Kenya Socialist Web
Site
October 12th 2005
20 REASONS WHY PRESIDENT KIBAKI’S GOVERNMENT
SHOULD BE OVERHTROWN BY KENYANS
“Since the President has lost
the support of Kenyans he had when he took over power, the decisive question is
whether the masses can be mobilized to rebel against his regime regardless of
the outcome of the referendum”
When we proposed last week that
the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) should
prepare the masses psychologically for Kibaki’s exit from power, it was not
because of any personal hatred of the President. The truth is that the election
of Mwai Kibaki as President of Kenya
was an accident because Kenyans wanted to remove former dictator Daniel arap
Moi from power regardless of who took over from Moi. The view was that there
could be no progress in the democratic struggle with Moi at the helm because of
harsh conditions the former President had imposed on Kenyans.
Current events in Kenya
clearly indicate that Kibaki has served his purpose and his continued stay in
power is now more of a political liability because he is driving the Nation
backwards. Our perspective that Kibaki should be overthrown through democratic
means available is based on the premise that he will lose to the Orange
movement on November 21st and if he doesn’t quit after this defeat, there will
be a serious political crisis in Kenya that could plunge the nation
into total chaos.
The Narc government is split and in the event of an Orange
victory, the regime will not function, political tensions will rise while
Kibaki and his henchmen will simply be struggling to hang on to power against a
rising mass movement against the government. While we welcome the call by
members of the Orange Movement for a snap general election regardless of the
outcome of the referendum, we wish to strengthen the case for Kibaki’s quick
exit because Kenya
needs a new leadership after the Narc disaster. We wish to outline some of Kibaki’s
major mistakes which dictates that he should go.
- CONSTITUTION: After failing to deliver a Constitution
100 days after coming to power, Kibaki hijacked a “people’s driven
Constitution” drafted at Bomas which he
proceeded to mutilate through his lackeys in Parliament. Kenyans are now
being asked to vote for a Constitution that will extend dictatorship and
authoritarianism in the country indefinitely. This is unacceptable after
Kenyans witnessed the making of a dictator during Moi’s
24 years in power.
- MEMORANDUM: Kibaki’s official nickname since his days
as Moi’s Vice President is “General Kiguoya” which means
“General coward”. The President’s conmanship and open deception saw him dump the
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) agreed upon by
his political allies before elections, a move responsible for the current
split in the Narc government. The MoU fiasco is
evidence that Kenya
has a President who cannot be trusted.
- TRIBALISM: Although Kenyans thought that they had
elected a new President, the person who seized power was a “photocopy of
Moi”. Just like his former boss, Kibaki has filled the government with
members of his Kikuyu ethnic group, a move that, in essence, promotes a
vice hated the most by millions of Kenyans – tribalism. With Kibaki in
power, the fight against tribalism has been ditched until he departs.
Kibaki is a tribalist and advising him to stop
tribalism is like advising a vampire to stop sucking blood. It will never
happen!
- CORRUPTION: Institutionalized corruption was one
major reason why Moi lost power. After seizing the State machine, cases of
corruption scandals in the media have been chocking Kenyans like fish
bones stuck in the esophagus. The latest is a case of corrupt Generals
sending Army helicopters to South Africa
for repairs. An old merchant ship was recently purchased and converted
into a naval ship in another corrupt deal that exploded in the media. After
spending billions of Tax payer's money on the Goldenberg commission,
Kibaki has failed to bring to book thieves in the Goldenberg scandal while
during his leadership, Kenyans witnessed the
explosion of the Anglo leasing scandal that forcefully brought the
issue of rot and corruption in Kibaki's government to the national
arena. The President has refused to
prosecute a single thief who has stolen from the tax payer. Even his
former anti-corruption boss, John Githongo, quit
because he was convinced that Kibaki had lost the will to fight
corruption. An estimated Ksh 40 billion has been stolen by Kibaki’s
friends since the septuagenarian assumed office. Why should Kibaki
continue to remain in power?
