Category Archives: Kenyan Election Crisis: Negotiations

FEATURE: ODM – PNU: VALENTINE’S DIVORCE OR MARRIAGE?

In Africa, it  is believed that, “when hyenas stop chewing on a stricken elephants, the beast  rarely gets up again”

It seems the  current political stalemate in Kenya is the shadow of the ‘unmovable beast that  is eating away its nation.’

What if the  Kofi  Annan-led mediation process  fails?

Would the UN  Security Council ask NATO to give temporary assistance to the AU, pending a  full-blown UN Mission’s arrival, including military? Why this questions and  many more?

Remember what  happened in Rwanda! There was a sudden withdrawal of foreign troops and resultant  chaos. Where was the UN, then, to save Rwanda?

Is China  failing Kenya by ‘passively’ helping end the political stalemate? History  reminds the world that China opposed the intervention of the UN in Sudan for  fear of annoying the ‘murderous government,’ from which it bought vast dollops  of oil. Isn’t China guilty for acting a passive perpetrator of genocide in  Sudan?

In ‘severe’  situations, UN distinguishes between two sorts of Security Council resolutions.  “Those passed  under Chapter 6 (six), deal with the peaceful resolution of disputes and  entitle the council, to make non-binding recommendations.  Those under  Chapter 7 (seven), give the council broad powers to take action including  warlike action, to deal with “threats to the peace, breaches of peace or acts  of aggression.”
          

And as it is  commonly asserted that Kibaki’s occupation of State House as president is still  ‘illegal’ and questionable and as the hardline stance by government is sustained, Kenya runs a risk of being ruled by warlords.

This means  that even if the second attempt, after a failed one by Ghana’s president Kufuor, to restore political electoral and historical order and currently  backed by the International Community, former UN Chief Koffi Annan and his team  of Eminent Persons, should not at all fail or else Kenya shall reach a  punctured crunch point in time to come.

Kofi Annan’s  team ought to facilitate Kenya to have a transitional ‘government of national  unity’ which could, in a year or two, hold elections. The International  Community should come in to give logistical and financial support directly or  NGOs affiliated to the mediation process to help save Kenya.
On tougher  grounds, Kenya would need closer foreign military protection and back-up for  the sake of internal and cross-order security.

Why?  Intelligence  forces predict a risk of a politico-economic proxy conflict breaking out  between Kenya and Uganda (and probably Somalia and Ethiopia) due to the  ‘adapted opposition strategies’ employed in Kenya by ODM against government’s  PNU. President Museveni would face the same challenge president Kibaki is  currently facing.

Does East  Africa need UN’s blue helmet forces to secure peace in the region?

To revisit  history, the International Crisis Group (ICG), a think-tank, had warned that the arrival foreign (Africa) troops as peace keepers, especially Ethiopia, may  rekindle Somalia’s civil war. The current militancy is Somalia seems the aftermath  of the pre-meditated warning.

Across the  border, and years back, the last Rwandan military aircraft had chugged  away, the Mai-Mai, a tribal militia came out of the bush. Two hours later,  bullets were flying and the townfolk were fleeing, as Mai-Mai warriors fought members of another rebel group and many were left dead.

Worse still,  the Lendu tribe of Congo had its own  death trap. With painted faces and leaf circles in their hair, they broke into a  hospital near Bunia where many of the medical staff and patients were from the rival Hemas, a tribe allied to  western Uganda.  The Lendu warriors went from bed to bed,  cutting up the occupants. By the time they had dragged out the children hiding  in the roof and torched a nearby village, they had killed 1,000 people.
In Kenya,  after elections were announced several self-made tribal militia clubbed together to try and force out a ‘rigged-in’ leader, Mwai Kibaki, and later on  turned on one another displacing themselves and leaving behind crude weapons of  national destruction and displacement.

On a lighter  note, I refuse to accept that ‘machetes and pangas’ should be classified as ‘small arms’. Should we blame knives, pangas, slashers, sickles, and razor  blades for being weapons that could kill? Or should we change the attitude of  men to de-classify such as ‘small arms.’ This is an issue of attitude and intention and not a matter of transforming an object to be an arm of the mind.

