Friday, May 18, 2007

FIBER OPTIC AT LAST


Kenyans can't wait to connect to high speed internet, cable T.V and other internet based communication services that they have been deprived of by the poor infrustracture over the years. The proposal to connect the country through fiber is thus most commendable as one of the best projects the kibaki government will be remembered for. Fiber-optic lines are strands of optically pure glass as thin as a human hair that carry digital information over long distances. The fact that it's cheaper and faster means that more kenyans will be able to connect to the rest of the world better than with the current facilities. This will subsequently translate into investments and economic growth.
surely, it cant be said any better that the proposal is long over due. Kenya like most african countries needs to utilize technology as an active tool to spur economic growth and development.



Sunday, April 29, 2007

ARMENIAN BROTHERS MAY VIE IN KENYAN ELECTIONS


What if someday while going to your office or farmland you hear from your favourite FM station that the leviathan-styled ARMENIAN BROTHERS have been elected to the Kenyan parliament.You could easily dismiss the propaganda as whimsical. But is it not the same country that our dear brothers-in law to be got state of the art facilities that is afforded only to the mighty power brokers of the government. If it wasn't strange then to call them investors, then it's not strange now to bestow them the MP (mheshimiwa) tag and adorn their fuel guzzling road gadgets with the Kenyan flag.

The blinging "investors" have treated Kenyans to an odd sense of mockery by threatening us and calling us all sorts of names that would have had Martin Luther king turn in his grave only to propose to our daughter later on. As if she was not a Kenyan, the Armenians forgot that the same names they has called other Kenyans equally apply to Wambui and her daughter Winnie, whatever her paternal name is. Our country may be called tolerant at the very least, but what we can't be passed off for is foolishness. As if we don't know who holds power to grant protection and facilities that the Armenians had access to. They could have dined in state house for all we care but their proposed marriage to a Kenyan woman of suspicious parentage and refusal to release the report on their activities in the name of national security is an insult to the public sentiment.
The next thing we may hear is that they have been nominated to serve in the government, or perhaps, elected unopposed from Othaya constituency. They may just be rewarded for their dedicated ambassadorship by appointment to the post of vice president. Standing for an election may be as easy for them as getting a V.I.P card at the airport lounge. After all, when you have visited and dined with the likes of Michuki, raided and crippled media houses the lucy kibaki style, planted a ring on the fingers of somebody's daughter, what better occupation can fit your profile than a mheshimiwa.
The Armenians and the Kibaki family, relatives, or activists (depending on what Winnie calls herself) should respect Kenyans and realize that though we may not be interested in the colour of the offsprings that may be begotten of the upcoming Armeno-Kenyan marriage, we certainly are concerned about the security of our own children. State resources are already far stretched in combating local criminals that we feel very reluctant to fight cross-breed bling criminals.

So much money has been wasted in investigating the activities of these disgruntled non-starters and so much time alloted to just discussing them. They've acquired a celebrity status by the attention the media has dedicated to them at the behest of other issues of national importance. It's time now to redirect that energy and commitment in developing infrastructure (both legal and otherwise) in order to prevent other such thugs from holding our country hostage.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

MUNGIKI POLITICS IN KENYA

The transitional period that saw Moi vacate the office of power and Kibaki take the mantle was hailed as the best opportunity to bring Kenya to a crime free country.The previous era had been described by many a political analysts as the most corrupt, nepotist and gangsteric regime in East Africa. True, there was improvement at the beginning of the Kibaki era. The diaspora who had feared returning home because of lawlessness and insecurity gained confidence in this government and started planning for their safe return. We saw the likes of Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Koigi packing their backs and cutting their dreadlocks respectively for the love of their homeland. Well, that was a spectacular moment to behold not only for them but also for their families and Kenya as a whole.

However come another election year, probably another transition, and things are back to the bad old days. I may be talking a research paper based on statistical probabilities here when i say that the Mungiki menace has become the no.1 killer disease worse than even AIDS, but at least for anyone suffering from the dreaded virus is sure and actually do long for a brighter day tomorrow morning when he wakes up to read my article. For every other ordinary Kenyan relying on public transport in most parts of Nairobi and central Kenya, the only surety he has for his safety is the fact that today it was another person killed and not him. His only prayer is that maybe tomorrow if there be another dead person, let that name be none other than his. He cannot help but think that someday his turn will reach.

That several MPs, ten of them for that matter, are involved in promoting Mungikiism is nothing to wonder about. It is a matter of common knowledge that nobody can run a pseudo-government in any democratic setup without the active support, however remote, from the well connected individuals in the mainstream of power. The mafia dons that our MPs are is something that the government has contented itself with since the days of Moi.
The intentions of keeping Mungiki alive especially during an election year is not something of a guesswork. These disgruntled politicians need to survive and to do so they involve in reigning terror amongst the voters with a view to skew election results. They want to make it so difficult for people from opposition stronghold to come out and vote.

The intention of the government in not flushing out these people is also to be questioned. the internal security minister's confession of the involvement of these MPs tells a tale of the fact that these people are known and had there been any political will they would have faced justice. However, this government is so low on incumbency ratings that it is willing to rely on the so called"protection" from these MPs and their Mungiki followers. If the security of Kenyans was something worth their time at Muthaiga Golf Club, they would have rounded up all the members of this dreaded sect and sent them to the gallows.It is for the obvious political reasons that the government does not want to act tough on them; they need to win an election, and elections in Kenya are not won through the ballots but by terrorism and corruption. Thus, the whole Mungiki episode comes to what i would call the game of musical terror ( read chairs) whereby to retain power at all cost, desperate and successive regimes in Kenya have employed the services of mafia dons to "campaign" for them using such tools as forcible circumcision, collecting plying fees for Matatus and protection fees from traders, kidnappings, killings and such other forms of intimidation.