- WRONG PRIORITIES: While over 2 million Kenyans are facing
starvation, Kibaki is planning to build for himself a palace worth Ksh 100
million at Tax payer’s expense. The issue is so real that it was brought
before Parliament. Kibaki’s speeches that he is fighting
for the interest of Kenyans is therefore sheer propaganda. A leader
who plans to build a palace worth millions of money when his people are
starving has lost the moral authority to rule. Kibaki must go!
- ARREST OF JOURNALISTS: After Narc came to power, the illegal
arrest of journalists and attempts to muzzle the media were considered
bygones of the Moi era. During the Kibaki Presidency, Kenyans have
witnessed with “shock and awe” the return of intimidation, harassment and
arrest of journalists doing their job in Kenya. With Kibaki as
President, there is no reason to indicate that the situation will change
in the future. This is why Kibaki has become a spent force who should be
disposed of. A golden opportunity to do this by way of referendum has
presented itself and Kenyans must not let this chance slip away. Let the referendum
be a vote of no confidence in the government and subsequently a reason for
snap elections so that Kibaki can go.
- BRIBING VOTERS: A part from direct rigging of elections,
former President Moi used to buy and destroy votes especially in
opposition strongholds as a way of winning elections. Kibaki is bribing
voters with land while Councilors are being enticed with “pay hikes” to
vote “Yes” in the coming referendum. The Provincial administration has
been rounded up and ordered to campaign for the “Yes” side. State funds
are being used in the referendum to support the “Yes” campaigns because Kiraitu Murungi has said that
the “Yes” campaign is a “government project”. Are there any other reasons
why Kibaki should not be relieved of his duties?
- 500,000 JOBS: There is nothing as disappointing as
promising poor unemployed youth jobs which cannot be delivered. This is
exactly what Kibaki did during the campaigns. 11 million unemployed Kenyans
were promised 500,000 jobs per year and they believed and voted for
Kibaki. Three years down the line, not a single job has been created
because the government is unable to invest in construction and industry,
the surest way of creating jobs. Promises of better housing for the poor
in slum areas have all evaporated. Instead, Kibaki has supported a salary
increment of MPs to more that Ksh 500,000 while the President has himself
cut a pay package of Ksh 2 million with a monthly “entertainment allowance”
of Ksh 200,000. Didn’t some English men say “enough is enough”?
- LANDLESSNESS: Land is a sensitive issue in Kenya
because millions of Kenyans remain landless more than 4 decades after the Mau
Mau freedom fighters took up arms to fight for
land. Instead of addressing the issue of landlessness, Kibaki is using the
issue of land to blackmail a section of Kenyans in the Rift Valley into
voting “Yes” at the referendum. What could be more dirty?
This is after these Kenyans were violently evicted from their land by the
government which also destroyed millions worth of property. Kibaki needs
to go so that pending issues like the land question can be addressed by a
new leadership committed to resettling the landless in Kenya.
- RULING
BY THE MAFIA: There is nothing worse than a whole government being
left on the hands of a small Mafia cartel that operates outside the law. The
core of Kibaki’s Mafia troupe is composed of Mirugi
Kariuki, Chris Murungaru,
Kiraitu Murungi, David
Mwiraria, John Michuki,
Njenga Karume among others. These Kikuyu chauvinists have and
continue to behave as though they own Kenya. Our view is that to end
the rule by the Mafia, Kibaki must give room!
- COMMISSIONS AND TASK FORCES: There is a tactic Moi used to employ to
buy time whenever his government was in crisis. It was called “ruling by
Commissions and Task forces”. Kibaki set up the Goldenberg commission but
then what happened? Leading Commissioners were corrupted, Kibaki failed to
act and now nothing tangible has come out of the Commission despite having
spent billions of tax payer’s money on it. The Ndungu
Land Report has been ditched by Kibaki because too many thieves in the
government have been implicated in land scandals including Kibaki himself.
