Thursday, February 23, 2012

Of Michuki’s Death and Politicians Who won’t Retire

Kenya mourns the passing of arguably the most decorated Minister in the past decade. Mr. John Njoroge Michuki of the Michuki rules passed on at the Aga Khan Hospital on Tuesday night. Political friends and rivals have abandoned their amity and rivalry to pay glowing tributes to the fallen technocrat. I for once feel I could sit out on this one. I am ambivalent on this one, I don’t know whether to mourn his death or celebrate his life. I lost for emotion for the fallen octogenarian. My lack of remorse should however not be misconstrued to mean a lack of sensitivity or being out of grain with the national grain. I however have reservations about appraising the life of a man who has been at the helms of power since pre-colonial times. Mr. Michuki who died at the age of 80 has had the opportunity to serve in almost all facets of social-political and corporate Kenya. He has had time to prove himself but most notably others and more so the young generation or my generation have found it extremely difficult to create niche’s in the thick of things in Kenyan society. Michuki and his over their shelf-life African technocrats and politicians epitomize what is primarily wrong with our continent. ‘We as a people have been unable to discern the time and season of getting new wine into new wine-skin, when the times’. Abdoulaye Wade is past his 80s, he has the knack though of thinking that he is indispensable to the Senegalese people, he thinks the Senegal’s institutions are dysfunctional without him. Mugabe who for his part is 8 and 1/2 a decade old. He runs his country like a barns for one of his many wives, power has corrupted his person so immensely that he probably forgot that he is Zimbabwe’s president and not Zimbabwe’s owner. The old geezers in Afro-politic belie that we as a people have been unable to create a finite demarcation between institution and personality. Mugabe thinks he is Zimbabwe’s government. He leads the country in a Machiavellian style unfit for stone-age band societies in the world. Mr. Wade thinks he rules by divine right. Africa is not replete with examples of statesmen who retire in grace, it is awash instead with examples of leaders who die of old age, from other non-communicable diseases probably worrying about an imminent coup-de tat or from the bullet (*see Gadhafi) The passing of Mr. Michuki might be bemoaned by many a Kenyan over, I for one won’t be shedding a tear over his passing to glory. For death, be symbolic, in the physical or political allows society to regenerate. It allows for new life and vigour. That is why we African’s name our children after elders in their family line. Death is an intergral part of societal self-renewal. Most African governments are way over the top when it comes to age, and that, that my friend is the cause of sclerosis that is so often the norm in African bureaucracies.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

MINDSPEAK: A MELTING POT OF AFRICA’S GREAT MINDS

. I was at mind speak last Saturday. This was a huge for me, for being a young Kenyan that generally spends most of his in the country side I miss out on this seemingly small but invaluable opportunities that would generally improve my knowledge base. I for sure was not going miss first mind speak of the year for I was in town. Never mind the main speaker was the Nestle CEO Peter Troiahalt whose name I was really struggling to comprehend. Save for the slight out of sorts feeling I was okay and was bubbling with energy; the sort that engulfs me when I am in a a caucus of peers who either remotely or explicitly understand what we (Africans need to do in order to achieve our development endeavors. There were umpteen highlights from Saturday 28, 2012 Mindspeak held at The Hotel Intercontinental, Nairobi. I shall however elucidate the highlights and the captions that really caught my attention in as simple a language as possible; #1 isn’t it amazing that foreigners (read non-Africans) understand our issues and problems better than ourselves? For god’s sake Mr. Troihat is French, he has been in the sub-Saharan Africa for a little over two years, but within that short time he has acquitted himself with institutional and infrastructural paralysis that is the characteristic norm in most African countries. Again the usual suspects of; corruption, poor transport and communication infrastructure, poor governance and over-bureaucratization are again mentioned being the bane of Africa’s underdevelopment. Mr. Troihalt apparently understands this better than politicians and policy makers that have been sitting at the helm of Africa’s decision making for fifty + odd years. #2 The Democratic Republic of Congo; my god, what a colossal mess of lost potential. DR Congo, a country bigger than Western Europe and with a population of 85 million , abundantly blessed in rare, valuable minerals like gold, diamonds, titanium et al. You would think that all this equals; riches. No! wait a minute the DR Congo has decided to bless herself with endless bloodshed, rape and massive poverty. The infrastructure is so bad that citizens of the Eastern Congo know nothing about Western DR Congo, the people there the Capital Kinshasa and Kabila’s enfeebled government that resides there. Would you imagine that in 2011 that the council of Ministers in the DRC met a record three times? Amazing, apparently the ministers were busy haggling the enormous mineral wealth to the highest bidders, merchants of death and rape they are. #3 Nestle; What an astounding example of sustainable success. Established in (1905) the food and beverages company is worth (211 billion US$D) and has its footprint in (86) countries. What an example of how unbridled free market capitalism creates value. Over the years Nestle has created value linkages for millions of people; employees, rural farmers, and investors. Sub Saharan Africa has very few indigenous Multi-national corporations. Bureaucratic bottlenecks, crony capitalism, parochialism strangles the life out-off indigenous African Businesses. That notwithstanding Nestle is putting 20million US$D in its Nairobi factory. #4 Finally, I would want all this change trotting young men and women on twitter, Facebook and myriads of other social media move away from the comfort of e-ranting and do something positive for their countries and society, let’s sweat our way to change rather than rant and wait for others to sweep the muck for us. Let us be the first to applaud ourselves for changing our societies rather than wait to applaud others for casting the ‘first stone of change’.