Certainly,  Kenyans have been caught between flexible timetables that the Koffi Annan led team and the International Community have demanded and the depressingly  inflexible record of African politicians, including Kenyan tribal militia  groups, warlords and faction leaders whose sparring has cost perhaps 1,000  lives and displaced 300,000 persons from their homes.
          

The International Community ought to end the intermittent and periodic pillage and  death that is ethnically based.

Reassembling Kenya back to where it was is a daunting task, but it is a task that has to start from somewhere– with the internationally sponsored Kofi Annan-led mediation process and the group of Eminent Persons, including like minded protagonists and political and ordinary Kenyans.
Let us all  avoid overturning the progress made so far and avoid political miscalculations  that endanger national security and stability. We all need to choose to  separate our home-grown centrism or hardline stances from national affairs and sectarian  political party radicalism for the sake of Kenya.      

Regards and Happy Val’s,

Mundia Mundia Jnr.             
       
                    

What Changes We Need For A Stable Kenya

Of the changes that we need for a stable Kenya, not only for the present but also for the future, here are a few that are important:

1. A term limit for the Presidency(we already have that)
2. An independent electoral commission.
3. An independent Judiciary system.
4.  An independent parliament.
5.  A land Commission with implementation power.
6. A tribal clashes commission with power to punish.
7. Vetting of senior government position by parliament.

What we don’t need:

1. Power sharing ( what is the purpose of an election)
2. Prime Minister (a position to divide people and waste money with little benefit to the common man)
3. A coalation government(what is democracy without  opposition)

All of the above can be achieved by constitution amendments or by agreement by all stake holders.

– Charles Nkuraya

FEATURE: A Case for Justice in Kenya

Date: Sat, 9 Feb 2008     22:49:32 -0500
 

On February 7th  2008, the United States Senate Foreign Relations Committee held a hearing titled “The Immediate and Underlying Causes andConsequences of Kenya’s Flawed Election”. This timely hearing
was chaired by the astute Senator Russ Feingold D-WI who, along withother committee Senators, made incisive queries of a number of American witnesses. The hearing resulted in a formal measure supporting a peaceful resolution of the current crisis in Kenya.

For readers who may be unacquainted, the people of Kenya have been painstakingly forging a nascent democracy over the past several decades. National elections were held on December 27th 2007 after an unprecedented peaceful and vigorous campaign season. There was real hope for the entrenchment of robust democracy by way of free and fair elections.

This was tragically not to be, for in the 11th hour, during vote-tallying, evidence of blatant and widespread rigging became exposed. A pre-meditated plan by the Kenyan government to outright steal the vote was enacted in front of the whole world. In fact, numerous international observers and official bodies have
roundly pointed to a flawed vote-tallying process. The result has been a discredited election that saw  incumbent Mr. Mwai Kibaki surreptitiously sworn in under the cover of secrecy and darkness, and the immediate, pre-meditated repression of civil liberties by a widespread lethal police crackdown on freedoms of speech, media and public assembly.

What has followed is truly horrific. Kenya has been convulsed by rioting in direct response both to the theft of votes as well as to the brutal police crackdown on anticipated protests; a crackdown which has included a
‘shoot-to-kill’ order toward unarmed protesters (Kenyans do not enjoy a right to bear arms as Americans do). The immediate post-election reaction by Kenyans has been one of outright rage at the blatant theft of their precious vote. This rage, and the lethal police suppression of it, has spiraled into the uncorking of
deep-seated land grievances and related ethnic rivalries.

The simplistic “tribal clashes” aphorism that has been imposed by Western media to neatly explain away the complex emotions being vented by Kenyans of all walks of life should be dispelled lest it become a self-fulfilling
prophecy. The facts are actually to the contrary. The poor of Kenya of all ethnic identities are the foot soldiers of a disenfranchised majority, and have taken to the streets to voice their disgust with a government which has robbed them of their barely realized liberty. It is the secondary action of a few shadowy nefarious characters, which has exploited the unstable situation to egg-on atavistic tendencies of impressionable youth to rally around parochial tribal identities.

In the meantime, the United States’ State Department and Embassy in Nairobi have been thrust into the role of attempting an honest brokerage between the protagonists the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) opposition, and Party of National Unity (PNU) government. This brokerage has had the somewhat nebulous aim of restoring peace, and resolving ‘the post-election violence.’