The Ouko Commission Report has not been released
because of political reasons. Instead, its Chairman Mr. Gor Sungu has been taken to
court for trying to get Dr. Ouko’s killers to
answer charges. We could go on and on. There is no end to reasons why
Kibaki should continue residing in State House!
- TEACHERS CHEATED: There are workers in Kenya living on what is called
“starvation wages”. This lot includes teachers who were cheated by Kibaki
that their pay hikes awarded by Moi in 1998 would be paid after Narc came
to power. Teachers voted for Narc “in toto”. To
date, this promise has not been honoured,
exposing Kibaki as a deceiver of workers who cannot be relied upon. Any
promise Kibaki now makes to Kenyans is dismissed as propaganda. How can he
continue to remain President when his only listeners are his cronies and
fellow ethnic cahauvists?
- KIBAKI’S TERM: When he took power, Kibaki promised to
step down once his 5 year term of office is over. Still on the point of
dishonesty, Kibaki has declared that he will stand for President in 2007,
shocking many Kenyans who thought that Kibaki was just a “transition
President”. If there is no pressure now for Kibaki to go, we might soon
read about Kibaki wanting to become “President for Life”. Honestly speaking,
can Kenyans take this kind of hog wash any longer?
- ATTACKS ON WORKERS: Kenyans witnessed with amazement when
Kibaki sent riot police to brutalize workers who had simply gone on strike
to demand for “living wages”. This is what Moi used to do to contain
industrial actions. As if that was not enough, Civil servants who decided
to go on strike to press for better working conditions and higher wages
were sacked by the government. Within a very short period of time, strike
actions have been banned and workers intimidated. Kenya, under Kibaki, is one of the most
anti-worker government in Africa
today. Kibaki should go to pave the way for workers to organize and play a
role in the running of the government. This should be the next item on the
agenda in a post Kibaki regime.
- POLITICAL ASSASSINATION: Professor Odhiambo
Mbai, who was chairing the “Devolution of power
Committee” during the Conference at Bomas to draft
the Constitution Kibaki has mutilated, was assassinated in cold blood. According
to video evidence by suspects, members of the ruling class and other
Kibaki allies were named as having been behind the assassination. Instead
of moving to unearth the truth as to who was responsible, Kibaki arrested
the journalist who uncovered the evidence, charged him in court before
releasing him due to external pressure. The issue is that political
assassinations are back in Kenya
under our own Kibaki. What does this say about his future as President?
- SHOOT TO KILL ORDERS: The order to police “to shoot suspected
criminals on sight” was a past time of former President Moi. John Michuki, Kibaki’s Minister for Internal security, has
ordered police to give suspected criminals the same treatment of death. As
a consequence, hundreds of Kenyans have been summarily executed by police
in the streets. The rise in crime is not due to any “natural urge” of
Kenyans to commit crime but due to lack of alternative ways of making a
living because the government is bankrupted and cannot create jobs. As
police conduct executions in the streets, a former Commissioner of Prisons
disclosed that 20 percent of Kenyans languishing in prisons are innocent.
Both the police and the army have been unable to intervene after Kenyan
ships are hijacked by war lords in stateless Somalia yet the President has
been quick to set his security forces to execute Kenyans in the streets
for suspected crimes. Kenya
needs a new and fresh leadership that can provide lasting security to
citizens and steer clear from public executions conducted by State police.
- ONE PARTY
STATE: In 1982, Kibaki engineered the
conversion of Kenya
into a one party dictatorship on the eve of the formation of the Kenya
Socialist Alliance. After coming to power on a Narc ticket, Kibaki began
proposing that Narc’s affiliate parties should
dissolve, a proposal that was strongly opposed by Kenyans who saw it as an
attempt to erect a new monolithic government in Kenya. The point is that Kibaki
has been there for too long and he takes several things for granted. What
the President should do is to go into retirement for when will he enjoy
his retirement benefits if he is approaching 80 and still wants to cling
on to power?
