About Edari

Retired Professor Department of Sociology and Urban Studies University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee

Kenya Elections 2022: Mzee Kenyatta’s Curse Continues to Dog Kenya

Mzee Kenyatta vs. Jaramogi Odinga

In his fight with Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Mzee Kenyatta resorted to demanding an oath of allegiance that the “Flag of Kenya Shall Not Leave the House of Mumbi”. Mumbi is the mythical ancestor of the Kikuyu clans. Mzee Kenyatta went further than that in his reference to the Luo people as “kihii”—a term that is equivalent to “juvenile”, applied to an uncircumcised youth. Traditionally while the Kikuyu’s rites of passage required circumcision, Luo practiced the procedure of knocking six lower front teeth to mark the transition to adulthood. The Luo people stopped this practice years ago. In fact a disproportionate number of Kenyan doctors today is made up of Luo physicians and they know better than anyone the African cultural “idiocy” of many of these practices, including “female circumcision” that many African tribes of Kenya practice.

Mzee Kenyatta used the brilliant Luo son of the soil Tom Mboya to marginalize and eliminate what he considered as the “menace” of Jaramogi Odinga in Kenyan politics. He succeeded in doing that. After that, many expected Tom Mboya to assume the mantle of leadership after Mzee Kenyatta’s reign. But Tom Mboya was shot to death in broad daylight on a busy street in Nairobi.

In the course of time, Mzee Kenyatta formed a strong alliance with Daniel arap Moi who had the allegiance of the huge voting block of the Kalenjin in the Rift Valley.

After Kenyatta’s demise, Moi took over and promised to follow the footsteps of Mzee Kenyatta. He coined the term of “Nyayo” to legitimize his trajectory to power. Moi was ruthless. He left the suppression of dissidents to henchmen like Amos Biwott, the most feared man in Kenya for many years. During the reign of Moi, another prominent Luo leader, Robert Ouko, the Foreign Minister in Moi’s government, was brutally murdered in a most gruesome manner.

Kenya became a “one party” repressive state until the advent of multi-parties born out of the struggle by prominent Kenyans across the tribal divide. The current era of multi-parties has seen the recreation of the voting block of “Mount” Kenya tribes and Kalenjin tribes—a two tribes political formation that simply co-opted the support of other major tribes, particularly the Luhya and Kamba. The long time nemesis of the “two headed political monster” in Kenya has always been the Luo! That was so during Mzee Kenyatta’s time and remains so, today after what we have seen in this election: 2022.

Uhuru Kenyatta and Raila Odinga and the Handshake

To the credit of these two “political youngsters”, they tried to break the “curse” laid by Uhuru’s father by bridging the political divide through a symbolic gesture of a handshake that became known as the “Bridging of the Bridges Initiative”.

The “Bridging of the Bridges Initiative” was never received well by Kikuyu and Kalenjin leaders and king makers. It threatened to rupture the “two-tribe hegemony” of the Kikuyu (Mt. Kenya) and the Kalenjin.

The Kenya General Elections of 2022 was a critical test of whether the country would move beyond the “traditional fault line” of a “two horse monopoly” of power represented by Ruto, one side, and the group that represented the new era of politics in Kenya: Raila Odinga and Martha Karua. The naming of William Ruto as the winner means that Kenya has sunk once again into the putrid politics of the past. There are many people in the Kikuyu/Mount Kenya communities who defied their “own” Uhuru Kenyatta and voted for Ruto. Even in Kiambu, the domicile of Kikuyu “royalty” saw the abandonment of Uhuru Kenyatta and support for William Ruto.

It is pointless to litigate the process of vote tallying, because the elephant in the room is the “primitive” political process that is used by ruthless leaders to capture state power and protecting the corrupt and looting government coffers.

MONKEYPOX AND AFRICA

When I woke up this morning I was reflecting upon the announcement by the World Health Organization about the outbreak of “monkeypox”. Like HIV/AIDS and Ebola, the infectious disease is once again being attributed to African countries, now labeled as “ENDEMIC COUNTRIES”.

Just consider this:

From Center for Disease Control (CDC)

“Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is defined as illness caused by a novel coronavirus called severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2; formerly called 2019-nCoV), which was first identified amid an outbreak of respiratory illness cases in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China.”

No one labeled China as an “endemic” country. So why does “endemic” and “non-endemic” labels being applied to some African countries?

“Endemic” in English language implies: indigenous to, original to, natural to, etc, you get the meaning.

The stench of RACISM IN MEDICINE is inescapable here. If you have credible evidence to attribute the origin of “monkeypox” to some African countries, simply focus your interventions on those countries without the additional baggage of introducing the “mark of the beast”, or the “original sin” of Biblical stories!

