Now look what we’ve done, we Kenyans. Just look at us. It is a bloody disgrace—no, I’m not swearing, I am offering a precise description of the situation on the ground. Bloody and Disgraceful. We are now calling for our International mummies and daddies to come and save us, because we cannot understand how it is that we are laying waste to all we hold dear, and we are still tut-tutting and clucking and wringing our hands while our country burns. Much worse, we have decided that the only two people who can save us are the precise two men whose overweening ambition and horror of unemployment have led us to this despicable pass.
Let us at least have the courage of our venality; let us look at ourselves squarely in the face and say “we screwed up big time, and we knew it all along, we did it knowingly and now we have to suck it up and deal with the results of our mistakes.” Let’s get a grip, guys. We really cannot go on much longer with these protestations of horrified incomprehension when all along bloggers, intellectuals, human rights activists and my next-door-neighbour’s little girl have all been warning us of the dangers of ethnic fundamentalism. The warning signs have been there—we have allowed our own dialogues to become replete with snide sub-texts and codes: we have become expert at fingering Luos, Kambas and Kikuyus with phrases and allusions calculated to inflame. It really doesn’t help us at all at this time to resort to coy references to violence “against members of a certain community” when we all know for a fact – take a deep breath and say it out loud – that Kikuyus are being killed and attempts being made to ethnically cleanse them out of areas across the country because of the perception that they are responsible for election results which in charitable moments can only be called exceedingly dodgy. Let’s just say it right out.
Kikuyus are being killed and are facing danger of yet more violence, because the rest of the country thinks that the people of Central Province will not only not vote for anyone who isn’t one of ‘them,’ but will also under no circumstances respect the rights of others to so vote for someone else. Young people are incensed and have been rendered violently irrational by the failure of their leaders and elders to consider the collective good as opposed to their bank balances. These young people are enraged, and so am I, that the people of this country count for so little that the greed of a few can negate the desire of the many. We have interethnic face-offs in Nairobi and bullet-ridden bodies in Kisumu; churches have been burned out with people in them in Eldoret.
I am travelling across the country with a driver whose name begins with an “O” and because we are deep in PNU country, I am systematically torturing myself with thoughts of what would happen to him if ‘my’ people decided to retaliate for acts of violence against them in the rest of the country. How is it that there is such a space in my imagination, in my country, after I saw with my own two sceptical eyes last Thursday the enormous patience and trust that the people of Kenya were willing to invest in the democratic process? I was there myself, going from polling station to polling station, to record this moment, this ridiculously awesome expression of the popular will. I saw them: the grandmothers and the dreadlocked young men, the mothers with children strapped to their backs, the guy in the wheelchair, the wide-eyed schoolkids watching their elder brothers and sisters exercise their constitutional rights. I saw them, and rejoiced. I was crafting judiciously preening sentences about our organic democratic traditions when the Electoral Commission of Kenya stumbled, slid and fell all the way into its own private Idaho—and left us with a hydra-headed mess.
In the past ten days, I have passed through Nakuru and Naivasha and Eldoret and Eldama Ravine, I have been to El Molo and Burguret and Chavakali; I’ve probably travelled in five of our eight provinces, and experienced a good 25% of the road surface of Kenya—isn’t it strange how certain numbers take on a potency known only to Kenyans? I have been watching the television and listening to an interesting cross-section of our leaders and opinion makers: we all seem to think that unless Raila and Kibaki get together and make nice, the rest of us are doomed to go on senselessly butchering each other without fear or favour, no scratch that: with ultimate fear and delicately nuanced favour. Somewhere along the lines of: you-must-have-voted-for-the-person-I-did-not-want-to-win-so-die.
