Thursday 31 January 2008

Flowers for the suffering

The flower thing was really cool ad all – but I still have my reservations. Inasmuch as the gesture was genuine and the organisers’ hearts were in the right place, the situation still hasn’t changed much.

The naked children in the “camps” are still naked, the yawning mothers, trying to nurse their babies are still hungry, and the wounded fathers are still hurting...

We need to address this issue with something more than laying flowers in a park where after a few days; they’ll be wilted; dead.

Contributions of food, clothing, medicine, money and books are far much better and will go a longer way in helping the displaced.

Like one displaced lady at a police station said, “How will some flowers help me? I still don’t have a place to go to, I’m still worried over my children’s health… ”

Kudos to the civil society

Thanks to the civil society’s intervention, Kenya’s grave situation will be on the agenda of the AU Summit’s meeting. If not for this lobbying we would not have been heard at the 53 member Union.
Indeed the Foreign minister and his crew were ready to downplay the chaos in the country – relegating it to a mere scuffle between two tribes! I really wonder sometime whether there’s any matter in the heads of some people! What will it take for the top men in the “government” to realize that no matter how long they burrow themselves in the sand, the situation will not just fade away?
True, they may not be affected by the violence but history will definitely judge them harshly by their callousness towards the issue and their cosmetic pleas for peace. Moreover, their generic speeches do little to lift the tormented souls of hurting Kenyans.
They steal from us, force a leader upon us and now go about, attending topnotch summits and daring to act like its business as usual!
Its people like Maina Kiai, Harun Ndubi and Co. who make Kenyans proud. They stick their necks out daily to lash out at the injustices being meted out on the common wananchi. Kudos to you!

Wednesday 30 January 2008

Sunday 27 January 2008

Wonders will never cease!

While the country is burning in a war that has taken a disturbingly chilling turn, some MPS are busy swapping accusations as to who is to blame for the post-election violence.
Shame on Nyamweya and his team for blaming the ODM’s call for majimboism as the reason why Kenyans are hacking each other to death! What is wrong with these people??? Do they even listen to themselves talk?
While the PNU sycophants are busy, patting their bellies and pointing stodgy fingers at the Opposition, the situation continues to exacerbate. Most appalling of all is the suggestion that it’s upon the ODM to go to the grassroots and plead with the people to stop killing each other!
Mr Nyamweya, does the ODM have state machinery at its disposal? Does it have the command of the armed forces? How much is the opposition expected to do? While the ODM is being accused of stirring the violence, what is the “government” doing in the meantime? Sitting pretty in the capital city, pleading for peace in front of TV cameras? So far removed from the alarming violence that’s spiralling out of control? How much have these pleas helped?
Why can’t they plead for more enforcement of the affected areas? Why can’t the government send more army personnel – because clearly the Administrative Police have lost control? If all they can do is watch from a distance as people’s homes are burnt and innocent lives are snuffed out, then this government is thoroughly failing us.
While Eric Kiraithe is busy disputing the number of live lost in the Rift Valley, the number is steadily rising. Where the hell is General. Ali? Why isn’t he ordering more personnel to the ground? Indeed, he can calmly say that the police force is stretched to dire limits. But how ironic then is it that this didn’t seem to be the case when a whole battalion was cooling its heels, cordoning off the Uhuru Park and other areas where the ODM had planned to hold peaceful rallies?
I feel so violated, livid, aggrieved and pained by this “government.” The loudest voices in that “government” are doing the least insofar as showing their concern for the dying and displaced is concerned. The most they have done is shout accusations to the opposition and order the displaced to leave the parks and chiefs’ camps. What a government! What a band of useless people who claim to serve and protect the citizenry!
Will this country ever heal if the people at its helm are of this nature? Will the children and great grandchildren of this country ever forget the injustice that has brought the nation to its knees?
When will it ever matter to the “government” that the voices of the dying and the displaced are crying out for help, support, safety and justice?
The last thing Kenyans want to hear is who is to blame for what. That can go on forever for all we care. But the lives of innocent Kenyans will not. Time is running out. The people responsible for ensuring the safety of all Kenyans need to snap to attention and do something. For heaven’s sake! Before it’s too late.

