The Zimbabwe Guardian (London)
Itayi Garande
6 May 2008
opinion
THE NEWLY 'appointed' Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga's characterisation that the political crisis in Zimbabwe is an embarrassment to Africa deserves some scrutiny.
To Prime Minister Odinga we say:
The embarrassment to Africa is also a tiny country like Kenya having a bloated cabinet with more ministers than anywhere else in the world. Mr Odinga, do you care to tell us why Jendayi Frazer was less vocal about 2,500 people we saw maimed on TV; yet she has strong words for 25 alleged deaths in Zimbabwe?
We know it's because you are a U.S. ally in the so-called "War On Terror". We also know that you have turned over dozens of your fellow countrymen to the U.S. and Ethiopia as suspected terrorists. But judging from the deaths we saw in December 2007-January 2008--and we still see today--shouldn't you focus on a 'War On Terror' in Kenya; i.e. the tribal fighting in your own country?
You say the tribal fighting that happened in Kenya was a result of the stolen election by Mr Kibaki. Why tell half-truths, Sir? Everyone knows the violence that characterised Kenya before the December 2007 elections, only that the world was not alert. The European Union's chief election monitor in Kenya condemned pre-election violence in Kenya which killed 300 people; even before the elections.
Kenya's Electoral Commission said since the 1992 elections, violence has pervaded the political atmosphere in Kenya.
Newsweek reported on January 8, 2008: "Throughout much of last spring (2007), in part because of the run-up to the elections but also for a host of other reasons, huge swaths of Kenya were succumbing to a particularly undulant, brutal kind of gangsterism. In episode after episode, many of which were documented by Kenyan reporters, innocent people were beheaded, skinned, raped, murdered and tortured by members of a secretive outlawed sect called Mungiki. In response the Kenyan police and domestic security services began to jail thousands of young men. Human rights organizations began calling attention to the apparent 'disappearances' of several of them. The 'Mungiki threat' became a national, if not an international, obsession."
Who's telling the truth Sir, you or Newsweek?
Why, in your first six months of office, are you already defying your national security minister, George Saitoti, who wants these perpetrators indicted and who wants the continuing violence to stop?
We know that you have also stopped a petition by women of Kenya to investigate cases of deadly violence.
These killings are not figments of our imagination, Sir. These are real, and documented. Ask police spokesman Eric Kiraithe who confirmed police in Kenya killed, in broad daylight, two people who "had been evading arrest and were killed after they ignored orders to surrender" - (BBC website 29 April, 2008). And where is Charles Ndugu Sir? Exactly a month ago, Sir, "the wife of the Mungiki's jailed leader was found beheaded, sparking deadly riots in the capital and surrounding areas," yet you haven't investigated. You had time to meet the MDC and give them advice on electoral victory and ending violence. Are you for real, Sir?
If you are such an expert on taming violence; we urge you to render your expertise to the Sudanese government--where an estimated 300 000 people may have died in a five-year conflict (according to UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs John Holmes); and 2 million driven from their homes. We need to remind you, Sir, that the UN Security Council--approached by your friends in the MDC--thinks 'there's no crisis in Darfur' if the way they are dragging their feet is anything to go by.
So when you highlight the case of Zimbabwe, Sir, we feel you are are echoing the words of the U.S. without dealing facts. Only a year ago Kenya was heralded as the symbol of democracy in the region--today it has flip-flopped. It is the epitomy of violence and an academic case study--for the study of ethnic violence in the region.
We know, Sir, that you are overawed by a Sh200 million loan from the International Finance Corporation for building private schools. IFC's executive Vice President Lars Thunell 'told us' through your state paper Sir. And Kenya being the second country to benefit for the programme in Africa after Ghana, you owe them some 'harsh words for Zimbabwe'--'and we understand'. It's a favour for a favour.
Sir, did you know that Jendayi Frazer was playing games with just this past January (2008)? She initiated the talks between you, Sir, and President Kibaki after admitting that the elections in Kenya were seriously flawed (a polite way of saying they are fraudulent). We saw her on Tavis Smiley's programme. It is easy to forget that the United States Ambassador in Kenya only weeks before the Jendayi announcement, had declared the elections free and fair.
