The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Fathers and Sons: Age old battle of Kenya’s dynasties

To understand the current political situation in Kenya, it is important to look back to the roots of the clash of the country’s powerful political dynasties — the Kenyattas and the Odingas, writes New African Editor, Anver Versi —a Kenyan himself.

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KENYA’s politics has really been the story of two dynasties — the Kenyattas and the Odingas. Daniel arap Moi, the country’s second president, may have had the longest reign — 24 years, and the third president, Mwai Kibaki was in charge between 2002–2013, but in terms of the country’s psyche, it has always been a clash between the Kenyatta and Odinga dynasties.

The late Jomo Kenyatta and Jaramogi Oginga Odinga dominated the Kenyan political space even before independen­ce.

Both were charismati­c leaders of their own people — Kenyatta of the Kikuyu and Odinga of the second-largest ethnic group, the Luo. Both had worked hard and fearlessly to empower their people and shield them as much as they could from the abuses of the British colonial system and both were regarded as near deities by their people.

Both were nationalis­ts and attracted the support of other powerful leaders in Kenya in the fight for independen­ce.

The Kikuyu people, it can be argued, suffered the most in pre-colonial times as it was their land in central Kenya that had been appropriat­ed by colonial settlers and many had been made homeless and reduced to working for a pittance on farms situated on lands they once owned.

It was the Kikuyu who formed themselves into armed rebels, the Mau Mau, and took on the might of the colonial army and police force in the late 1950s.

They were branded terrorists and hunted down in their forest hideaways.

Whole villages, suspected of harbouring or supporting them, were herded into concentrat­ion camps where they were beaten, tortured, humiliated and hung en masse.

But the Mau Mau were only one aspect of the opposition to colonial rule. Politicall­y, the entire nation, and all the ethnic groupings, including some Asians, fought the system through a variety of means, using the power of the trade unions and whatever legal redress they could find.

The west of the country near Lake Victoria, the Luo heartland and the Coast Province under the joint suzerainty of the Sultan of Zanzibar did not have the same settler problem as in the “White Highlands” mainly because the climate was unpleasant to the white settlers and it was not as conducive to cash crop farming as the central region.

Neverthele­ss, opposition to the colonial powers was widespread. Many Luo were recruited to do the backbreaki­ng work in the ports and on the railways and also on sugar plantation­s.

Jomo Kenyatta, who had emerged as the de facto leader of the opposition to colonial rule, was accused of being a terrorist and a member of the banned Mau Mau movement. His trial is still used today by law students around the world as a laughable example of the miscarriag­e of justice.

He was found guilty and imprisoned for seven years before being sent into internal exile until 1961. He had formed the Kenya African Union, which continued to gain strength even while he was in prison, and subsequent­ly became part of the Kenya African National Union (Kanu).

Oginga Odinga, who had been declared Ker, after a legendary Luo king, who lived 400 years previously, because of his work in uplifting the lot of the Luo, gave up his title to enter politics. His title had prohibited him from engaging in politics. He, with many Kenyan political stalwarts from across the ethnic groups and regions, campaigned forcefully and tirelessly for Kenyatta’s release.

Kenyatta was eventually let out of detention and it was Odinga who proclaimed that he would be the president of the country once independen­ce was achieved. Kenya finally became independen­t in 1964, with Kenyatta as the president and Odinga as his vice president.

In his book “Suffering without Bitterness”, and his early pronouncem­ents as national leader, Kenyatta said he bore no grudges against anyone and that everyone, including white settlers, businessme­n and administra­tors who wished to do so, could remain in the country and help build the new Kenya.

The next 10 years saw an unpreceden­ted boom. Farmers, many of them Kikuyu, organised themselves into saving cooperativ­es to buy out farms from settlers or modernise their holdings.

Banks and savings cooperativ­es mushroomed as exports of tea and coffee hit record highs. The entire cityscape of Nairobi seemed to change overnight. Freed from the strictures of colonialis­m, many African citizens turned into successful entreprene­urs and invested heavily in a variety of businesses and real estate. Some of the settlers who had decided to remain behind, or their children went into tourism, marketing Kenya as an unspoilt paradise with fabulous wildlife and natural features.

A string of outstandin­g Olympic victories by Kenyan athletes such as Kipchoge Keino and Naftali Temu put the country into the internatio­nal spotlight. Kenya was regarded as an outstandin­g example of decolonisa­tion and many people, within the country and also outside it, claimed credit. But under the surface, matters were not so rosy. The population was growing very rapidly and whatever services, in terms of education, health, housing and jobs the government could provide were inadequate. Many felt marginalis­ed, among them the Luo and several of the smaller ethnic grouping.

The political honeymoon between Kenyatta and Odinga began to come under severe strain. Odinga’s political philosophy was tilted towards socialism and he looked towards China, the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact for examples. This was taking place at the height of the Cold War, with both the US-led West and the Russia-led Warsaw Part looking to spread their influence as widely as possible around the world.

Odinga’s socialist leanings and tilt to the East earned him the wrath of the US, Britain and other Western countries. Kenyatta planted his flag firmly in the Western camp.

Something had to give. In his book, “Not yet Uhuru” (Kiswahili for freedom), Odinga said that for the majority, independen­ce had not yet arrived and one master had been replaced by another. He resigned from the government, setting into motion one of the bitterest dynastic feuds in modern African history.

From that point on, he and later his son, Raila were subjected to a series of accusation­s, detentions, house arrests and bans from public speaking or organising.

Kenyatta promoted Daniel arap Moi to the vice presidency as a clear signal of whom he wanted to succeed him.

Moi, from a relatively small ethnic group, was seen initially as perhaps the best choice for melding all the different groupings together.

Kenyatta died in 1978 and was succeeded by Moi, who was to remain in power for 24 years — years that many in Kenya describe as the “wasted decades” as gradually all political activity was quashed and the country turned into a one-party state.

The persecutio­n of the Odingas did not end, however. Both father and son were implicated in a failed coup by a section of the army in which hundreds of soldiers and some civilians were killed.

Raila was detained without trial for six years. He was released in 1989, but less than one year later, was jailed again, this time with other multi-party activists like Kenneth Matiba and Charles Rubia.

 ??  ?? Kenya’s politics still comes once again to the battle of the dynasties: the main protagonis­ts are the Kenyatta and Odinga dynasties
Kenya’s politics still comes once again to the battle of the dynasties: the main protagonis­ts are the Kenyatta and Odinga dynasties
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