Wednesday 23 January 2008

Kenya Police divided over operations

NAIROBI, Kenya - The police commander poured gasoline down the walls of three slum shacks and set them alight. At each home, his officers waited until his back was turned, then doused the flames.

The small rebellion is symptomatic of rifts within Kenya 's police force over harsh tactics ordered to suppress opposition protests, some officers say — a new fracture in ethnic and political conflicts tearing at the country since a disputed presidential election

Several police officers sought out The Associated Press to express concern over the tough measures they have been ordered to use against opposition supporters protesting what they say was President Mwai Kibaki's theft of the Dec. 27 ballot.

"People are separating into tribes," said one Muslim policeman in Nairobi , who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of losing his job. "What is outside is being reflected in the force."

Human rights groups say more than 650 people have died in an election dispute that has sparked three overlapping conflicts — between ruling party loyalists and the opposition, between ethnic groups with long-held land grievances or connections to rival politicians, and between police and the residents of Nairobi's restive shantytowns.

Clashes have been particularly severe between Kibaki's Kikuyu people, the largest ethnic group, and the Luo of opposition presidential candidate Raila Odinga.

But rights groups say many deaths have been caused by police, who have fired tear gas and live rounds at protesters.

Several police officers said they had been given "shoot-to-kill" orders, and one described "a general rebellion which has been compounded by that kind of orders."

Two officers involved in a raid on a Nairobi slum said they had refused to shoot to kill and fired their guns into the air instead..

Officers said some policemen had threatened colleagues with fisticuffs and even death in disputes over tactics. All the officers spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

The divisions further weaken a force already undermined by low pay — a recruit's monthly salary is $154 and a mid-ranking officer makes $240 — and a reputation for corruption.

One officer said tensions are so high there could be a police strike.

Police spokesman Eric Kiraithe denied there are any splits within the force and charged that officers may have been bribed by the opposition to fabricate testimony.

"There are no divisions in the police force as of now," he said.

Kiraithe also said no commander had issued shoot-to-kill orders, insisting that officers are being told to use restraint.

Kenya 's police initially denied killing any protesters, but last week acknowledged officers had been responsible for some deaths and put the number at 82. Rights activists said the number was much higher.

At a rally Monday attended by thousands in his hometown of Kisumu, the opposition leader Odinga raged against police violence, pointing to seven bodies that had been brought into the stadium.

"You can see how our bodies are lying there dead because they were killed by ruthless police," Odinga said.

At least 53 people have been killed in Kisumu. Hospital records indicate 44 of them died from bullets. Guns have been used primarily, if not exclusively, by police in the upheaval since the election, while rioters have often used machetes and bows and arrows.

Kiraithe also denied police officers would deliberately destroy property.

"There are no circumstances whatsoever when a police officer can set fire to a building. It is false," he said.

Two officers, however, said that is exactly what happened.

They said that last week, after a train was looted as it rolled through Nairobi's Kibera slum on the last of three days of opposition protests, they were given orders to enter homes there, beat any men they found and destroy property in the homes.

"Spare a woman and a child, but everything else was to be vandalized. Any man found in his house was to be dealt with — beaten up," one of the officers said.

He and a second officer involved in the raid said their colleagues reluctantly searched houses but refused to beat people or destroy property, because many of the officers were Luo, the same ethnic group as the householders. They said the commander was from the Meru tribe, considered an ally of the Kikuyu.

On Friday, another police patrol in Kibera fired from a train, and six people died, including a 15-year-old girl.

Later Friday, the two officers said, they were told they would be returning to Kibera that night and a senior officer told them they were taking gasoline along. Houses would be burned to teach the slum dwellers a lesson, the two said.