We know that in a number of African countries labeled as “endemic”–Nigeria, Cameroon, Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, several communities eat monkey and baboon meat. These “meats” are referred to as “bush meat”. Could the origin of “monkeypox” be traced to handling and consumption of such “meats”?

The Search For the Original Sin

At the height of the HIV/AIDS, monkeys that were infected were said to be the disease vectors (transmission mechanisms) that became the “bridge” to human infections with the deadly disease. This is the same logic that is being applied to “monkeypox”.

What the negative labels do is to complicate public health disease interventions by rendering millions of people as “suspects” in the infection of the “world at large”–Europe, in particular, where people from “endemic countries” will be subjected to intense scrutiny. Beyond what they are carrying in their luggage, WHAT ARE THEY CARRYING IN THEIR BODIES?

The Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) report is out and the “UnGodly” troop of “Nay Sayers” are on the retreat!

On the night of November 26, 2019 the BBI report was officially presented to Uhuru Kenyatta and Raila Odinga in State House, Nairobi. Kenyans found out that this initiative was truly a step forward, very much in the same vein as the “sacred” political history of the United States of America: a step in crafting a “more perfect Union”. Democracy is always an incremental process of moving forward through the dialectical process of the “union of opposites”. American democracy is the outcome of several critical events, ranging from the Civil War, World War I, Suffragettes (Women’s Movement), World War II, to the Civil Rights Movement spearheaded by Martin Luther King. By the same token in Kenya, we have had the Anti-Colonial movement led by Mzee Jomo Kenyatta, to the quest for democratization of political life after independence, led by Jaramogi Oginga Odinga (Not Yet Uhuru).

When Vice President Moi took over from Kenyatta, he followed the footsteps of Kenyatta (Nyayo politics) and perfected the art of absolute control of political power in a “one party” state. This triggered the struggle for multi-party democracy whose aim was to democratize the political space. The triumph of multi-party democratic struggle ushered in the emergence of the less “noisy” President Kibaki, an economist by training. It was in this period that Kenya enjoyed some measure of economic prosperity. Kibaki’s rein came to an end in 2012 and the subsequent two general elections, 2013 and 2017, once again ushered in ethnic violence, threatening the very existence of Kenya as a “nation”.

It was then that Uhuru Kenyatta and Raila came together in 2018 to explore ways in which the Kenyan democracy could be moved to a more “perfect union”. Kudos to these two sons of the soil, who happen to be the sons of the two principal players who kicked off the process of moving the country towards a more “perfect union”: Mzee Jomo Kenyatta and Jaramogi Oginga Odinga. Now the entire country will debate on the merits of the BBI and hopefully isolate critical ingredients in crafting a more “perfect union” in the present historical conjuncture.

Cut-Throat Elections and Pathways to Wealth for Elected Persons in Kenya and Africa in General

  1. Monthly salaries and fringe benefits that exceed millions of shillings per year
  2. Retirement packages that guarantee security of income for life
  3. Generating income through political favors to businesses, organizations, etc
  4. Generating income through memberships in strategic parliamentary committees
  5. Outright massive thefts and plundering of monies for projects etc
  6. An inside track to investment in businesses and other income-generating activities
  7. Income generated through either membership or protection of “cartels” (organized criminal groups), eg healthcare cartel, sugar cartel, coffee cartel, maize cartel, etc
  8. All these methods of amassing wealth requires a robust layer of protection of interests through legitimate as well as illegitimate armed groups and undercover agents.

Jazz: The African American Gift to the World and Genesis of Bango Music in Kenya

As much as “Hip Hop” tradition has become a global “standard” of rendering popular music, it is the “jazz tradition” that is the greatest gift of African Americans to the world, as far as I am concerned. It all started in the World War II years, when several of the African American “Big Bands” were sent to Europe and the Far East to entertain American and Allied troops. The impact was immediate, especially in view of the fact that African American virtuosos provided a robust antidote for the vicious form of racism that Fascism and Nazism represented. In 1950s some of us British colonial “subjects” in African countries like Kenya, were influenced by the same “bug” as we danced the “jitterbug” to the “big band” sounds played by African musicians. In Kenya, there was the “Mzungu” (white man), nicknamed “Bwana Kiko” (Mr. Pipe Smoking), who organized one of the first African jazz bands in Nairobi.

The Cuban Influence and Heritage

African “Big Bands” that were organized in the post World War II years, combined the Latin American jazz heritage of Cuba with the African American “big band” jazz tradition of the US to produce new music played by the Cuban Marimba Boys in Nairobi. It turns out that there was actually a Cuban Marimba band in Cuba! This is jazz heritage that formed the background of the Congolese music that became the standard for producing “popular music” in Africa–welcome to the world of Congolese music of OK Jazz and Franco! In the 1950s, Congolese rumba had an unmistakable influence of the Latin rumba. But over the years, very complex musical compositions have been developed by the Congolese global superstars such as Kofi Olomide, Fally Ipupa and Frerre Gola. The background musicians who play instruments like the guitars, saxophones and drums/percussions, are simply incredible. Unlike a “true jazz” stage, they are not afforded the space of showcasing their talents during live performances!

Coast Bands in Kenya

It was in Mombasa that some of the greatest bands in Kenya took root and with that came the popularization of the jazz “rumba” tradition of Cuba and South America. Bands were big time stuff with saxophones, trumpets, drums, guitars, bass, and several vocalists. ECO (East Coast Orchestra) Band led by Badi Juma, were a household name at the Coast. Both “white” joints such as big hotels and popular clubs such as the African Railway Club in Mombasa, provided the much needed revenues to sustain these bands. Then came African weddings. These were all-night affairs that became rooted in the African musical culture at the Coast. You could not pay the musicians for playing all night. Rather, it was the pomp and circumstance of the occasions and wider public appreciation that motivated the musicians to play all night! Welcome to the world of Bango Music!

Mzee Joseph Ngala and the Bango Tradition

After the passing of “big bands” of yester years at the Coast, it is Mzee Joseph Ngala who has kept the jazz rumba tradition alive at the Coast. In the musical rendition of the clip “Nione Raha” (So I may be happy), I combined my favorite song of Mzee Ngala with images of my relatives to celebrate Mother’s Day. This is complex music by any measure and it is a far cry from the “hip hop” popular music that you hear today throughout Africa. Bango musicians have achieved mastery over the instruments they play: drums, regular and bass guitars, alto and tenor saxophones, trumpets, and accomplished male and female vocalists. The critical question that I would like to end with is: how will Bango bands survive economically beyond wedding venues and a following of those who bill themselves as “Bango addicts”?

Advice on How to “Deal” With a Slow Laptop

  1. Upgrade your memory (RAM). You should have at least 8GB of ram (random access memory). This is what is actively used by your applications to process information. Whether you can upgrade or not, depends on the design of your motherboard. Never buy a computer with a limit of just 4GB of memory! Applications today demand a higher level of system resources to perform at a high level.
  2. Hard drive space. Make sure you have a big hard drive. I would recommend 1 terabyte, ie 1000GB hard drive. The reasoning here is simple. The more files you have, the more cluttering you get and when you call for a particular application, cluttering will slow the capacity of an application to find what you have asked for. It’s like trying to find your friend in a crowded field!
  3. Multi-tasking, ie working with several applications at the same time. A lot of computer companies like to brag about the multi-tasking capabilities of their machines. This is often just noise. The more applications you open up, the slower will be your computer. The reason is simple. Most of the software depend on the same system resources to do their work. How many times have you opened an application, only to be told that it will not open because another application is open! Aya!
  4. Software Upgrades. Make sure you have the latest version of your operating system. Any operating system when it is first launched, does have a lot of “bugs” (ie problems) that are addressed by subsequent revised versions. These are what are labeled as “upgrades”. Microsoft is notorious for launching software that is full of “bugs” and when people start complaining, they “rescue” their clients with software upgrades. This part of the dense jungle of computing in which companies are driven by competition to launch “dirty” products (ie products with bugs). Ordinarily companies would suffer for this, but not Microsoft. Why: their monopoly position insulates them against being punished by consumers. It is because of this many people have gravitated towards “Linux” operating systems as an alternative to Windows.
  5. Driver updates. Wikipedia {A driver provides a software interface to hardware devices, enabling operating systems and other computer programs to access hardware functions without needing to know precise details about the hardware being used.} You should always have the latest drives for your particular operating system–whether you have Windows or Linux.
  6. In today’s computing, system clean up utilities are critical. These will clean up registry, memory, viruses, hard drives and optimize your system. There are “free” utilities such as CClean (they actually have advertisers galore underwriting the costs). Commercial software include such prominent names like McAfee, Norton, etc. I am cheap, so I have been using Spyhunter for years. It’s not the best, but does what I need to do!

DON’T BE A SUCKER, SO KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN AND ASK FOR HELP IF YOU NEED IT!