It bears repeating that biased preference is the essence of democratic right—you can vote for whoever you want to vote for, even if the cumulative effect of this democratic right in Central Province looked somewhat like the hypnotised members of a cult were voting for their messiah; nevertheless, you should be allowed to do that and live to regret it at leisure. This is democracy: we’re allowed to be myopic and fearful like that, as long as we do it democratically and peacefully. What is of more immediate concern here are the numbers of extremely angry and disenfranchised young men who are even now desperately foreshortening their own futures and possibilities by plunging themselves into bloodletting and unspeakable criminality.
How have we produced this population of Kenyans so estranged, so alienated from a sense of collective hope and a progressive trajectory that they are willing to burn to the ground this national edifice we call our home? I begin to suspect that it might have something to do with the ways in which we treat our people as if they are disposable nappies....first we crap all over them and then we throw them away. Or, first we work them up with visions and dreams of a utopia denied them only by the holding of office by the ‘the other side’ then we slyly make insinuations of how much easier life would be without ‘them’ and then we give them a little nudge and say “oh look, there goes one of them now. And who left this panga lying about in the open like that, all nice and shiny and sharp?”
And then we exclaim in shocked horror: oh goodness, me! However could this have happened? Oh please, please, well, gracious me, whatever shall we do?
On the other hand, whatever can Kikuyus think we are about, saying complacently that “we” won the election when even Europeans who can count are quite able to figure out the implications of votes which add up to fifty thousand and are transmuted into seventy thousand by some mysterious Kikuyu alchemy? It boggles the mind, the sheer bare-faced effrontery of fraud meant to thwart the popular will and carried out in naked defiance of international observers and Kenyan media. We may not have universal education yet, but a good number of Kenyans can count for themselves with a fair degree of confidence in their own tallies. What on earth do the people of Central Province mean, dancing about in the streets like that with joy, when it is evident to anyone who believes in this country that uchawi numbers are self-evidently not a cause for celebration? There’s hubris, and then there’s Central Province. I am fairly sure that it didn’t help matters. No one has won here, folks. We are all our own victims and our own oppressors—and some of us are guiltier than others.
The drunken man in a bar in a PNU stronghold who leeringly raised his glass to me in celebration of the government being “ours as usual” should, as he nurses the inevitable (and I hope excruciating) hang-over, ingest with his Panadol the human costs of maintaining the feudal principality of Kikuyustan--especially when other people would rather live in Kenya. Where does he think he will flee to, when the flames of discontent spread, as they inevitably will unless we come to our senses? Amongst the many things that should stop the down-swing of that upraised panga is the fact that our neighbours in the region are deeply inconvenienced by our violent naval-gazing proclivities. It will probably serve us right to be in the position of receiving humanitarian assistance from countries we have regarded with pitying superiority up to now. Perhaps we will then understand that refugees are not lazy people on the dole; they are innocents trying to save their own lives. The measure of our neighbourliness is about to be put to the test as Kenyans attempt to escape our home-grown stupidity by running across the Ugandan border. It is to be hoped that our generosity towards our neighbours has in the past been of an order sufficient to compel them to look compassionately on our compatriots. Perish the thought—Kenyan refugees and internally displaced persons of a magnitude sufficient to necessitate Red Cross concerns of a humanitarian crisis in the unfolding.
Enough. If we are to sink with the ship, let us at least not pretend that all along we thought it was only a spring shower that was brewing, and not a furious tempest. Self-truth is a good platform to stand on and from which to survey this mess and decide what to do next. Enough pretence.We cannot bleat on endlessly about the wonders of our economic growth when most Kenyans have yet to see the evidence of such growth. We cannot leave people out in the cold whilst we luxuriate in the warmth of our riches and then, to add further insult, disingenuously ask them why they don’t come into the light of the fire when we know we’ve barred all the possible means of access beforehand. We cannot solicit and accept people’s trust and their goodwill and then expend this capital in ways unworthy of ourselves. We, above all, cannot disclaim responsibility for our own careless rhetoric and propensity for exploiting base fears and misperceptions by our current shocked protestations of incredulity. We did this—let us fix it. All of us: not just those two job-seekers who seem to care much more for their careers than for the people of their country. Let us fix this mess—each of us, with whatever means of communication, persuasion and rationality that we can muster. Let us stop this senseless tragedy now. Speak out and say: Enough.
