News
Stark contrast between US and Kenya fetes
The presidential motorcade approaches Capitol Hill during the inauguration ceremony of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States, in Washington. PHOTO/ REUTERS
Posted Tuesday, January 20 2009 at 21:21
In Summary
- Obama took office 78 days after the polls while Kibaki was sworn in soon after the results
As Kenyans joined millions across the world to witness the historic swearing in of Barack Obama on Tuesday, they must have been struck by the stark contrasts between the Washington DC ceremony and similar events at home.
Mr Obama took office 78 days after winning the presidency in a ceremony witnessed by one of the largest crowds in America’s history.
Hundreds of thousands of people converged on Washington DC — in buses, trains and planes — from across the world to celebrate Obama’s inauguration.
Inaugural parade
After the oath, they watched the new president and his family ride in an inaugural parade along Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House.
After that, outgoing President George W. Bush — rated the most unpopular leader in American history — was escorted in a military plane to his home in Texas.
The organising committee threw 10 inaugural balls after the swearing-in.
Despite having been elected in November last year, Mr Obama rode into Washington on Saturday in a 10-car train retracing the route President Abraham Lincoln — his idol — took to the capital before he assumed the presidency in 1861.
Many other presidents had similar ideas for their arrivals in Washington. Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt came slowly by train while Bill Clinton took a bus from Thomas Jefferson’s home outside Charlottesville.
Obama’s presidency presents a sense of hope and renewal for thousands of Americans who flocked Washington DC for the event.
Someone great
“He gave us something different to look forward to. I want my daughter to have a sense of feeling that even though people struggle, there is always a chance that you could be someone great,” said mother of two Donna Allen in Washington DC.
Former Nation political editor Emman Omari compares the excitement generated by Obama’s feat to the enthusiasm with which Kenyans welcomed Daniel Moi’s presidency in 1978 after Jomo Kenyatta’s as well as Mwai Kibaki’s 2002 election.
“Kenyans had a lot of faith in Moi’s presidency. It was a relief as it marked the end of what many perceived as the political dominance of a small clique of people,” he said.
Like Obama’s election, President Kibaki’s 2002 win was a milestone; the end of the Kanu dictatorship and dawn of optimism for thousands of jubilant Kenyans who thronged Uhuru Park to witness what they thought was the break of a new beginning. It was not to be.
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Submitted by tmamondePosted January 23, 2009 01:25 AM
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Submitted by Viann
Stolen elections? why is that still an issue while those who were aggrieved are now in power and seriously - not helping! Besides Kriegler would beg to differ with the lot of you. Besides, when are we going to have a 'bail-out' plan, for the IDPs the starving and for our tribal thinking?
Posted January 23, 2009 12:23 AM -
Submitted by wilsonoketdh
Grand coalition did nothing to root out corruption. If anything they have plunged us deep into corruption with the help of their friends PNU. Grand Coalition has turned out to be grand theft. Kenya was once a democracy and everyone wanted to have democracy like Kenya. Kenya still has a chance to turn things around
Posted January 22, 2009 11:21 PM -
Submitted by Daniel08
Your prime minister is been implicated in an oil scam involving his family; his constituents have clustered in one of the biggest slams in the world dying in poverty and in his long career in politics has done nothing about it. Some PNU thugs have looted already (eg saitoti) and the other are quickly doing it jointly with PNU. It is sad that we are so easily be fooled by this gang into cheap politics whilst they loot Kenya dry. This is the money that will fund violence come the next election.
Posted January 22, 2009 07:09 PM -
Submitted by mulosh
If anyone here is still talking about who won in 2007, you are MISSING the point, the better question is would have made a difference? ODM is busy selling maize and PNU oil, and you are still talking about who won! the answer is simple: a fellowship of conmen and charlatans!
Posted January 22, 2009 06:11 PM




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Thank you Nation Group for this space where "Kenyans" at home and in the Diaspora converge on important issues. Back to school commentators before this peice. Avoid the narrow interpretation (by many of you) of the word compare. To compare is to examine two or more ideas, persons, ideas, etc with an object of noting similarities and differences. Now, the word Contrast is to compare in order to show differences and note the opposing attributes of the subjects in question. Be good , walk good. Tom Mboya Amonde here