. The only respite for a few lucky Luos from Nyanza province has been pursing education and getting degrees, and, thereby, hopefully securing good careers. Many other Luos work as labourers and live in in the slums of Nairobi and Mombasa. Yet, many more Luos work as labourers in the large international tea estates in Kericho. What a life to live, eh!

The story is the same, or even much worse in the Coast, Eastern, and North East provinces of Kenya. Essentially, this is because the land in these provinces is not very fertile and rainfall is scarce or very sporadic. To compound the situation, other potential economic ventures, such as mining, horticulture, ranching, tourism, fishing, are very politicised and thus contentious, or the development projects and sectors in the vast Coast, East and North Eastern provinces have been totally neglected by the various Kenyan governments. The resources in these provinces are either grossly under-utilised or totally unexplored.

What is my point?

My point is simply that many of the people in Kenya are very poor. The majority of Kenyans were poor, sickly and uneducated during independence. Today with over 40 year of independence, perhaps even many more Kenyans are pathetically poor, sickly and uneducated. Poorer than ever before…!

So why on earth do we still vote for leaders who merely politic (wana ropoka ropoka bure na tena ovyo). Many of our leaders are blatantly corrupt, without shame ((Wana pokonya mali ya uma). In fact, some of our leaders brag and are proud of being corrupt.

What surprises and bewilders me the most is that, many ignorant Kenyans idolize corrupt leaders and view them as tribal heros or heroines, at their own expense.It defeats logic that the rational Kenyans who moan, groan, and complain about corrupt government would regard corrupt leaders with awe and amazement.So what baffles and astonishes me is, why do we Kenyans continue to vote for leaders who seem to make us poorer and poorer?

Well, with all due respect, Kenya’s first President and found father, Mzee Jomo Kenyatta is dead.

Kenya’s second Daniel T. Arap-Moi is now old and sickly.

Jomo Kenyatta’s son, Uhuru Kenyatta, in now a minister in Kibaki’s current government. Daniel Arap Moi’s son, Gideon Moi, was until recently an MP of the constituency that he inherited from his father. I believe the poor Tugens finally woke up, felt they’d had enough. The Tugens got fed up and kicked him out. They elected a new MP: Honourable Samuel Mwaita.

Uhuru and Gideon are like clones, the two of them often appear to be much worse then their fathers. Uhuru and Gideon carrying on, each one of them, the father’s legacy, inheritance and mindset into our generation. Honestly, Uhuru Kenyatta and Gideon Moi are no better in governance, transparency, upholding democracy, respecting the law, setting up structures of justice, and serving the people and they do not even have the charisma that their fathers (Jomo Kenyatta and Daniel Arap Moi) had in their time.

It is an open secret in Kenya that Gideon is very corrupt. He amassed alot of wealth, land, and property fraudulently. Gideon Moi took advantage of his father’s reign, and he stole or acted as a proxy for those who stole for the President of Kenya. Yet Kenyans still elected him as Mweshimiwa, an honourable Member of Parlarment.

Wonder of wonders, eh…!

Similarly, Raila is following in the footsteps of his father, Musalia Mudavadi is following in the footsteps of his father… and the list goes on and on…

In summary, none of these “younger” men, have proven that they have the acumen to be worthwhile leaders. Their fathers helped to take Kenya down the drain. And their sons (together with Mwai Kibaki) are all following in the same footsteps. Otherwise we would not have the problems that we are facing todayin Kenya.

Where and when will we get able and truly patriotic leaders in Kenya and in Africa?

These dynasties are a disaster for Kenya and Africa.

These men are are riding on the fame and respect that Kenyans had for their fathers. They are getting sympathy votes. They buy votes using money that their fathers stole from Kenyans. And Kenyans blindly vote for them. God have mercy on us ignorant and mere mortals. For, alas,look at how pathetic and poor we are, eh…!

Kibaki is living and ruling the country from state house like a tyrant. He does not have control over or the respect of more than half of the people of Kenya. He does not have much control of members of his Kikuyu tribe. He does not have much control of the police. Kibaki does not have much control of the GSU. He has no control over peaceful demonstrators. No control of the Kalenjin warriors. No control of the Mungiki sects. No control of vigilante groups. No control at all over members of his cabinet. Kibaki does not even have sufficient control over his kitchen cabinet. It is also scary that Kibaki does not seem to have the adequate control or goodwill of the Kenyan Armed Forces. And Kibaki definitely does not have much control over or respect from his own wife Lucy Kibaki. How sad.

