President Barack Obama spoke twice in 24 hours about the Michael Brown
ruling while President Uhuru Kenyatta took five days to comment on the
Mandera killings. PHOTO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
In the past two years, we have witnessed massacres in Baragoi,
Westgate, Mpeketoni, Kapedo and now Mandera, and the government still
pretends there is no security crisis.
This week, there
were protests in 170 American cities over the verdict to not indict
Police Officer Darren Wilson for the killing of Michael Brown in
Ferguson, Missouri. Meanwhile, a mere 170 demonstrators took to the
streets of Nairobi on Tuesday to protest against the slaughter of 28
Kenyans in Mandera, while Uhuru Park was jam-packed the following day
for the service of Senator Otieno Kajwang’, who departed this life with
many pending questions over his legal and Cabinet career.
President
Obama spoke twice in 24 hours about the Michael Brown ruling while
President Kenyatta took five days to comment on the Mandera killings.
Makes you wonder whether we have lost our sense of outrage or given up
on the national project?
Have massacres become so
frequent that we become unaffected and indifferent, not really upset
providing our village and family are not on the list of casualties? Or
has protest and outrage been devolved like everything else, to the
detriment of national cohesion and unity?
Even a
cursory glance at the evening news shows that the right to protest is
enjoyed in every corner of the country. Kenyans demonstrate just about
everywhere and about anything: MCAs, governors, pot-holed roads, randy
teachers, polluting factories, exam timetables, embezzling chiefs and
even drunken priests. Kenyans take to the streets with very little
encouragement and soon there will not be a green branch left on the
trees.
NATIONWIDE PROTESTS
But
what do all these demonstrations have in common? They all concern
local, village or county issues. They are matters that affect Wanjiku
and citizens believe can be addressed immediately and effectively when
pressure is exerted. But when was the last time that we had nationwide
protests over a matter of national importance, apart from teachers and
nurses who downed tools out of self-interest?
Politicians,
too, rarely see the larger picture of the nation. Last Sunday morning,
Mombasa politicians held a meeting to demand the reopening of four
mosques. That demand had some legitimacy but Mombasa Christians worship
every Sunday with armed police in attendance and with the knowledge that
they could be attacked with weapons that were stored in one of those
mosques. Did the politicians take cognisance of the rights and concerns
of all of their constituents?
Last week, I wrote that
Kenya is crying out for leaders and sick and tired of politicians. A
leader is one who puts the nation before his ethnic community, party or
religion. A leader is angry about every massacre and committed to the
safety of every citizen. But the downside of devolution is that we have
become insular, tribal and village citizens, losing the vision of a
united Kenya unable to see beyond our county boundaries.
As
a result we fail to demand the security we deserve and allow ourselves
to be chastised for not doing enough to make the country safe.
We have a long way to go but wherever Kenya is headed it must be led by patriots who value life and liberty for every citizen.
gdolan54@gmail.com @GabrielDolan1
No comments:
Post a Comment