It concerns us, Sir as young Zimbabweans, who would like to see their country succeed, that you shout about the "Ship of Shame" carrying weapons into Zimbabwe; yet at the height of violence in Kenya, the Bush Administration expects to provide Kenya with $800,000 in Foreign Military Financing Program funds to pay for further arms purchases. Your country was involved in arms deals of an extraordinary list of weaponry, supposedly for the Kenyan police?
Remember these statistics, Sir: The Pentagon gave Kenya $1.6 million worth of weaponry and other military assistance in 2006 and an estimated $2.5 million in 2007 through its Foreign Military Sales Program.
That's not all.
Kenya has also been permitted to make large arms deals directly with private American arms producers through the State Department's Direct Commercial Sales Program. Kenya took deliver of $1.9 million worth of arms this way in 2005, got an estimated $867,000 worth in 2007, and is expected to receive another $3.1 million worth this year.
It gets worse.
In addition, the Bush Administration intends to spend $550,000 in 2008 to train Kenyan military officers in the United States through the International Military Education and Training Program at military academies and other military educational institutions in the United States.
Who is Kenya planning to fight, Sir? Terrorism, maybe?
Would it be out of line again Sir to say that the U.S. government is negotiating base access agreements with the government of Kenya--along with the governments of Gabon, Mali, Morocco, Tunisia, Namibia, Sao Tome, Senegal, Uganda, and Zambia--that will allow American troops to use their military facilities (know as Cooperative Security Locations and Forward Operating Sites) whenever the United States wants to deploy its own troops in Africa.
Does this then explain your position (i.e. Kenya's position) and President Levy Mwanawasa's position over Zimbabwe? Or maybe not? If not, why the selective funding? Botswana has been receiving military "biodiversity" funding from the U.S. since 1991. In 2003 it received $4.5 million from the USA for "African regional stability". Botswana is a stable country--but which plays a role in advancing US interests in Southern Africa, and Kenya, where US interest in Sudan are advanced; $6 million to continue engagement with the Nigerian military on reform, modernization and democratization; and $6 million to continue engagement with the South African military."
So you want us, Sir to smile when Mr Morgan Tsvangirai of the MDC visits these countries--Kenya, Botswana (where he has sanctuary), Zambia (whose president he wants to mediate the Zimbabwe crisis) and South Africa (his press office)--claiming to have won an election?
Maybe it's just a coincidence!
If it is then, is it also a coincidence that in August/September 2003, after days of denials, Botswana admitted signing an agreement with America giving U.S. citizens immunity from prosecution by the International Criminal Court (ICC)--the U.S. Bilateral Immunity Agreements (or so-called "Article 98" Agreements)?
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This writer is truly biased. While i agree with the fact that Odinga should look at his country first before criticising others- He is telling the truth " Zimbabwe i.e mugabe and zanu is an embarrasment to Africa. The writer did not point this out, we need to acknoledge and be greatful when others speakout for us since the rest of Africa is quiet while our families are being tortured and murdered.
Why does this author not speak out against zanu as a zimbabwean? those zanu pf have brought our country down from being a proud nation. WHY ITAYI? U… [Read Full Text]
The Zimbabwe Guardian spews ZANU-PF propaganda, just like The Herald.
Itayi Garande (Zimbabwe Monitor) You have some very good points concerning the double-faced character/personality of Raila Odinga. He has certainly contributed to (if not supported) the election genocides recently committed in Kenya. We are bracing ourselves for more such violence in future -- now that we have a Prime Minister with a terribly indiscreet mouth.
However TWO WRONGS WILL NEVER MAKE A RIGHT. Zimbabwe must resolve its own election mess without making any comparisons to Kenya (or any other nation). Therefore this kind of free punching of insults, comparative negatives and sneering comments -- is not the best manner to… [Read Full Text]