In response, junior officers hid 15 cans of water in the three trucks that transported them, the two officers said. Some also tipped off relatives in the area about the raid, and the area was deserted when they arrived, the officers said.

The men said their senior officer set fire to shanties in three different locations and left a group to guard each. When he left, the officers doused the fires, the two said.

Two residents, Beatrice Michael and George Okumu, corroborated parts of the officers' story. Michael said she passed three truckloads of police while taking her daughter to a hospital after she was hit by a stray bullet. Okumu said residents were tipped off their homes would be burned and left the area Friday night.

The two officers said objections to such harsh tactics had been intensified by the ethnic splits plaguing Kenya . Some Luo officers have been transferred from their usual patrol areas, they said.

An officer at the Criminal Investigation Department, where the two senior officers are both Kikuyu, said he knew of at least 10 non-Kikuyu officers who had been asked to give up their sidearms. No reason was given, he said.

"If they see two or three people (police) who are not Kikuyu discussing politics, they become suspicious," the officer said.

Kiraithe, the police spokesman, said he was unaware of any such incidents.

The Muslim officer in Nairobi said he had been ready to fight some colleagues when they suggested tear-gassing Nairobi 's main mosque during a small demonstration Friday.

There was outrage when police in the coastal city of Mombasa fired tear gas outside the main mosque at unarmed protesters who were preparing to march after Friday prayers.

The officer said he threw away his tear gas without using it. He added that although most of those disobeying orders were non-Kikuyus, there were also some Kikuyu officers unhappy with the situation.

Many of his Muslim colleagues, he said, were concerned they could be transferred or fired because of the perception that Muslim communities support the opposition.

"There are people who say they are ready to join Raila's force the Muslim officer said. "Senior officers are also divided ... Some guys are saying, 'Let me see anyone shooting a civilian, I will kill you.'"

This is the real picture - what Mr Kiraithe or Gen. Ali will not tell Kenyans

Tuesday 22 January 2008

BEING TWENTY - SOMETHING

They call it the "Quarter-life Crisis." It is when you stop going along with the crowd and start realizing that there are many things about yourself that you didn't know and may not like. You start feeling insecure and wonder where you will be in a year or two, but then get scared because you barely know where you are now.

You start realizing that people are selfish and that, maybe, those friends that you thought you were so close to aren't exactly the greatest people you have ever met, and the people you have lost touch with are some of the most important ones. What you don't recognize is that they are realizing that too, and aren't really cold, catty, mean or insincere, but that they are as confused as you.

You look at your job... and it is not even close to what you thought you would be doing, or maybe you are looking for a job and realizing that you’re going to have to start at the bottom and that scares you. Your opinions have gotten stronger. You see what others are doing and find yourself judging more than usual because suddenly you realize that you have certain boundaries in your life and are constantly adding things to your list of what is acceptable and what isn't. One minute, you are insecure and then the next, secure.

You laugh and cry with the greatest force of your life. You feel alone and scared and confused.
Suddenly, change is the enemy and you try and cling on to the past with dear life, but soon realize that the past is drifting further and further away, and there is nothing to do but stay where you are or move forward.

You get your heart broken and wonder how someone you loved could do such damage to you. Or you lie in bed and wonder why you can't meet anyone decent enough that you want to get to know better. Or maybe you love someone but love someone else too and cannot figure out why you are doing this because you know that you aren't a bad person. You go through the same emotions and questions over and over, and talk with your friends about the same topics because you cannot seem to make a decision.

You worry about loans, money, the future and making a life for yourself... and while winning the race would be great, right now you'd just like to be a contender! What you may not realize is that everyone reading this relates to it. We are in our best of times and our worst of times, trying as hard as we can to figure this whole thing out.

Enjoy being twenty-something! It only lasts for so long...
Happy New Year and keep living.

