Opinion
An open letter to vice-chair Betty Murungi
Posted Saturday, August 8 2009 at 15:39
They say a picture is worth a thousand words. That’s why I have decided to write this open letter because your name, Ms Betty Kaari Murungi, is synonymous with human rights and civil society in Kenya.
I cannot but critically analyse the picture of the swearing-in ceremony now that you have “eaten” the kithitu – taken the oath – to be vice-chair of the truth commission ceremony. Madam, I want to bring that historic picture into sharp focus so that we can reflect on its moral, political and even legal implications.
But let me state the bottom line upfront – I find it impossible to explain your presence in the company of the three most important men in that picture.
Let’s start with Chief Justice Evan Gicheru, the man who swore you in. I need not remind you that Mr Gicheru swore in Mr Mwai Kibaki at night, an act that triggered violence and brought Kenya to the brink of collapse last year.
As the head of the judiciary – the guardian of legality – Chief Justice Gicheru was duty-bound to act with caution until the electoral dispute had been resolved.
In my view, he abused his office by acting in a partisan political manner. Mr Gicheru has lost the confidence of the bar and the public because of his failure to reform the judiciary and uphold the rule of law.
Politically, you are answerable to Mr Mutula Kilonzo, the Justice minister, who is the other important man in the picture. No one doubts that Mr Kilonzo is both a brilliant and even clever lawyer. But that is beside the point.
It is his political history that is relevant to his oversight of the TJRC. Mr Kilonzo was a long-time lawyer for Mr Daniel arap Moi, who ruled Kenya with a heavy hand for 24 years.
I am sure you remember Mr Kilonzo as a rabid defender of the Kanu-Moi regime at the height of its repression. In fact, Mr Kilonzo was a vocal opponent of the Task Force on the Establishment of a Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission which I chaired in 2003. Don’t you find it ironic that he has now taken charge of the TJRC?
Then there is Ambassador Bethuel Kiplagat, your chairman, and the last important man in the picture. The man has a long and storeyed career. He was a central figure during the Moi reign when most of the atrocities you will investigate were committed.
This is the most ominous cloud that hangs over his head. The second is that he may be called to testify before his own truth commission on the grisly murder in February 1990 of Dr Robert Ouko, Kenya’s minister for Foreign Affairs under whom he served as Permanent Secretary.
These are not trivial matters. Can a person who was such an integral part of a brutal and repressive system – and vigorously defended the Kanu regime at its zenith – be a credible steward of excavating the sordid past? Madam, I am not saying that the TJRC should be led by a living saint. Such people only exist in religious texts.
But the chair should be someone who has had nothing to do with a government in which most of the atrocities that the TJRC will investigate were committed. You perfectly fit this bill yourself, and would make the most credible chair of the truth commission.
So I must ask: why do you think President Kibaki did not pick you to lead the TJRC? Is the answer not obvious? You would have nothing to hide, cover up, or protect because your hands are clean.
In fact, your family was a target of the repression that the TJRC would investigate. I would be damned if President Kibaki would have appointed an internationally acclaimed human rights advocate like you to head the truth commission.
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Submitted by mzaPosted August 09, 2009 06:21 PM
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Submitted by jasiri
Ai! mwanoo1, is fighting from within just a cliche' to you or d'u understand its dynamics. One can only fight from within when those around r breaking the pillars that support a structure. this r defective structures, u can only fight from out, build relevant autonomous structures then move in to establish them! by the way, who is witness 2 ur courage even as u call others cowards. time will tell.
Posted August 09, 2009 04:06 PM -
Submitted by estom
Ms. Murungi deserves to be congratulated for going where the problems is. She is hundred times more useful than some hyped professors who pontificate from western countries. Prof. Mutua once wrote that Kibaki's greatest failure was that he had not formed a truth commission; now that there is one, Mutua wont consider it credible unless he heads it himself.
Posted August 09, 2009 12:09 PM -
Submitted by Obwakemwatugul
The whole leadership in Kenya has served in the Moi regime including those who appointed Kiplagat. Target the Kibaki adminstration since Kiplagat did not offer himself for the Job. The right way to look at the Chair is that he was in the regime and he could be having full know how of what happened which is positive. Professor your articles have a hidden agenda, and I think you are transitting into a champion of Anti-Kalenjin Movement in Kenya. This can't work, like many people think of you, Kiplagat is an international peace maker.
Posted August 09, 2009 10:16 AM -
Submitted by mutuwa123
It is indeed sad that such a lady can allow herself to be used so obviously. What is it, is it the paycheck or what that takes the best of the very best and corrupts them to the point they do not care what we think of them anymore? Raila joined Kanu, Koigi became Kibaki's cheerleader, Orengo became Raila's youthwinger, Martha Karua God bless her soul, was foaming in the mouth in Kibaki's defence...and so many others the list goes on. What drives these beautiful people to demean themselves after building National reputations?
Posted August 09, 2009 06:24 AM




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Mutua, you were appointed by the same Kibaki in 2003 to chair the task force on the establishment of TJRC. Why didn't you turn down the offer? Could you please tell us how much were you paid and what tangible benefit you achieved for us, the tax payers? Those who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones!