Politics and policy
Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o is one of the seven Kenyans who made it to the art and culture category of the list. PHOTO | FILE
By GEORGE OMONDI, omondi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Mr Kenyatta is among 23 politicians and public office holders listed among Africa’s most influential personalities of 2014. He is listed in that category with his nemesis Ms Bensouda, who succeeded Argentinian Luis Moreno-Ocampo in 2012.
- Seven Kenyans made it to the art and culture category of the list including Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o, Jim Chuchu of Just a Band, literary icon Ngugi wa Thiongo, novelist Yvonne Owuor and writer Binyavanga Wainaina.
President Uhuru Kenyatta combined political
shrewdness and the power of a suave public relations machine to
overshadow his pending trial for international crimes at The Hague and
emerge as one of Africa’s most influential personalities this year.
London-based magazine New African says Mr Kenyatta made it
to the exclusive list for successfully employing a smart political
strategy that has turned Africa against the International Criminal Court
(ICC) and away from the serious crimes he is accused of committing
during Kenya’s 2007 General Election.
Mr Kenyatta was recognised for skilfully exploiting
the ICC charges, which initially threatened his leadership ambitions,
to make ICC Chief
Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda among the continent’s most reviled personalities.
Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda among the continent’s most reviled personalities.
“While the Office of the Prosecutor alleges witness
tampering and non-cooperation by the Kenyan government, it is really
Kenyatta’s shrewd politics that have undermined the court. He has
rallied African leaders in opposition to the ICC in a way that very few
people imagined could happen.”
The report adds that Mr Kenyatta has “reframed
his case as being about the dignity and sovereignty of Kenya and more
broadly Africa, rather than about the political violence following the
disputed 2007 election.”
The struggle with ICC has been the making of Mr
Kenyatta and is expected to define his presidency – having so far
transformed an erstwhile political neophyte into a savvy and dominant
figure in African politics, the report says.
Publication of the list came amid a barrage of
criticism that has greeted Mr Kenyatta’s first year in office,
especially over the seemingly unstoppable wave of insecurity mainly
driven by Somalia-based Al-Shabaab terrorists.
The President has also come under sharp criticism
over rampant corruption and rising ethnic friction that has continued to
eat into Kenya’s political fabric since he took power 18 months ago.
“His country faces many challenges, but is full of
opportunity. How he will use his newfound stature in 2015 remains to be
seen,” the New African concludes.
Mr Kenyatta is among 23 politicians and public
office holders listed among Africa’s most influential personalities of
2014. He is listed in that category with his nemesis Ms Bensouda, who
succeeded Argentinian Luis Moreno-Ocampo in 2012.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who is cited
for his anti-ICC stand and continued military interventions in the
region’s conflicts, also made it to the list alongside South African
politician Julius Malema.
South Sudan President Salva Kiir and his former
deputy, Riek Machar, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau and Chad
strongman Idriss Déby also made it to the list of Africa’s most
influential public personalities.
“Many of them are heroes whose actions have pushed
Africa forwards in exciting and positive ways. Some continue to hold the
continent back. They are presented to you, the good alongside the bad,
in no particular order,” the report says.
Mr Kenyatta leads 13 Kenyans who made it to the continent-wide list of the most influential Africans this year.
Keroche Breweries CEO Tabitha Karanja is the only person who
made it to the list of Africa’s influential business and economic
leaders. She was celebrated for taking on a more established rival East African Breweries Limited (EABL) in the region’s highly competitive beer market.
The coveted list of top business moguls includes Nigeria’s
Aliko Dangote, who has invested in many African markets and Tidjane
Thiam, the Ivorian head of Prudential Insurance – the European
underwriter that acquired Kenya’s life insurer, Shield Assurance Company
in September.
Ory Okolloh, an advocate of good governance and
better known as a co-founder of the Ushaidi platform and Mzalendo
website is also in the list of most influential Africans.
In science, Prof Calestous Juma who moved from
Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government to act as the director of the
Gates Foundation-funded Agricultural Innovation in Africa Project is
named among influential personalities for the year.
Seven Kenyans made it to the art and culture
category of the list including Oscar winner Lupita Nyong’o, Jim Chuchu
of Just a Band, literary icon Ngugi wa Thiongo, novelist Yvonne Owuor
and writer Binyavanga Wainaina.
Others in the category are television host and
fashion PR strategist Diana Opoti and photojournalist-cum-activist
Boniface Mwangi. Godfrey ‘Gado’ Mwapwemba, a Tanzanian better known in
Kenya for his political cartoons and political satirical puppet show,
XYZ, is also in the list.
Two award-winning athletes javelin record holder
Julius Yego and marathon runner Dennis Kimetto are also listed in the
league of Africa’s most influential.
They were listed alongside Botswana’s 20-year-old
middle distance runner Nijel Amos who knocked David Rudisha off his 800m
perch during this year’s Commonwealth Games.
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