As a result, in an attempt to be even-handed, the U.S Ambassador to Kenya Mr. Michael Ranneberger proclaimed that “There is ample evidence of rigging on both sides.” The folly of this position is that there is actually no evidence at all of rigging by the opposition. This is because the opposition could not steal the vote even if it had wanted to; the partisan state apparatus has menacingly controlled the voting process
from an early beginning to the extreme end. In fact, on multiple levels, including the personnel appointments of the duplicitous Electoral Commission of Kenya, all organs of Kenyan government are directly dominated by Mr. Kibaki’s imperial presidency.

Mr. Ranneberger should have called squarely the uneven hand of the government which has buried Kenya in its reckless house of cards. The government PNU can and did steal votes- on the order of at least hundreds of thousands and probably over one million in an electorate of but 9 million, in order to tip the balance in favor of PNU’s unpopular Mr. Kibaki.
The evidence of this government orchestrated rigging has been openly put before Mr. Kofi Annan who is currently in Nairobi attempting feverishly to mediate dialogue between the leadership of the two parties. In the meantime, those who have the least to lose, mainly dwellers of Nairobi’s informal settlements, and poor country farmers and peasants, are caught up in an escalating cycle of violence characterized by the widespread killings of unarmed civilians by paramilitary police, murders of neighbors in heretofore
peaceable communities, then revenge killings, all of which continue with impunity.

The problem for the United States, is how and where to take a stand on the Kenyan post-election crisis. In order to articulate the import of such a stand, it is useful to recall Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s maxim “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” This maxim should not be dismissed as a trite feel-good adage, if only for the mere fact that we currently have soldiers foisting democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq in order to preserve a fragile terrorism-free security on our own home front. The central problem with Mr. Ranneberger’s well-meaning proclamation is that he sacrificed the defense of justice, for the expediency of trying to equalize an unequal peace. This is problematic because, invoking Dr. King once more, “True peace is not merely the absence of tension: it is the presence of justice.” Seemingly similar, distinguishing between a True Peace and an unequal peace is crucial for Kenya. With True Peace there is justice; in an unequal peace there is not. The mediated settlement the Kenyan opposition ODM has demanded is in fact one predicated explicitly on political justice, and therefore would lead to a True Peace if extolled by all. The government, through guile and
not-so-clever manipulation of repressive instruments of power freely at its disposal, will try to force an unequal peace. As an example, the recent shocking murder of two opposition members of parliament
has now reduced the hard-won opposition ODM majority in parliament.
The government line on these political murders (which have a long precedence in recent Kenyan history) is that one is ‘merely unexplained’ and the other ‘the result of a love triangle’. In the second murder, the lecherous government propaganda machine shows that it does not even leave its own unscathed. The murderous culprit of this obtusely angled fairy-tale turns out to be none other than a shoot-to-kill-loving policeman, as so witlessly confessed by the government police boss himself.

Notwithstanding the direct and insurmountable evidence of unjust election rigging by government agents, there is conversely equally compelling circumstantial evidence supporting the opposition’s contention that
veritable justice must be a central deliberate outcome of any mediated negotiation. This circumstantial evidence exists most powerfully as the telling convergence of now official conclusions by the US, EU and Canada, with the longstanding platform manifesto of the ODM: that the traditional framework of Kenyan government as enshrined in its neocolonial constitution, and as defiled by the wanton corruption of its likeminded oligarchs, is inherently undemocratic. Even the weak-minded United States Bureau of African
Affairs Assistant Secretary of State, Dr. Jendayi Frazer, testified February 7th at Senator Feingold’s hearing that Kenya is in bad need of radical constitutional and other institutional reform. All other civil society American witnesses who testified at this same hearing re-iterated the fundamental problem of Kenya’s tyrannical constitution which preserves an imperial presidency without independent checks and balances.

ODM presidential candidate Mr. Raila Odinga had campaigned on an open platform of bringing a new
constitution to bear within six months. Such a constitution, known colloquially in Kenya as the Bomas Draft, had already been authored by eminent persons from across the political divide and has been eagerly awaited enactment by a savvy majority of Kenyans. This new constitution has as its pillar the devolution of power from the presidency and creation of the necessary political spaces to accommodate all of Kenya’s varied and deserving communities. Of course, its enactment has been heartlessly stymied by the greedy cronies of Mr. Kibaki’s government.

