Friday, January 31, 2014

BIKO: Intellectuals, rotten leadership and the mundane issues we focus on

PHOTO | PPS President Kenyatta receives the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission’s final report from team chairman Bethuel Kiplagat at State House Nairobi.

PHOTO | PPS President Kenyatta receives the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission’s final report from team chairman Bethuel Kiplagat at State House Nairobi.  PPS
By Steve Biko
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Here is what Admiral James B. Stockdale once said on leadership:
Leadership must be based on goodwill. Goodwill does not mean posturing and, least of all, pandering to the mob. It means obvious and wholehearted commitment to helping followers. We are tired of leaders we fear, tired of leaders we love, and of tired of leadership who let us take liberties with them. What we need for leaders are men of the heart who are so helpful that they, in effect, do away with the need of their jobs. But leaders like that are never out of a job, never out of followers. Strange as it sounds, great leaders gain authority by giving it away." 
What we need for leaders are men of the heart who are so helpful that they, in effect, do away with the need of their jobs. I couldn’t have put it better than Admiral James B. Stockdale and his thoughts echo the negative zone aspect of our leadership.
From Kenyans dying in Turkana, yet there was ample warning about the impeding drought to Governors taxing us Kenyans at the source of production to those ‘eating’ under the pretext of railway.

This is the state of affairs of our leadership and the saddest bit is that the so called intellectuals and moreso, young intellectual are silent. We are more worried about the gay debate, which socialite is in Dubai, or which concert your crush is attending this Friday than the real issues that are tearing this nation right in the middle.

After Kenyans for Kenya, many of us believed that finally, a lasting solution had been found for our brothers and sisters in Turkana, that hunger, drought and famine had been dealt a death blow. Blogs were written, analyst elucidated the way forward, warnings were given, statistics were shared and many believed that the government and the stakeholders of Turkana would finally do something permanent and sustainable.

INTELLECTUALS MUST RISE UP
Imagine my shock and disbelief when I saw a tweet from the Nairobi Senator rallying Kenyans to support his initiative to raise funds to buy food for our fellow Kenyans in Turkana, hardly a year down the road since the Kenyans for Kenyans initiative.


I believe that if you educate a man or teach him how to fish, you will secure his future. However noble Mike Sonko’s initiative is, we must for once, as intellectuals of this nation, rise up and talk. We must tell our leaders what they need to hear, not what they want to hear. As intellectuals, we have failed this nation by our silence and showing interest in issues that will not secure our future in any way.

As a people of a blessed nation, living on handouts from our leaders as they buy mansions and cars worth billions, as they wine and dine while we wait under the table for crumbs, is wrong. The intellectuals must stop worrying about who retweeted them or who will buy their books and speak up.
In an essay on the role of intellectuals in society,  Gian Tu Trung writes that he finds a great deal of truth in Einstein’s words:

“The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.” A person with capabilities and knowledge bears this kind of responsibility and owes his or her world the benefits of their profound wisdom. Intellectuals need to use their capacity to contribute to steering society away from the negatively-impacting results that they foresee, not just for past mis-directed efforts, but also for current and future inappropriate endeavors.’

His words couldn’t be truer in our situation. Look at the articles done by Arunga, Gaitho, Mbugua, Mbataru, Kwame, Walubengo and Bankelele. We all know what is wrong with this country. We know what is ailing our leadership. Yet we wield the essence of truth with fear. These great writers, to me are the gate keepers to the lounge of Kenyan intellectuals but yet they hold back, they refuse to face the dragon that assails this nation in terms of leadership, be it national or county.

LUDICROUS TAXES
Just look at how the Governors are behaving in terms of coming up with taxes. Who in their right mind will tax at the point of production? Who in their sane mind introduces an HIV tax in a world where we trying our level best to fight stigma on the same?

Look at Bungoma, Busia, Kiambu and Kakamega counties and the ludicrous tax options they coming up with; Chicken Tax, Banana Tax, Cow Tax, Boda boda Tax. What are we trying to tell Kenyans really? What are we telling the potential job creators? Why are the intellectuals silent? Why is our focus more on gay debate issues that honestly in my view, is neither here nor there when you look at the bigger picture and the issues facing us, as Kenyans?

When you look at the environment of leadership through the kaleidoscope of what true leadership is supposed to be, you will weep for Kenya. Our leadership lacks the counsel and advice of intellectuals. When you look at the British Parliament and House of Lords, the leaders there invite the academic world and other analysts on certain days for them to appear before them to analyze and debate proposed legislation or policy, and how it will affect society and the business world. They infuse intellectuals into their legislative process.

This is the approach that our counties should have taken in terms of coming up with legislation. Have the intellectuals give their advice and opinion. When those charged with the responsibility to talk, critique and analyze focus on mundane issues, when the poor are helpless and the political class and those that are connected are ‘eating’, then a country is about to implode and it won’t be pretty. Amid the silence of the intellectuals, corruption, greed, crime and tribalism have taken permanent root that no leadership will be able to remove unless all Kenyans are pulling in the same direction.

Dee Hock, Founder and CEO Emeritus, Visa once said neither control nor management is leadership; leadership is leadership. “If you seek to lead, invest at least 50 per cent of your time in leading yourself—your own purpose, ethics, principles, motivation, conduct. Invest at least 20 per cent leading those with authority over you and 15 per cent leading your peers."

I believe he was talking about our leaders. None of them invest anything for us. They take advantage of their positions to enrich themselves. It’s time the youth, the intellectuals, the feminists all focused on what is important before we have no country to engage in. We have enough examples all around us of what it could be like if we do not do something.

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