- PURCHASE OF JUSTICE: Under Kibaki’s government, the grand son
of Lord Delemare, a former colonial master,
murdered a Kenyan national in cold blood. There was hope when the murderer
was arrested and brought to court but that is where the hope ended. The
Attorney General ordered that the murderer be released because there was
insufficient evidence to try him. This was despite eye witness account of
what happened. The issue here is that justice in Kibaki’s Kenya is
being dispensed selectively. The rich are able to buy justice while the
poor are incarcerated. Are there any further reasons why Kibaki should not
go?
- KENYA
IS SOLD: For a
“developing country” like Kenya,
the government needs to have a firm grip on the country’s economy. Instead
of increasing government control of major economic activities in Kenya,
Kibaki is either allowing multinational companies to take control of the
commanding heights of the economy or selling State enterprises to these
multinationals under the privatization program. We have a tea industry
worth 43.5 billion and out of this, 78 percent is on the hands of foreign
companies. The tourism industry is worth Ksh 42 billion and 71 percent is
on the hands of foreign companies. We have 43 banks in Kenya and
more than 38 are foreign owned. The Stock Exchange is populated with
foreign companies. In simpler terms, the country has been sold to foreign
interests and Kibaki is doing nothing about this. High prices of consumer commodities
precipitated by spiraling inflation has made life impossible for millions
of workers, peasants and the unemployed who can hardly put a square meal
on the table. It is official that 56 percent of Kenyans are living below
the poverty level. With Kibaki as President, Kenyans can only expect
further empty promises and further exploitation of workers as poverty
increases and the rich continue to get richer.
- KIBAKI TOO OLD: Kibaki is a pre-independence politician
who has been there for too long. In the process, he has come to assume
that Kenya
is a large and personal business empire. We refer to 15 years of misrule
of first President Mzee Jomo
Kenyatta when Kibaki was in government before
Kenyans went through another 24 years of Moi’s
dictatorship with Kibaki in government for 10 years as Moi’s
Vice President.. Even if he was a brilliant and
astute politician, it is time for him to call it a day. Kibaki’s advanced
age and ill health could be a contributing factor to the current crisis in
Kenya.
CONCLUSION:
We believe that the overthrow of President Kibaki could be done in a
peaceful and democratic manner. Since the President has lost the support of
Kenyans he had when he took over power, the decisive question is whether the
masses can be mobilized to rebel against his regime regardless of the outcome
of the referendum. A sure way to get Kibaki out will be to convince a vast
section of workers to down their tools while at the same time mobilizing these
workers and and the 11 million strong unemployed
youth into the streets with demands for better wages, better working
conditions, jobs for the youth, land to the landless and calls for Kibaki to
quit. The Orange team is well crafted to fill
the power vacuum and to further open the democratic space for revolutionary
politics needed to end Neo-colonialism and imperialist domination in our
country.
There is no number of police or
army that will be able to beat a determined people. Moi failed during the
struggle for political pluralism. Governments have been toppled by organized
masses the world over. President Kiabki is now a
hindrance to Kenya’s
democratic struggle and as the defeat of his government in the November
referendum appears imminent, this defeat will only advance the struggle in Kenya if it is
carried to its logical conclusion of Kibaki’s overthrow from power. From the
point of view of KESDEMO, this is the best way forward.
Martin Ngatia
Interim Chairperson
ngatia_martin@hotmail.com
Okoth Osewe
Interim seceratry
osewe@hotmail.com
Kenya Scandinavia Democratic Movement (KESDMO)
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
KESDEMO is an umbrella
Movement bringing together Kenya People’s Democratic Movement (KEPEDEMO Mapinduzi), Kenya Socialist Democratic Alliance (KSDA),
Kenya Social Forum in Norway
(KSF-Norway), Muungano Ya Akina Mama Scandinavia, Organization of Kenyans in Denmark
(OKD) and Association of Kenyan Students in Finland (AKSIF). We also work with
the Kenya Socialist Community in London.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Published by Kenya Socialist Democratic
Alliance (KSDA)
email: harakatips@hotmail.com
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