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28 comments:
WM, I havent read your post yet, just wanted to say Hi and wish you a happy new year. Later.
U well?
Guessaurus
WM:
What an astounding piece of writing. Wow. I think this should be published everywhere.
Thank you.
-Silaha
BRAVO
This is my first time to your blog, a commenter on kenyan pundit recommended this piece.
Very well written and very truthfully spoken. Great call/challenge to each of us to own up to how we've contributed to this mess. We are all responsible and you are absolutely right only WE can fix this mess.
Very artriculately expressed. Many thanks. I hope more people read this and heed your words.
Excellent review. I wish we could publish this in the mainstream media! Every Kenyan needs to read this.
I like the way you ask each and everyone of us to take responsibility and not jut sit there saying we won or you stole!
Thank you for the sober analysis
I see you found your password.
I am, as you are.
Be safe--more later.
Keguro
To all--I'll write to you individually if I have your emails. To Mr. Opoti, you are welcome to republish this post and thank you for your comments. --W.M.
Deep post that conveys the message. Thank you WM
Well said, a shame that these 2 men will not listen to any voice of reason at all.
dearest,
take care of yourself, amidst it all.
yours under the banyan tree
I agree 100% with Osirisgod's comments above.
This is MUCH BIGGER than the alleged rigging - it is about the ethnic cleansing ODINGA'S supporters are seeking against Kikuyus. Similar to what we saw when they burned down a church filled with innocent women and children amongst other crimes against humanity they have committed this past week.
So let's save the democratic talk for when we have wazungus (this means white people for those guests who don't speak swahili) around us. Kenyans know what to say to white people. But Kenyans know the real truth. We are Africans after all. This is why I'm glad Kibaki is president of Kenya.
This is a fantastic commentary. It's time for all Kenyans to take responsibility for the mess fellow Kenyans are facing. Kenya is bigger than the two fools, who don't deserve our support.
I am actually clinically depressed since 31st..
I am seething with rage that the arrogance of two men has plunged Kenya into a dark pit that from which we may never escape.
I am angry that Kibaki fiddles his thumbs while Kenyans are dying
I am horrified that Kenyans would hack each other to death on live TV..
I am literally crying for my country
WM,
It has been a week of internal madness as I try to make something of the anguish back home;I threw myself onto the endless wild wide web in search of signs of a dream, instead I met the rude reality of savagery; I scavanged through blogs for any signs of sanity, instead I found a vibrant commerce of blame, a perpetuation of tribal chauvinism and an imposing mediocity. And then I finally stumbled on Enough! Articulate. Lacking the old school ethnic spice that stoked the passions that have come to consume our Motherland. If only it could find it's way into the cold psyche of the Kibakis and Odingas of our world; if only it could penetrate the conscience of the heartless folks who are slitting throats of innocent Kenyans. If only...
Mark Evans Ondari
We all saw this
"I saw with my own two skeptical eyes last Thursday the enormous patience and trust that the people of Kenya were willing to invest in the democratic process? I was there myself, going from polling station to polling station, to record this moment, this ridiculously awesome expression of the popular will. I saw them: the grandmothers and the dreadlocked young men, the mothers with children strapped to their backs, the guy in the wheelchair, the wide-eyes schoolkids watching their elder brothers and sisters exercise their constitutional rights. I saw them, and rejoiced..."
we did, did we not, just to get this
"the sheer bare-faced effrontery of fraud meant to thwart the popular will and carried out in naked defiance of international observers and Kenyan media"
we were all sitting infront of the TV, with our mouths wide open, tears streaming down our eyes as
" Kikuyus think we are about, saying complacently that “we” won the election when even Europeans who can count are quite able to figure out the implications of votes which add up to fifty thousand and are transmuted into seventy thousand by some mysterious Kikuyu alchemy?"
and doing this "but What on earth do the people of Central Province mean, dancing about in the streets like that with joy" and this "The drunken man in a bar in a PNU stronghold who leeringly raised his glass to me in celebration of the government being “ours as usual”.." and this dancing about in the streets like that with joy
we are still siting in front of the the TV....
But we are still scratching our head wondering.... But is it Ok for all of us, to sit back, and declare the election free and fair right as this are the basis of democracy,
"It bears repeating that biased preference is the essence of democratic right—you can vote for whoever you want to vote for, even if the cumulative effect of this democratic right in Central Province looked somewhat like the hypnotised members of a cult were voting for their messiah; nevertheless, you should be allowed to do that and live to regret it at leisure."
Is this not the reason why we are still MAD, is this not the reason the blood letting will not cease. In conflict resolution, the parties involved should be willing to accept that there has been a mistake done and not pull out the victim cards.
stay safe as you travel
Folks, I don't think we are being very fair here in equally blaming the two leaders, Raila and Kibaki. I am not making excuses for Raila but if there is one thing I blame him for, it is not doing everything he can to stop the killing of Innocent Kenyans. Lets be objective here. Kibaki played a bigger role in creating this mess. It is well documented there were legitimate grievances being raised by the opposition. If this issues would have been addressed, the opposition agreed they would concede the elections. Why did he refuse to have this issues addressed? Kibaki just made Moi look like an angel.
Mr Mwai kibaki is right now hiding behind the security walls of the government of kenya, while the kenyans he lied to and deceived are furious with him, and feeling the backlash of his gluttonious grab for power. Just 5 years ago, many kenyans were very hopeful, that the union of mr kibaki and mr raila odinga which were enough to uproot moi, would be enough to put kenya on a path to industrial development, but that was just a dream. It has been said that raila and kibaki had a memorandum of understanding that would have allowed them to share power while kibaki remained president, but kibaki renegged on those promises and instead pushed for constitutional reforms that would have increased his powers while treating the mou with mr odinga as trash. Kenyans are very angry today, because they have been raped by the electoral process, and many kenyans have said they will never vote again. Do you blame them? Some very strange news has come to me today regarding the church burning in eldoret. . What is becoming apparent is that kenyans are very furious, and the ethnic differences have only exacerbated this wound.I have heard that kikuyus have essentially been driven out of the west of kenya and perhaps also from the coast. What has happened is fracture along ethnic lines because of corruption in kibaki. Odinga has called kibaki a thief and a liar. That is not far from the truth, as evidenced by kibaki's actions.
As an American who has been to your country, hugged its children, fallen in love with its heroes and heroines [unsung and unnamed], I weep with you. Kenyans, you are blessed with a rich country, many citizens willing and able to carry it forward to greatness. The few hooligans holding peace branches in the right hand, rocks in the left, will not destroy it. Neither will the political hooligans, who look much more dignified in their suits. We Americans are praying for you; rooting for you. You are not alone in this. Press on, blog-writers, freedom fighters and truth-tellers. We are with you.
Saturday Nation News paper
Why Kivuitu must be held accountable for poll chaos
Story by DONALD B. KIPKORIR
Publication Date: 1/5/2008
About 5.30pm on December 30, Electoral Commission chairman Samuel Kivuitu and two other commissioners huddled in a tiny room and, exclusively through state-funded Kenya Broadcasting Corporation, announced President Kibaki re-elected. Within an hour, the President was sworn in at State House at a function in which the national anthem was not played and in the absence of the diplomatic corps. Then the country was thrown into chaos.
In the fullness of time, history will apportion culpability over the current anarchy. At the moment, however, Mr Kivuitu should take full responsibility. But as he tries to run away from this responsibility to blame the chaos on pressure from PNU and ODM Kenya, I wish to offer the correct legal position over the whole saga and how the country can wriggle out of it.