America has a special historical role in championing freedom and democracy both at home and all around the world. The great American Martin Luther King Jr. was prescient in his perseverating sensation that the cause of justice must be the bedrock upon which peace is lastingly unfurled. I hail the resolute efforts of Senator Feingold to exact truth from Kenya’s treacherous predicament. He and his committee’s devotion affirm the
universal dictum that ‘suffering truth shall set us free.’ For Kenya, the distillation of truths from the poisoned chalice of the recent election has exposed immediate political, social and economic injustices. The corollary therefore is that directly addressing glaring injustices arising from the flawed Kenyan election is the
essential stand that will at long last set Kenyans free.

The voices for justice on this West side of the Atlantic and on that East side of Africa are finally synchronous because of the cathartic space that Kenya’s post-election crisis has loosed upon the world. Those of us who have
a conscience and are aware of the unfolding calamity in Kenya should see therefore that our fair-minded voices sound firmly on the side justice. We should for the sake of those in Kenya who, though corralled in the great Rift of their burning Valley, thirst first for the quenching stream of justice to wash away the torment of their fair, yet freedom famished land. Don’t just take it from me. The great Russian Novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who made the world aware of the Soviet Union’s great sin of Gulag labor camps, states it best: “Justice is conscience, not a personal conscience but the  conscience of the whole of humanity. Those who clearly recognize the voice of their own conscience usually recognize also the voice of justice.”

– Omondi

PRESS STATEMENT BY BISHOPS FROM RIFT-VALLEY, NYANZA, AND WESTERN PROVINCES IN SUPPORT OF PROPOSALS FROM H.E KOFI ANNAN

Any Peace loving Kenyan or anybody in any country in the world who has been following the post general election events in the country, would sincerely support the Mediation team of former UN chief Kofi Annan.
  
  It is on that note that we as Bishops from Rift-Valley, Nyanza and Western Provinces urge Kenyans to rally behind Annan if the country was to heal from the sufferings it has experienced in the last few months.
  
  We believe it is the formation of a Grand Coalition Government pending elections after two years that would help the country pick up fully and remain united as before. Kenya has been known as an Island of peace and this would continue when Kenyans are satisfied of the country’s leadership through elections.
  
  The country has shed a lot of blood and it is therefore important for our politicians to weigh what they say especially regarding the Mediation talks led by H.E Koffi Annan. The remarks like those from Hon. Martha Karua regarding the announcement by Annan over the talks development should be avoided by all means.
  
  As Bishops from the three Provinces, just like majority Kenyans, we are convinced that Annan and his team is best placed to end the turmoil in the country if they are fully supported by us, Kenyans.
  
  The remarks from Hon Karua, criticizing the announcement by Annan on the Plans for a grand coalition government followed by elections after two years, is in bad faith and clearly shows that she, and by extension the PNU which she leads in the mediation is not for the interest of the general country.
  
  As we told H.E Koffi Annan in amemorandum we had sent to him, the country is bleeding and talks hold the key to the future destiny of this nation whose innocent citizens, including children have heavily suffered due to the Presidential elections. The situation needs a political approach like this led by Annan and not courts as demanded by the PNU.
  
  We must realize that courts are not fields to sort out political mischief. Kenyans are keenly following the proceedings from the Annan dialogue because they yawn for Justice on the political leadership in the country which will be solved through another ballot exercise.
  
  As clergy, we feel duty bound to remind our political leaders that they cannot hang on power while the country is falling apart over the disputed Presidential elections and that it was important for them to swallow any pride and support Annan initiative for the interest of the country.
  
  The behaviour of Hon. Karua over the progress made to the public from Annan, clearly indicate that she does not mean well for the country and has no respect for the democratic principles she had been talking of previously.
  Kenyans voted on the platform of change and made their verdict. If their democratic decision through the ballot box was not respected hence a rose to the dispute, then it would only be wise to subject the same Kenyans to another elections so as to get a leader of their choice.
  
  That is why we maintain that people of goodwill must just support the Mediation initiative led by H.E Koffi Annan.      
                    
