This was a very good week for President Uhuru Kenyatta and his
Jubilee administration. His government basked in glory as it welcomed
two high-profile delegations who came calling carrying many goodies.
The
Secretary-General of the United Nations and the President of the World
Bank arrived into Nairobi. Both heaped lavish praises on the President
and his government.
The world, despite initial
misgivings and vile propaganda by some European countries, has finally
accepted that Nairobi is geopolitically indispensable and Uhuru is a
President they can do business with.
There is a lesson to learn from the radical change of Kenya’s diplomatic fortunes in the last 18 months.
Kenya’s
diplomat number one is the President himself, but the Foreign
Secretary, Ambassador Amina Mohamed, and her team have done an exemplary
job.
The foreign office looks different and delivers
admirable results compared to the time when the stiff and scruffy Prof
Sam Ongeri headed it.
The lesson to draw is that if
the President picks the right person for the job and gives them the
right support, Kenyans will get positive results.
In
fact, after 18 months in power, the President and his Deputy seem to be
in a comfort zone in terms of stabilising their government, delivering
on many fronts, and putting the country on a cruise mode.
The
economy is turning around, devolution is gaining ground, business
optimism is high, foreign investment is going ahead, the judiciary is
robust, infrastructure projects are in high gear and there is a general
feeling that the country is on the right trajectory.
The
President and his administration rightly sees the importance of the
economy, infrastructure development, improvements in agricultural
development and joins the dots to see that we need an holistic approach
to realise Vision 2030.
But he ignores or underscores an important component: Security and the rule of law is a cardinal pillar in Vision 2030.
It is here that the Jubilee administration is doing badly and failing the country.
Without
security and adherence to the rule of law, Kenyans should forget about
attaining Vision 2030. It will remain a mirage, an illusion and a
propaganda song.
Internal security and the rule of law
is an area the President and his government need to focus attention on.
The government has failed Kenyans in this area.
In a perilous state
Despite the cries and pleas of Kenyans, the President has refused to heed their concerns.
Ironically,
it is the Office of the President that is in charge of internal
security. Our internal security sector is in a shambles. We are
needlessly losing lives and limbs.
Whether it is in
Nairobi or in the counties in the north, law and order is in a perilous
state. Death of innocent people and destruction and theft of their
properties are a common occurrence. The situation is desperate.
True,
the Jubilee Government has delivered on resources for the security
forces and has undertaken a massive recruitment to increase the boots on
the ground. But the security situation in many parts of the country,
instead of improving, has worsened.
And there is a
zero chance of any meaningful improvement in the near future unless the
President truly appreciates what is ailing the sector and takes a
decisive action.
The internal security sector has two
crippling challenges. These two problems are the fundamentals or core
factors that inform the symptoms of the security paralysis we are
seeing.
The internal security sector lacks a strong
and competent leadership fit for the offices. Individuals who simply
don’t have the minimum competence and capabilities to deliver for
Kenyans occupy offices that are crucial in bringing meaningful change to
the sector.
Corruption at all levels is a daily
ritualistic practice. How can a country survive if criminals can buy
every office in the internal security sector at a nominal fee? How?
The
President and his Deputy must address the abject failures in internal
security. They cannot wish away the problems of insecurity.
Law and order are the first bricks to lay in the foundation of civilised states.
Senior Counsel Ahmednasir Abdullahi is the publisher, Nairobi Law Monthly: macalin91@gmail.com
Law and order are the first bricks to lay in the foundation of civilised states.
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