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The
real lessons from Kenya
Joram
Nyathi, The Zimbabwe Independent
January 11, 2008
http://allafrica.com/stories/200801110647.html
A lot has been
said about the Kenyan election debacle. Lessons have been drawn
locally on both sides of the political divide. Unfortunately most
of these lessons are no more than self-serving wishes. In my view,
the real lesson is the danger of obsession with change for its own
sake, and in that quest, embracing every claimant to power as the
Messiah. Zimbabweans are guilty of this propensity.
South Africans look worse.
Reading the South African media about President Thabo Mbeki's alleged
autocratic rule in the few weeks before Polokwane made me feel like
we in Zimbabwe were ruled by angels. So intense was the hatred for
Mbeki that his rival Jacob Zuma was assured of the ANC presidency
despite his soiled name. It was as if the name Zuma represented
a cure for Aids, crime and racial inequality in SA.
It is perplexing. Here
is a man who answers to every act of misdemeanor from rape to influence-peddling
to outright corruption and tax evasion being elevated to the pedestal
of a saint who is being victimised by a cruel sitting president
whom he has challenged for office! In any civilised society, the
accusation of corruption, let alone rape, should make any decent
person recuse himself from the presidential race. Zuma would have
magnified his own stature. He doesn't need to be convicted.
Things were never going
to be easy for Mbeki from the start: matching Nelson Mandela's affability,
dealing with a recalcitrant ruler such as President Robert Mugabe
who is universally reviled by those he has hurt, and given growing
anti-intellectual sentiment in politics in Zimbabwe and SA. But
in Zuma we have a man who can stand up when later accused of rape,
violence (leth' umshini wami), corruption, racketeering, fraud and
philandering and say with a straight face: "When I campaigned
I didn't hide who I am."
In the face of all this
grunge you have influential organisations such as Cosatu threatening
the judiciary with a "bloodbath" if Zuma is brought to
court.
The biggest lesson from
the Kenyan post-election violence is the danger of electing into
power democratic charlatans without institutional fireguards to
ensure such people can be removed later without bloodletting; and
our fascination with the politics of tribe and other irrational
considerations which blind us to people's motives for getting into
politics. It is the danger of choosing leaders for where they come
from ahead of enduring values necessary in nation-building.
Anyone who opposes a
hated sitting president automatically becomes a democrat. Mwai Kibaki
was feted as a democrat for defeating Daniel arap Moi without anyone
examining his democratic credentials. The election was judged free
and fair. In five years the guy has shown his true colours and those
who elected him are shocked by his "transformation" from
what he never was to a corrupt dictator and tribalist. To me there
was no betrayal of the people but an exposure of bad choice.
The irony is that Western
democracies which are quick to point to us torch bearers of democracy
subject their would-be leaders to a very rigorous vetting before
they are elected. I am fascinated by the ongoing campaign by the
Democrats in the United States. This is not a country in any serious
political crisis like we are, yet its leader must pass through the
crucible of public scrutiny and explain fully what his policies
are, what he wants to do and how. It is not enough to chronicle
the current leader's failures. Any imbecile can do that. Talking
democracy and human rights is cheap - the test is on delivery.
Unfortunately in desperation
for change, any change, we are shy if not afraid to confront our
future leaders with hard questions about who they are and their
shortcomings. Yet it is the political leader ultimately who gives
the nation its international character.
The other lesson from
Kenya is not the threat of violence if elections are rigged. Forcing
people to vote in a certain way on the threat of violence amounts
to democracy by fear. It does not represent the free will of the
people. It is the need to select for leadership people of integrity.
We need leaders who are able to accept loss and victory in an election
with dignity and know when to quit.
Kenya's Raila Odinga
might have a cause to complain, but to me there is no point in voting
for a leader of hooligans, who, after a disputed electoral result,
rampage in the streets, burning, raping and murdering people in
church. There was nothing among the poor Kikuyu in the slums of
Kibera and Mathare to show that they had unfairly benefited from
Mwai Kibaki's rule ahead of other tribes. Nor is there evidence
that those being targeted for attack voted for him. Yet we read
that boys and girls as young as six years are being raped for voting
for Kibaki or for simply being Kikuyu.
In any case, if the Kikuyu
are being targeted as an ethnic group because Kibaki is Kikuyu,
then by inverse rule Odinga forfeits the claim of a "people's
president" if only his Luo clanspeople and a few others voted
for him.
The trouble with wanton
violence is that it never affects the criminal leader himself. Does
anybody for once nurse the illusion that Charles Taylor or Joseph
Kony will ever fully pay for atrocities they have committed against
their people in Liberia and Uganda? Or that Odinga is justified
in causing the deaths of over 600 Kenyans because he wants to go
to State House?
Broadly, the Kenyans
are paying for what has become the bane of African politics - short-term
and opportunistic considerations in the selection of national leaders.
Lack of long-term vision in the beginning comes to haunt us in the
end.
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