  
  
  
  
  Signed by Bishops
  
  1.      BISHOP DR. WASHINGTON OGONYO NGEDE
  POWER OF JESUS AROUND THE WORLD CHURCH & COORDINATOR CHURCH FOR CHANGE NYANZA. PROVINCE
  
  2.      BISHOP FRANCIS MWAI ABIERO
  ANGLICAN CHURCH
  
  3.      ARCHBISHOP SILAS OWITI
  VOICE OF SALVATION AND HEALING CHURCH
  
  4.      BISHOP ZEPHANIAH OUMA ORAO
  NEW WINE EMMANUEL SHALOME CHURCH
  
  5.      ARCHBISHOP JULIUS OTIENO OLOO
  LIVING WATER INTERNATIONAL
  
  6.      BISHOP PETER CHEMASWET
  BAPTIST CHURCH & COORDINATOR CHURCH FOR CHANGE RIFT VALLEY PROVINCE
  
  7.      BISHOP PATRICK MUGANDA
  FRIENDS CHURCH COORDINATOR CHURCH FOR CHANGE WESTERN PROVINCE
  
  8.      BISHOP JOSHUA KOYO
  CHAIRMAN NCCK NYANZA REGION
  
  9.      BISHOP CHARLES AGWATA
  OBEDIENT PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD

Interesting Read: Solutions for Kenya???

PLEASE SEND AN INTERESTING STORY ABOUT WATER MELON TO PNU
MEMBERS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  _____  

Great article on finding a unique way to meet a market need, a customer focused approach and thinking out-of-the-box (or maybe in the box in this case!).

 Lessons of the Square Watermelon

Japanese grocery stores had a problem. They are much smaller than their US counterparts and therefore don’t have room to waste. Watermelons, big and round, wasted a lot of space. Most people would simply tell the grocery stores that watermelons grow round and there is nothing that can be done about it. That is how I would assume the vast majority of people would respond. But some Japanese farmers took a different approach. If the supermarkets wanted a square watermelon, they asked themselves, ‘How can we provide one?’ It wasn’t long before they invented the square watermelon. 

 
http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermellons

http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermellons.

The solution to the problem of round watermelons wasn’t nearly as difficult to solve for those who didn’t assume the problem was impossible to begin with and simply asked how it could be done. It turns out that all you need to do is place them into a square box when they are growing and the watermelon will take on the shape of the box. 
 
http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermelons
http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermelons.p

This made the grocery stores happy and had the added benefit that it was much easier and cost effective to ship the watermelons. Consumers also loved them because they took less space in their refrigerators which are much smaller than those in the US meaning that the growers could charge a premium price for them. 

 http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermelons

http://www.financialhack.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/square-watermelons-2

What does this have do with anything besides square watermelons? There are a few lessons that can you can take away from this story which help you in all parts of your life. Here are a few of them:

Don’t Assume: The major problem was that most people had always seen round watermelons so they automatically assumed that square watermelons were impossible before even thinking about the question. Things that you have been doing a certain way your entire life have taken on the aura of the round watermelon and you likely don’t even take the time to consider if there is another way to do it. Breaking yourself from assuming this way can greatly improve your overall life as you are constantly looking for new and
better ways to do things. This was one of the most difficult things for me to do because most of the assumptions I make, I don’t even realize that I’m making them. They seem perfectly logical on the surface, so I have to constantly make an effort to question them.

Question habits: The best way to tackle these assumptions is to question your habits. If you can make an effort to question the way you do things on a consistent basis, you will find that you can continually improve the way that you live your life. Forming habits when they have been well thought out is usually a positive thing, but most of us have adopted our habits from various people and places without even thinking about them. I have changed a large number of habits that I have had after taking the time to question them and continue to do so. Some of them I have know idea where they came from while others I can trace to certain people or instances in my life. It’s a never ending process, but by doing this, you can consistently strive toward making all aspects of your life more enjoyable instead of defaulting to what you have now.

Be creative: When faced with a problem, be creative in looking for a solution. This often requires thinking outside the box. Most people who viewed this question likely thought they were being asked how they could genetically alter water melons to grow square which would be a much more difficult process to accomplish. By looking at the question from an alternative perspective, however, the solution was quite simple. Being creative and looking at things in different ways in all portions of your live will help you find solutions to many problems where others can’t see them. I am not a creative person, but I’ve found that the more that you look at things from different perspectives, the more creative I have become. It’s a learned art and builds upon itself.
 
Look for a better way: The square watermelon question was simply seeking a better and more convenient way to do something. The stores had flagged a problem they were having and asked if a solution was possible. It’s impossible to find a better way if you are never asking the question in the first place. I try to ask if there is a better way of doing the things that I do and I constantly write down the things I wish I could do (but currently
can’t) since these are usually hints about steps I need to change. Get into the habit of asking yourself, ‘Is there a better way I could be doing this?’ and you will find there often is.

Impossibilities often aren’t: If you begin with the notion that something is impossible, then it obviously will be for you. If, on the other hand, you decide to see if something is possible or not, you will find out through trial and error.

Take away the lessons from the square watermelons and apply them to all areas in your life (work, politics, finances, relationships, etc) and you will find that by consistently applying them, you will constantly be improving all aspects of your life.

 
JK

Annan seeks to seal Kenya crisis deal in days

PNU MUST BE OFFERED TOBACCO FOR WITHOUT TOBACCO THE SPIRIT OF MUNGIKI HAS TOO MUCH FATIGUE AND WITH 43 MPS LIKE THE TRIBES IN KENYA, THEY WILL NEVER QUIT FOOLING THEMSELVES THAT THEY ARE BORN GOVERNORS. KIBAKI HAS STARTED HIS BOMBASTIC ABUSIVE WORDS TO THE MAJESTIC PEOPLE OF KENYA. KENYANS MUST GO TO STATE HOUSE TO TELL THIS ALCOHOLIC LEADER TO QUIT. – OPADO

Annan seeks to seal Kenya crisis deal in days – Yahoo! News

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080212/wl_nm/kenya_crisis_dc_10

GIVE KENYANS LIBERTY OR SPELL DEATH INSTEAD

Dear Majestic People Of Kenya,

I return to the Kenyan election saga because I must. I was in Kenya when the election was stolen with impunity in favor of Mwai Kibaki. Catastrophe followed, and with my own eyes, I have seen the pictures and heard the stories. Suffice is to say, we only imagined reality. Regardless of where we are, Kenyans have lived the reality of a stolen election already. But worse can still happen, and yet the best days for Kenya are actually upon us.

It is however a mistake for Kofi Annan to assume that negotiations can bear fruit without actively engaging the feuding principals, Raila & Mwai. The UK, AU,UN, EU & US have a big stake in Kenya and can not allow her to slide into a anarchy. What my 10th great grandfather Ragem advises is that the UK, AU, UN, EU, & US engage Raila & Mwai directly. Again, he advises them to sequester Raila and Kibaki and not let them out until they agree for the sake of Kenya and the world. Meanwhile, the Speaker of Parliament can run the operations of the house that keeps the government running.

Considering that the parties negotiating on behalf of the feuding principals have already been sequestered, my 10th great grandfather Ragem has a piece of advice as well. You have been given the power to negotiate on behalf of Raila & Mwai. This means that to the eyes of Kenyans and the world, you “are”  Raila or Mwai. Do not harden your heart, because you are “not” Raila or Kibaki. Yield more ground, heck change your mind if need be and save our country. Whatever you agree on, Raila or Kibaki cannot disagree with. They gave you the mandate and so has the entire mankind. This is the situation the UK, AU, UN, EU & US have placed the feuding principals in – a catch 22 situation. The feuding principals have no option but to accept whatever you decide.

Indeed, Kenya lost its sovereignty the moment we started fighting amongst ourselves and the moment UK, AU, UN, EU & US put its foot on the door. It is too late to argue therwise, though Martha Karua may try. To her, we remind her of Tarik Aziz and the Iraq dilemma.

The way I see it, the west brought this mongrel called democracy to Africa. It was obvious that it had a lot of side effects but for a while was thought to work in Kenya. The festering unseen wound ruptured in an orgy of blood, habitat destruction and dehumanization what with the crumble of weak democratic institutions like ECK. That the African Union summit in Ethiopia was divided was a sign of acknowledgment that democracy is a corrupt pill with terrible side effects, just like the Polio vaccine’s side effects brought us HIV in the Congo Brazzaville.

The mediators including the UK, AU, UN, EU & US will either give us normalcy in a pioneered and tailored solution unique to Kenya, or they will give us death. I prefer the former since it would demonstrate justice.

Meanwhile, I want to emphasize that the Kenyan problem is not tribalism, but elitism. So please do not butcher my name. It is a tradition I am proud of and prepared to die defending!