Friday
September 28, 2012-On 27 December 2007, Kenyan activists were
positive the nation’s free, popular vote would decide the president and jolt
the small group of leaders who had commanded power since independence. Instead,
the Kenyan election was disputed (most observers say stolen) and attacks and
recriminations waved across the country, leaving almost 1,500 people dead and
more than 650,000 displaced. The image Kenya had forged through its openness to
the West and a widespread diaspora was gone. It was replaced with the character
of its politics since independence – an ensconced political elite, corrupt,
violent and tribal.
The country has tried to overcome the causes
of that post-election violence, but it will be tested in the 2013 election, set
for 4 March. New, democratic initiatives have been hailed as ushering in a new
era, but they’re starting to look woefully inadequate.
After rivals Mwai Kibaki, Kenya’s president,
and Raila Odinga, its prime minister, reached a mediated resolution to the
conflict, the next step was passing a new constitution. In 2010, after years of
failing to introduce needed constitutional reforms, a new document aimed at
reducing tribalism, corruption, marginalisation and inequality in the
distribution of resources was completed. It devolved powers and reformed the
police and judiciary, which were found to have been ineffective against
violence.
The economy also bounced back. Kenya can’t
match the growth of Africa’s resource-rich economic powerhouses, but GDP is
expected to come in at 5% this year. A host of international corporations have
set up base in Nairobi and the country is developing young, innovative
entrepreneurs. Investment looks set to surge as Kenya opens its first
large-scale mine, projected to produce 80,000 tonnes of rutile (used for, among
other things, the production of titanium) a year and has increased oil
exploration after the nation’s first discovery this year.
The developments could be used to overcome
issues of poverty and inequality, but all economic predictions depend on what
will happen in 2013. Kenya may not have done enough to prevent more bloodshed.
The International Criminal Court has charged
four leaders for crimes against humanity committed during the 2007-08 violence.
The charges include murder, deportation, persecution and rape, but the
government has been uncooperative and resisted providing the ICC with essential
information. Two of the four charged, Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto, are
presidential candidates. Their trial is set for April 2013, one month after the
elections, which means the poll will be about more than who gets to occupy
State House.
Kenya’s top leaders have publicly denounced
division and violence, but not everyone’s got the message. An MP exploited a
land and water conflict between rival communities to incite violence in the
Tana River district, resulting in the deaths of more than 110 people in a
series of raids in August and September. MP Dadho Godhana was suspected of trying
to scare a community from registering to vote and was subsequently charged and
fired from cabinet.
The country’s religious and class divisions
came to the fore a month ago, when Muslims rioted in Mombasa over the killing
of radical cleric Aboud Rogo. Protestors claimed police killed Rogo, but their
violent response highlighted deeper divisions. Along the coast, job
opportunities are rare and poverty rife. Protestors claimed they’ve been
marginalised as the state’s jobs and resources are being swallowed up in the
interior.
This week another MP was charged with
inciting violence. Ferdinand Waititu went to Kayole on Monday and told a crowd,
already angry over a Masaai security guard’s alleged killing of a thief, “We
are saying that from today, we don’t want to see these Masaai here in Kayole.”
After Waititu was charged, police waited outside parliament, but he was
smuggled out in another MP’s car to evade arrest.
The charges bode ill for Kenya’s hopes of
reform. “We have had pre-election violence in 1992, 1997 and 2001 and there are
indications this could be the worst yet,” Abbas Gullet of the Kenya Red Cross
told Daily
Nation.
“Voting will likely occur along ethnic lines,
and dissatisfaction with results is likely to lead to killings of Luo, Kikuyu
and Kalenjin ethnic groups, on levels equal to or surpassing those seen in
2007-08,” wrote Natznet Tesfay, head of Africa forecasting at Exclusive Analysis,
in This is
Africa.
But the recent calamities have provided some
hope. Key political figures have condemned the violence and warned that their
colleagues who want to incite unrest will face charges. Civil society has
spoken out against the killings and is warning of disaster.
“We are concerned at the impunity being
displayed by some political leaders through utterances that are offensive,
divisive and potentially damaging to the fragile inter-ethnic relations. This
is irresponsible and careless as the leaders are in public limelight and widely
quoted in mass media… This is unacceptable and we condemn it,” the Anglican
Church said in a statement
issued Thursday.
If the country heeds the advice and holds a
peaceful election in 2013, it will prove that Kenya has made advances since
2007 and will be on its way to becoming a democratic and economic leader on the
continent. But the recent violence suggests state security forces, politicians
and the public haven’t learned their lesson, leaving the country suffering from
the politics of ethnic patronage and violence.
Daily Maverick