So, where and when will Kenya and Africa get able and truly patriotic leaders?         Kiprotich Arap-Ruto
        Canada
        E-mail: safari_africa123@yahoo.com

3 thoughts on “FEATURE: Where and when will Kenya and Africa get able and truly patriotic leaders?

  1. admin

    Your article has a very nice title but some where down the line, it lost its substance and turned into what I will say petty and ignorant outbursts. I’ll only take you head on, on how you used your words to describe Kenyans whichever state and conditions they live in. In fact it looks very inhuman, if you are truly a Kenyan to label them the way you did.I’ll excuse you to some extent in other areas you touched on because I don’t know when and how you found your way into Canada.

    Here is where your ignorance in Kenyan (Africa) politics come into play. Oburu Odinga has never, from political standpoint held any ministerial post. He has been a mere member of parliament who has no powers as far as government development policies are concerned. Before I continue, do you know the jurisdictional mandate of an a member of parliament? When you say Obura is responsible for the poverty in Nyanza province, please assess your intellect properly.

    Raila has been in the government as a minister for three years. He was actually the minister for Roads and housing but later on the housing docket was clipped off his wings. OK, I did not see you complain or write articles when the government was frustrating Raila’s work. How many roadblocks were put on ways as he was trying to straighten things in his ministry? An example, Permanent Secretary issuing orders by-passing the boss. Can you name the rest? Do you remember upgrading of Kibera slums by an investor brought in by Raila? What went wrong? May be I’m responding to a person who does not have an iota of Kenyan issues. Did you learn from primary school the fundamental rights of human being? Raila was trying to address one of them here.It is true Kibera people lack most of the fundamental human rights but I’m hard pressed to read a Kenyan respond the way you did. It seems you are in a better place than the Kiberas, what solution do you have for them rather than call them sick, naked, etc.?

    Even if I’m not Luo, I feel offended by your comments about them. You label them solely as laborers in tea factories as if other communities don’t do these kind of jobs. Your comments were very lenient towards other communities, while the luos, you have roundly reduced into destitute, vagabonds and living in pathetic conditions. Even in the developed world like Canada, there are warehouses and farms where people do similar jobs, though in better terms and conditions, but they are still laborious jobs. Which is good? A luo picking tea in a factory and an “X” tribe hijacking cars along Nairobi streets for a quick rich?

    Finally, it would have been better to write an article that give people hope and solutions rather than abhor Kenyans the way you have done. Go back and read your article and surely, you will be ashamed of yourself. In that regard, enjoy your economic asylum status in Canada.

    Vincent Jobando, PhD
    Physics Professor, WA USA

    Posted on behalf of Vincent by Jaluo Press.

  2. admin

    Mon, 11 Feb 2008 14:50:39

    While it’s true to admit that we are yet to see a true leader in Kenya and
    Africa at large, it’s also important to note that we don’t define leadership
    by exposing weaknesses. Perhaps if I may ask, it wasn’t Raila, Mudavadi,
    uhurus and the rest to be borne to politicians.

    What you are entertaining is utopian type of politics. lets face it allover
    the world politics is a dynasty, from India all the way to the USA, name it
    all families have dominated politics and that what its all about, even in
    the book of kings King David was anointed by God to lead the Israelites from
    Goliath, he passed the mantle to King Solomon who was the most Richest
    person the world has ever seen, therefore the argument of true leadership
    does not hold water if you use politics as a yardstick.

    This is because Kenya has the most successful cooperation’s in the regions
    which are private and devoid off politics, that’s where true leadership
    lies.

    Regards

    Silas

  3. Lucia

    Kenya needs young leaders who can put price tags on the vast natural resources which are now being plundered by “resource hungry foreign investors” in exchange for foreign aid.

    Despite its wealth, Kenya is begging in exchange for: (a) foreign aid, which is mainly used to buy arms to control the citizens (b) bribes given to the ruling elite to do absolutely nothing. These elite are controlled by the so called foreign investors.

    Kenya will get worse unless there are patriotic young Kenyans willing to ignore tribal barriers to unite the republic. Foreign exploiters and those elites helping them are deliberately using tribalism as an effective and lethal control tool. The tribes fight one another while the looters are carrying on with the plundering of the nation’s resources. There are many corporate merceneries in Kenya/Africa right now . I was stunned to see Kenyans guarding foreign tourists in Mombasa while GSU and Mungiki were busy using live amunition to kill or hack poor Kenyans to death.
    Young educated Kenyans must be very wary about the influx of massive foreign NGOs (non-governmental organizations). These people are not there to help Kenyans/Africans. They are there to harvest natural resouces at the local level. If these NGOs were helpful, you would not have seen the expansion of slums in Kenya. “Beware of wolves in sheep’s clothing”.

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