Gulf News

Why Kenya’s upcoming polls should worry the world

Unresolved legacy of the country’s colonial past and fears of post-election violence pose a threat to the East African nation

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riving in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi, can be a nightmare. Not only is one prone to spending endless hours in traffic jams, but also the roads are menaced by brilliantl­y coloured, insanely driven, hulking deathtraps that pass for the city’s public transport system. Terrifying­ly oblivious to the dangers they pose to both their passengers and other road users, the matatus — as the beasts are called — are a perfect metaphor for Kenya as it hurtles toward elections next month.

With three weeks to go, domestic and internatio­nal observers are concerned with whether the polls will be peaceful and fair. Kenya is still haunted by the post-election violence of a decade ago, in which at least 1,300 people died and more than 600,000 were displaced from their homes. Many are fearful of a repeat of violence, as it was in 2007.

There is good reason to worry. Just like in 2007, the campaigns of incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta and his main challenger, Raila Odinga, have deeply polarised Kenya along ethnic lines; the nation is split down the middle, with polls showing the race tightening as election day approaches. Across the country, there are reports of people moving their families away from ethnically mixed neighbourh­oods in areas anticipate­d to be flashpoint­s of violence, and into tribal enclaves where there is safety in numbers.

More disconcert­ing has been the impugning of the impartiali­ty of the judiciary. In 2007, the opposition refused to entrust the electoral dispute to the courts, providing the spark for the violence. Alongside its poor handling of the 2013 petition against Kenyatta’s election, the judiciary has had to endure continuing allegation­s of corruption. Public infighting has broken out within the Supreme Court, which was specifical­ly establishe­d in the aftermath of the 2008 violence to deal with electoral disputes. Now, the opposition has already declared that if it suspects the election to be rigged, it would not be returning to the courts, as it did in 2013. Many fear that this is code for a resort to street protests that may potentiall­y degenerate into violence.

Regional inequaliti­es

The real fuel for the fire in 2007 was the unresolved legacy of the country’s colonial past, which manifests in the form of land conflicts and massive class and regional inequaliti­es. By the time of independen­ce from Britain in 1963, about 60,000 European settlers owned half of all agricultur­al land in Kenya. Since then, successive kleptocrat­ic government­s have preferred to concentrat­e these areas in the hands of a small elite, further exacerbati­ng land hunger as the population has grown ninefold. This, in turn, has led to the huge wealth disparitie­s with one report showing 62 per cent of the country’s wealth being owned by just 0.02 per cent of the population.The conduct of the Independen­t Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) has been a cause for serious concern. Time and again, the IEBC has been chastised by the courts over its arrangemen­ts for the elections, most recently in cases concerning the finality of vote counts at the county level and its procuremen­t of ballot papers. Worse is lack of transparen­cy in IEBC’s planning.

Perhaps most damaging to the IEBC’s credibilit­y has been the perception that it is doing the incumbent’s bidding. This is reinforced by the near-identical positions the IEBC and the governing Jubilee Party have taken on almost every issue, sometimes resulting in party spokesmen purporting to speak for the elections body as well. As far as electoral abuses are concerned, the IEBC has been quiet on a series of TV commercial­s paid for by The President’s Delivery Unit, which clearly violate the legal prohibitio­n against the government either advertisin­g its achievemen­ts during the campaign period or using public resources to campaign for a particular candidate.

Like Nairobi’s infamous matatus, the election is barrelling along, many times on the wrong side of the law, the noise and vitriol of the campaigns are drowning out common sense. For the terrified passengers, whether they — and Kenya — arrive at the other side in one piece seems to be coming down to a wing and a prayer. Patrick Gathara is a strategic communicat­ions consultant, writer and award-winning political cartoonist in Kenya.

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 ??  ?? Cash flows as Kenyan polls approach Kenyan challenger: No violence if vote is fair
Cash flows as Kenyan polls approach Kenyan challenger: No violence if vote is fair

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