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Will the PSC compromise jump-start national healing?

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By MUTAHI NGUNYI
Posted  Saturday, January 23  2010 at  13:52

In Summary

  • In reaching a deal, team has exposed the two principals as the main problem

This week I feel optimistic. I expected the PSC to end in disarray. And I said so last week. Well, I was wrong; damn wrong. Now I am intellectually embarrassed. Not by what they have achieved. No.

But by assuming that MPs are generally “sick”. That they suffer from “collective ignorance”. And this is why I call them the “cream of the crap!”

But, on account of this PSC, I withdraw the unkind descriptions. Not completely though; but for now.

I am compelled by three things. One, this PSC has begun the process of national healing. They were not supposed to, but they have. I will return to this thought in a bit.

Two, by cutting a deal without the supervision of foreigners, they make us proud. In fact, they make the “Annan types” irrelevant. And this is why we must send a quick telegram to President Obama.

The message to our Kogelo brother should be simple: “Back off!” Our fathers, through an act of God, sent him to lead Americans. He should lead Americans.

Back at home, we have our leaders. They are woolly, alright. But they are still ours. We will not allow him to lecture President Kibaki and the Right Honourable Raila Odinga on constitutional matters. No way.

Three, and to flip the “Obama attack”, the PSC has exposed a dark secret. Not intentionally, but by default. In agreeing, they have exposed the two principals as the problem. They have also confirmed that we are not a nation of mad people.

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Our “national madness” is caused by two Kenyans: One Emilio Stanley Mwai Kibaki and one Raila Amolo Odinga. Period! Remove them from the equation, we are a sober nation.

Leave us to their “cat fights”, we are doomed. But there is a rider to the PSC success. Incidentally, PSC is dominated by young politicians. Even Charity Ngilu is young enough to be President Kibaki’s daughter. Seriously!

To the contrary, President Kibaki and his buddy, Mr Odinga, are political dinosaurs. Come 2012, Mr Odinga will be going 70. In sum, they are “using an old map to take us to new lands”.

My point? Maybe national reconciliation will be driven by the younger generation. And, by default, this generation is driving the PSC.

They must, therefore, not tire. In doing so, they must be guided by the following thoughts from a wise man: “If you do good, people will accuse you of selfish motives. Do good anyway. If you succeed, you will win false friends and true enemies. Succeed anyway. The good you do today will be forgotten tomorrow. Do good anyway. The biggest people with the biggest ideas can be shot down by the smallest people with the smallest minds. Think big anyway. People favour underdogs, but follow only the top dogs. Fight for the underdogs anyway. What you spend years building may be destroyed overnight. Build anyway.”

And now some thoughts on their deal. Whatever they give us must be better than what we have. The question, however, is this; is it? I have my doubts. It looks like the “more things change, the more they remain the same”.

What we have is the same constitution with a few flowery changes. Here are my reasons. First and foremost, they have re-invented the imperial presidency. No. They have entrenched it. Instead of choosing a Cabinet from our representatives, he will choose it from his non-elected “buddies”.

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Add a comment (34 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by TheRightWinger

    Spot on, Mr Ngunyi. Cynicism is the way to go: at independence, we were told colonialism was our problem, in the '90s, it was single party rule, after multi partyism, we were told it was the constitution. But our lot has gotten worse! The truth is, even with a new katiba, little will change. Constitutions never built nations, nations do make constitutions.

    Posted  January 25, 2010 03:56 PM  
  2. Submitted by PsonofK

    An interesting perspective indeed. Why however do we approach ethnicity as an absolute fact? Will it always be a factor in politics? Do we honestly believe that we will always look at things through the lens of tribe? That view is untrue in my opinion and limits our potential.

    Posted  January 25, 2010 02:57 PM  
  3. Submitted by wanja2003

    Am glad obama and Annan are putting pressure on this people..the rwandan genocide would not have happened if someone was bold enough to step in. Kenya was going down hill fast. I favor the presidential system with appropriate checks and balances. 2centers of power will only create more confusion..by the way, i can't wait for this old guys to leave...

    Posted  January 25, 2010 02:46 PM  
  4. Submitted by vgogero

    Let us emulate the Ghanaian model since Ghana is an African success story and a role model .We can try and copy a few lessons from them Now that the PSC has opted for pure Presidential system

    Posted  January 25, 2010 01:22 PM  
  5. Submitted by kimeli75

    But why create more parliamentary seats when the current figure is almost crushing Kenyans down their knees

    Posted  January 25, 2010 01:10 PM  

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