Will some of these people please shut up?

It’s bad enough that one half of the country has to contend with a PNU office – something that they didn’t bargain for. But to listen to the utterances of some people is simply too much.

To put it bluntly, I wish some people could just SHUT UP! Especially irrelevant individuals who have absolutely no moral ground to speak on the issues of the day.

I take offence with such people.

  • Dick Wathika, Madaraka “MP” – You need to focus on your job at hand and desist from shooting yourself in the foot with comments such as this. “Our constitution doesn’t allow losers to share power with winners. Firstly, who told you that you won? Secondly, if that’s the case, then what in Heaven’s name is Kalonzo Musyoka doing on the Government side???
  • Mr. Wetangula: Since you seem to have a major problem with the British Government failing to recognize your boss as the legitimate CEO of the country, then I see you summoning a whole bunch of people to your office to ask them why they just cant do that. Because incase you haven’t noticed, almost every relevant organization and union had criticized the ECK’s announcement of Kibaki as winner of the presidential elections. Think EU, EALA, UK, US, KNHCR etc. So I guess you have a lot on your plate. Good luck trying to convince the rest of the world that the opposite is true.
  • The same goes for the likes of Mungatana (another ‘winner’), Karua and Michuki. These guys not only make callous remarks regarding the current political upheavals but they also fuel this war further by stoking more wood into the fire.
  • Government spokesman: Will you ever get tired of competing with the ostriches in the ‘Bury Your Head in the Sand’ contest??

People please, just shut up and let your boss do the talking for himself.

However, I’m not sure how feasible that will be considering the track record that Kibaki has. As Noble Laureate, Honorable Wangari Maathai mentioned, “President Kibaki continues to be aloof and unreachable despite the serious situation that Kenyans are dealing with.”

The president is too far removed from the people to actually grasp the delicacy of the situation and save the day. Surrounded by his clique of sycophantic foot soldiers, he doesn’t seem to realize that he has the power to put an end to all this senseless killings.

When will reality dawn on him?

Will Kofi make it?

As the former UN Secretary General comes in to sort out the muddle that is our nation currently, I can’t help but wonder – will he achieve much? True, the team he’s going to work with is composed of very notable and worthy individuals. So the peace-brokering team is quite a force to reckon with.

The problem is, are the two parties in the fray ready to sit down and talk? Because if only one side is willing, then all this will be nothing short of a Public Relations gimmick or shenanigan.

John Kufuor apparently didn’t achieve much due to time constraints, according to Madam Graca Machel. So does that mean that this group will have the luxury of adequate time to broker a lasting ceasefire?

I pray that they do. Because if they don’t, then the bloodletting will continue, the power-hungry will continue irritating and mocking the citizenry and the losers will continue popping up on our TV screens and radio talk shows in a bid to seem relevant and important.

Please Mr. Odinga and Kibaki – give Kofi Annan and his team a chance! That’s all that Kenyans can ask for.

Monday 21 January 2008

To the Kenyan MPs – any help please?

Someone asked a very valid question the other day-where are the MPs in all this turbulence? Why aren’t they checking in on their displaced constituents and offer them solace?

Well, right on queue came a forlorn plea from one FM station (Kiss FM actually) to the honourable members of parliament. They were asked to kindly forfeit their fat salaries and contribute the cash to the displaced persons in different parts of the country.

Well, I must say that this caught me by surprise. I mean, who would expect any right thinking MP to forgo his salary for the sake of others? I almost laughed out loud – it was purely satirical, I thought.

But then again, I imagined that probably – just probably – someone would heed the call. I mean, if there’s one way that an MP can show his people that he/she really cares, then isn’t this it?

So I waited…by the end of business yesterday, no cheque had checked in at the Kiss FM offices. I wasn’t totally surprised, although I had waited with bated breath for a sign.

Which brings me to the point of my argument – did an FM station have to make this plea? Couldn’t the honourable members have thought about this all by themselves? Why is it that the conscience of this esteemed arm of government is so hard to prick?

Indeed, one MP who opted for anonymity advanced the argument that making such a contribution wasn’t very simple, especially now that so many MPs elect are struggling to pay off the debts they incurred in the form of campaign funds.

Well, that’s a point…but which is more important?

So far, Kiss FM’s noble plea is seemingly all for naught. But today is another day – and I doubt if there’s a deadline for the MPs to be generous.

All we can do is hope – and cross our fingers while we’re at it.

The Man In Black

THE MAN IN BLACK
This is a tribute to the "Man in a Black T Shirt"
His name we may or may not know
But that’s how he was referred to by the KTN Television network
The date was Wednesday 16th January 2008
I spent an hour sitting alone last night replaying the KTN clip in my mind
Did you see it?
The Man in Black was dancing in Nyanza, Kenya – was it in Kisumu?
He was Dancing and also protesting with his friends
He was exercising one of his basic Human Rights – The Right to Free Speech and Assembly
He had no stone to hurl and no machete in his hand to hurt
He was just dancing and protesting
He was not looting either
Just Dancing and Protesting
Then came the grand finale
He was running away… he was not fighting
He was not dancing or protesting either
The Man in Green was only a few feet away
Two rapid shots from an automatic rifle
And the dance was over ….
The Man in Black lay on the floor together with his friend
He tried to get up one more time – he was only dancing!!
But the shot had done its job
As he tumbled down yet again the brute in Green had to kick him
Probably to kick the Man in Black’s last breathe out
That was the sudden end to the Dance
Farewell Man in Black – a friend I never got to meet
A friend who gave up his life for Kenyans’ freedom
As I sat I realized that The Man in Black was probably a ‘poor man’
No riches and no bank account either to his name
All I can offer his Soul are my Prayers for His Soul’s Peaceful Journey
And May My Prayers and those of Many Others enrich your Soul
And May that Enrichment of your Soul be our reward and thanks for your Sacrifice
May that Enrichment Power your Journey
And your Soul be blessed with Riches not seen
I take Solace in that.
The Nature of the Soul is WEAPONS CUT IT NOT, FIRE BURNS IT NOT, WATER WETS IT NOT, WIND DRIES IT NOT
After this thought propped up in my Being
Yet another Powerful thought Burst thru
This was the one that surprised me, my friend
May the World of Justice Notice this Brutal Crime against Humanity
In the Meantime May Peace and Justice Prevail in Kenya
When will we see sense in this beautiful Land and Country called Kenya?

By Vivek Mehta Jan 17th 2008, Mombasa

Sunday 20 January 2008

Kenya's fight for democracy

It’s been almost a month now since Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner of the 2007 presidential elections. A lot has happened since then - and I must say, democracy has been violated and tarnished tenfold. What pains me the most is the number of lives that have been lost.
I vehemently oppose the police and their use of live ammunition to "disperse” the crowds that showed up on the streets.
How many lives must be lost before our voices can be heard? I believe that ODM was very serious when it called for PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATIONS. The violence, mayhem and cold-blooded killings that followed were never meant to happen. The killing of an unarmed young man in Kisumu was especially unnerving.
What does it take for the police spokesman, Eric Kiraithe to just admit that the policeman was actually caught on tape hunting down the innocent man and shooting him in cold blood? What does it take for the police commissioner to admit that the use of live ammunition was a terribly wrong call? Where is the conscience of these people who have sworn to “serve and protect?”
It’s a painful day for Kenya to have come to this – democracy can be noisy, true, but it should never be so noisy as to drown out the voices of the downtrodden, the voices of those who want justice.
I hope that the children of Kenya never forget the blood that was shed in this past month – a terrible testament of what ethnicity and politics combined can result into.
Pray for this country; and for the perpetrators of this violence and rape of democracy. That God may forgive us for we truly know not what we do…