The Electoral Commission of Kenya (ECK) was created pursuant to Section 41 of the Constitution and thus has security of tenure and independence. Section 42A sets out its mandate to be mainly two-fold — the registration of voters and the maintenance of the voter register, as well as directing and supervising civic, parliamentary and presidential elections.
The National Assembly and Presidential Elections Act, Cap 7, and its subsidiary, the Presidential and Parliamentary Elections Regulations sets out the legal framework that enables the ECK to effectively and fully conduct elections. The election of political leaders is a key component of any nation state that claims to be a democracy. To be legitimate, the electoral process must not only be free and fair, but also be seen to be so.
The regulations clearly set out the road-map for conducting elections, voting, votes counting and tallying, announcing results and challenging the process.
Presidential, parliamentary and civic elections are conducted at the polling stations, which are so located that voters have access to them with the least inconvenience and such that the ECK and the Government provide the logistics, the materials and security. At the moment, there are nearly 27,000 polling stations.
Each station is headed by a presiding officer, assisted by poll clerks. On the polling day, voters are given specific times within which they may cast their votes in person and not by proxy. All through the entire voting process, candidates’ agents, the media and accredited observers have free and unlimited access to the polling centre to witness the voting.
At the close of voting, the presiding officer and his clerks, in the presence of the agents, the media and observers, proceed to count the votes. Once the counting begins, the law stipulates that it shall not stop until it is completed. The results are then announced at the polling stations. The presiding officer then makes three packets each separately holding valid, disputed and spoilt ballot papers.
The officer makes another three packets holding spoilt papers, marked copy register and counterfoils of used ballot papers. He also prepares a statement that summarises the voting at the polling station, which he signs. It is countersigned by all the agents present. The packets are sealed and the agents are free to affix their own seal. The two sets of packets, the statement and the ballot boxes are transmitted to the returning officer at the constituency level.
The returning officer, once he receives the packets and boxes from the polling stations, proceeds to tally the votes. This is done in the presence of the candidates’ agents and the media. Vote recounting is not gone into, except for those disputed, and the returning officer has discretion to confirm or vary the disputed ones only. He shall never change the valid or spoilt votes. He then proceeds to announce to all present the results of both the presidential and parliamentary votes.
The returning officer is obliged in law to then fill Forms 16, 16A and 17A, which set out the results and the votes cast for each presidential and parliamentary candidates. The statutory forms are signed by the officer and the candidates’ agents. The agents, the media and observers are allowed to make and keep copies of the three forms, which are then physically delivered to the ECK headquarters in Nairobi.
On receiving them the ECK gives all parliamentary and presidential candidates 24 hours to lodge complaints, if any, including demanding a recount or retallying. The ECK is obliged to, within 48 hours, allow the recount or retallying. All candidates and the ECK therefore have 72 hours to resolve any disputes. It is only after the period that the ECK can announce the winners of each of the 210 parliamentary seats and issue a certificate known as Form 17 to each elected MP and Form 18 to the elected president. The results are then gazetted.
With due respect to Mr Kivuitu, it was irregular, unlawful and void in law to announce the results on December 30 and swear in the President on the same day. The ECK boss announced the results when he did not have the original Forms 16, 16A and 17A from each constituency, refused to allow the 24-hour period for candidates to lodge complaints and declined to allow retallying.
He told the world that his returning officers had gone underground, and that he did not have powers to order retallying. On the day the results were being announced, Special Gazette Notice No. 12612 was issued declaring Mr Kibaki the president. Mr Kivuitu deliberately misled the world and subverted the law.
Section 5 of the Constitution states that the president shall be elected in accordance with the Constitution and the National Assembly and Presidential Elections Act, Cap 7. Non-compliance with the mandatory provisions vitiates the process.
In law, the fundamental principle is that a void process does not confer legitimacy. A public officer acting in compliance with the law must comply with the substantive, formal and procedural conditions laid down and at all times act in good faith and for the public good. As a repository of these constitutional and statutory powers and duties, Mr Kivuitu was obliged to be faithful to the process and not be influenced by external forces, as he has admitted.
By his infidelity to the law, he has failed the country and must undo the mistakes. Section 5 of the Constitution states that a president duly elected is the one who has the highest votes cast.
The ECK can invoke its powers under the Constitution to retally all valid Forms 16 and 16A and retract the results and announce the valid ones. The announcement of results on December 30 was a ministerial act that does not invalidate the ECK’s constitutional powers. The ECK can invoke its powers under the Constitution to retally all valid Forms 16 and 16A and retract the results and announce the valid ones. The announcement of results on December 30 was a ministerial act that does not invalidate the ECK’s constitutional powers.
The Constitution states that any other law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is void to the extent of inconsistency. Thus, Mr Kivuitu must take the high road, invoke the ECK’s constitutional mandate and review the forms and give Kenyans the president they elected, be it Mr Kibaki or ODM candidate Raila Odinga.
The tough stands taken by ODM and President Kibaki’s PNU are theatrics which will not help the country. Neither party has any constitutional mandate that is the ECK’s monopoly. If he allows the status quo to stay, Mr Kivuitu will one day be held to account for the bloodshed and property destroyed.
The country’s unity and future rest on his shoulders, and he cannot pass the buck.
Mr Kipkorir is an advocate of the High Court.
The Constitution states that any other law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is void to the extent of inconsistency. Thus, Mr Kivuitu must take the high road, invoke the ECK’s constitutional mandate and review the forms and give Kenyans the president they elected, be it Mr Kibaki or ODM candidate Raila Odinga.
The tough stands taken by ODM and President Kibaki’s PNU are theatrics which will not help the country. Neither party has any constitutional mandate that is the ECK’s monopoly. If he allows the status quo to stay, Mr Kivuitu will one day be held to account for the bloodshed and property destroyed.
The country’s unity and future rest on his shoulders, and he cannot pass the buck.
Mr Kipkorir is an advocate of the High Court.
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=39&newsid=113952
Yani!, Have my baby. I probably could have put it better, but i have to admit it would take me sometime to frame the issues as consisely as you have.
I agree with you, that the thing people don't get is we are all responsible. everyone of us. Much as we point fingers and blame it on the ECK, Raila and Kibaki, Luos, Kikuyus etc we too are responsible - and suprisingly even more responsible than we'd care to beleive - for all the mgrrh..mgrrh.. 'crap' that's going on. Yes, we bare more blame individually than the leaders who stand accused do. if i was to persecute anyone, i would persecute myself. I am responsible as a kenyan.
Problem is, our own characters defeat us and blind us to the extent that it would take a life coach to get us to see how much and to what depths we are actually responsible. It is my fault, yours, and that of the 30 million Kenyan's within our beloved country. Until the day each kenyan is ready to accept - without blame except to ourselves - 100% responsibility for what's happened in the last week or so, we'll forever wrestle with finding the elusive 'root cause' of what just happened.
WM, you have taken this right out of my heart, and put it down in a way I couldn't ever have.
Oh Lord, that we may all see the truth in these words!!
Thanks for this! I wonder though - as thought provoking your piece is - I feel we're preaching to the choir. What a dream it would be to get the attention of all politicians to read this piece and feel the pain, suffering, disappointment of all disillusioned Kenyans. We Pray for Peace!
If you want to know your worst enemy, look in the mirror......WM thank you for this post.
I found your post published in "Sueddeutsche Zeitung", one of our country's good newspapers. Even translated into german language its message is strong and impressive. Thanks for writing and good luck.
