Give Kenyans things digital, and they will make a feast. M-Pesa
was taken up with such zeal, nearly half of all mobile money
transactions take place in Kenya. Until other Africans caught on,
Kenyans were the second most active users of Twitter in Africa.
They
have slid in the rankings, but probably remain the most vocal. One of
the little-appreciated but very good things with this
living-life-out-in-the-digital world is that a nation’s social media use
is a free opinion poll about what it thinks and where its body is.
Following
Kenyans on Twitter, or #KOT as they are more popularly known, the last
year has been very different. On the whole, after the 2013 election,
#KOT have, actually, become less angry. However, they have become more
divided.
Looking back, the country’s best social media
moment should have been its worst. Kenya hit the bottom of the pit after
the 2008 post-election violence (PEV) in which more than 1,300 people
were killed.
Two things, however, happened. One, the
PEV also unleashed the most intense soul-searching the country had ever
gone through in recent years and many people emerged from it with their
heads in the right place.
It also produced an imperfect
marriage, in the coalition government between former President Mwai
Kibaki and former Prime Minister Raila Odinga. Many people did not like
the coalition because it bickered too much, but those were the
appearances. In reality, in terms of things like infrastructure, the
coalition broke records in delivering.
'MKATE NUSU'
Also,
the Raila side of the government always complained about being treated
badly and being given crumbs as the Kibaki camp dined on the bread. But
that, too, was rhetoric. As any child whose mother bakes (or any man
whose partner does the same) knows, the cake is overrated. Most times
the crumbs taste better than the cake.
The problem
with the crumbs is that they are never enough, but no one should ever
say they are not delicious. In any event, that dysfunctional
Kibaki-Raila setup achieved two other things. First, it manufactured a
sufficient level of elite consensus for Kenya to easily pass a fairly
progressive constitution in 2010.
Secondly, it
considerably deradicalised electoral politics, with the result that
though the 2013 vote seemed to have been bungled more than the December
2007 one that resulted in violence, it ended up in the court, not on the
streets being settled with machetes and crossbars.
The
last three years of Kibaki were also the glory years of #KOT. Not so
much in its fun moments, but in rallying as a country to take on the
world. That was the heyday of the #SomeoneTellNigeria,
#SomeoneTellBotswana hashtags, in which Kenyans on Twitter buried their
differences and took down other countries in digital brawls.
It
is instructive that for nearly two years now, there has not been any
significant #SomeoneTell…campaign. There was a big come-together moment
after the September 2013 attack on the Westgate mall by the Al-Shabaab
militants, but as the siege ended, the recriminations started. The Kenya
Defence Forces were denounced for allegedly looting the mall.
STATE FAILURE
The
government was assailed for sleeping on the job. A trenchant narrative
about State failure took hold, and an equally boisterous and outspoken
narrative in defence of the State emerged. The middle ground collapsed.
Thus,
during the terrorist attacks in Mandera at the end of 2014, and more
recently at Garissa University College in which 148 Kenyans died, this
divide and a level of indifference persisted. It was significant, for
example, that barely two days after the attack, the English Premier
League, and a big-bottom contest somewhere in Nakuru or those parts,
were trending over the Garissa attack.
Kenya is not
alone. In most of Africa, one observes this same listlessness. One way
to read it is that there is a hunger for new big ideas that allow people
to rise above the parochialism of their national politics and the
dreariness of their daily lives. The new constitutions have been written
and passed. The M-Pesas have been developed.
The
terrorists have become a permanent fixture of life, and America is not
going to elect a black man in the next election. Everywhere you look in
Africa, people want to climb out of their holes. However, either they do
not know how — or do not have someone to dig them out.
The author is editor of Mail & Guardian Africa. Twitter@cobbo
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