WM: incisive commentary as usual. Hope you stay safe.
love,
ps
Everyday we wake up and still can't believe this is the Kenya we know. Whatever became of us? When did we become such beasts? The democratic process in Kenya has been raped and all must take responsibility for it. We have gone so far back as a nation that it is hard to see how and when we will recover from all this. Our politicians should never be allowed to hold us ransom again.
We fought for what they called a second liberation and now they have chosen to yank it away because it suits their selfish interests. That is unacceptable. Rigging of elections should have been a thing of the distant past. While this should be addressed it seems pretty immaterial while people are dying because they are Kikuyus. The same people who fought so hard for to remove Moi and give Kenyans "true democracy" are the same people who are fighting tooth and nail to legitimize the worst of the Moi traits today. Our leaders have taken democracy and personalized so as to apply it when it suits their needs. That not withstanding, why are we turning on each other. We cannot blame wananchi for exercising their democratic rights. They DO NOT deserve to die because they are Kikuyuys. At the end of the day, none of us can change our tribe, but we can change our perception of each other. They have been our brothers and sisters and neigbours and friends for decades, now they are the enemy????
The hate messages being sent around via sms are appalling. Those who sit and compose them are the lowest beings in society. As level headed Kenyans, we should not encourage the spread of this cancer called tribalism. It is already eating away at the core of the society and we must stop it before it finishes us. Poor politics killed Rwanda. We shouldn't allow our politicians to take us down the same road.
The way I see things, the only way this problem can be solved is if Kibaki and Raila came to some agreement. The arrogance of their lieutenants is what is crippling any chance of peace. This not a time for arrogance and playing the blame game. It is time for them to stand up as "leaders" and take responsibility for what is tearing this country apart. Serious crimes against humanity are being committed and certain issues need to be addressed. Stop telling us about the court process. Tell us how we can achieve the peace we have always enjoyed. Stop telling us about the looting because Kenyans have taken their queue from the politicians. They have looted our democracy by infringing on our democratic space.They are ALL responsible for the mess Kenya is in right now and so are we.
I don’t know that Kibaki and Raila are the only hope that Kenya has left. When they could have done something, anything really, they did not and so I am not holding my breathe waiting for them to rescue us and heal our land.
I do know this though, that it is NOT Kibaki and it is NOT Raila bloodthirstily lying in wait for innocent people, to kill and to rape. It is not them picking up machetes and all manner of weapons to kill the next guy and it is not them burning their neighbour’s houses down just because they are of one tribe or the other. They are not raping women and children, sodomizing men or murdering them in their sleep and they are not hatching revenge plots on nani who lives three doors down because his accent has suddenly become distasteful.
The longer we look to these two clowns to save us, the longer we’ll take to pick ourselves up. And, the sooner we realize that we are actually doing this to ourselves with no thought to tomorrow, no thought to our children, no single thought spared for what we’ll do when we have not enough food left, no ounce of dignity and nothing except our stupid pride and unfounded hatred for each other to go on. We think nothing of these things. We think nothing of what will happen to us and our country, when our strength is spent and we are left to stare at the debris left over from our blood letting.
Polarized, hatred, blame, resentment and suspicion filled. That is what we reduced ourselves to. We make snide remarks at each other, blame this or the other camp, pledge our allegiances to these little gods we have created for ourselves, gods who couldn’t care less if we turned cannibalistic and hacked each other for dinner. Seriously, are we so dense that we don’t see that this is beyond elections, beyond the two dwarfs that we have placed on a pedestal so high they now believe themselves godlike?
I am not sorry I voted. It was my duty and I did it, whole heartedly. I am sorry that this is who we are, who we have become and I am sorry that we are still too wrapped up in ourselves to see our part in it all. We have all lost. We have lost our innocence and our dignity. We have lost trust in each other and in ourselves. In the place of neighbours are the oppressors who come to you in the night. But, amid all this, I am still hopeful that we’ll wake up from our slumber and not only stop the killing but critically look at ourselves and then address the things that triggered all this so that it never happens again.
ENOUGH!
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