Prof. Ronald Edari

Economic Existence, The Credit Score and Contradictions of a Capitalist System

A credit score is based on a person’s ability to pay back what he/she has borrowed. The critical component of a credit score is the credit history, essentially your sins or virtues of the past, based on how you have made your regular payments to your creditors–banks, mortgage lenders or credit card companies. Now, here is the glitch. If you have a checkered or erratic history of paying back what you owe (especially for credit card holders), or you default on your loan by declaring bankruptcy or failure to pay your mortgage, your credit score will go down. That means you are a “bad risk”, an economic “goat” who financial institutions and other lenders have to avoid. That will be reflected on a low credit score.

What if you are economically conservative and try to live within your own means by avoiding borrowing, or if you borrow, you pay on short notice. This means that you will have no track record that credit analysis evaluators can base their judgment on. An unknown “economic animal” is a “bad risk” that should also be avoided. This will be reflected in a low credit score. In fact in extreme cases where people have never borrowed any money, then they have no “economic existence”. They have moved into the pale of humanity and heavens forbid if they show up at a financial institution to borrow money. They will meet with the proverbial brick wall and will politely be shown the door!

The Moral

You are damned if you are poor or struggling financially. But you are also damned if you are financially secure,  and refuse to be ripped off by financial institutions whose profits depend on extending credit and charging interest! Personally I fall in this category and when I showed up at a dealership to buy a car, I had a hard time securing an auto loan. But I persuaded a credit company to lend me the money so that I can establish my “economic existence”. This year I will sell my house and pay off the remaining modest balance on my auto loan. When I do this, I will also fall off the radar of the credit analysis snoops. That does not matter, because I will completely relocate to Kenya and come back to the US for health check ups and visiting with my children.

Uhuru and Raila Decide to Work Together!

It is said that politics often leads to strange bed fellows, and so let it be with what the Kenyan public saw today, March 9, 2018: Uhuru and Raila coming together to announce their decision to work together. If Raila and Uhuru were divided by truly ideological fault lines of “left and right”, their decision would be dubbed by people on the left as “class collaboration”! But we have none of this type of situation in Kenya. All what the “wananchi” (citizens) want are jobs that pay a living wage, decent housing and healthcare, clean and safe drinking water, affordable education for their children, etc. This is the tall billing that the different political parties have to deliver. To do that they have to collect revenues from different sources and allocate money efficiently and fairly in all parts of Kenya. The government has to control wayward expenditures such as the salaries and fringe benefits of members of parliament and civil servants,  and deal with corruption, etc. This was not evident even when Raila was the in the government.

Despite party differences, the needs of the people are the same throughout Kenya. The modalities through which such needs can be satisfied does not differ much across the different political party platforms. So why do we have different political parties? The answer is: because we have different tribes and political constituencies that are largely tribal! To avoid the “zero sum” politics of the gain for this tribe is a loss for another tribe, the coming together of Uhuru and Raila is actually a matter of objective necessity that is determined by the nature of hopelessly tribal politics!

Unpacking Tribal Domination Through Tribal Myths: Tribal Hegemonies

This is a complex issue, but for the sake of simplicity I will reduce what I am going to say into itemized propositions:

  1. Leaders use tribal voting blocks to win elections. The main reason for this is because Kenya is still a tribal society and political constituencies tend to be homogeneous in terms of tribal affiliation; that is true even in large cities where you will find members of the same tribe living in the same urban neighborhood. That has been the pattern since the days of British colonialism in Kenya!
  2. If you appeal to your “tribesmen” to win elections, what are you going to give them in return? For the vast majority of Kenyans with modest to no income, not much!
  3. For show and tell the “unGodly” leaders undertake high profile projects–a road here, a bridge there, a school over here, etc; these do indeed help wananchi with their “mikokoteni” (wheeled carts) in transporting their produce to the markets. But by and large, the big infrastructure projects in particular are of more benefit to the wealthy. Heavy commercial trucks can undertake long distance hauling of goods for the global as well as Kenyan market places. Today in Kenya, you will see an incredible sight of huge 18-wheel trucks strewn all over the place along the Mombasa-Nairobi road.
  4. Whatever the “unGodly” leadership does, they understand that the passport to great riches depend on the construction of a modern infrastructure. Uhuru Kenyatta and Ruto cannot continue to amass their wealth without undertaking these “mega” projects. Besides there is the political payoff of using such projects for propaganda and winning elections.
  5. Big projects and foreign investment also yields tremendous dividends in terms of bribes, shake-downs (extortion of foreign investors), etc. Remember Biwott? He was called “Mr. ten percent” because that is allegedly what he demanded from investors whether local or foreign. Rather quietly the “unGodly” Kenyan leadership has been doing the same since our independence.
  6. Kenya is not a static society and there has emerged a class of middle income class of professionals in both the private and public sectors. These are people who the “unGodly” has to bribe through loans from bank that they control or influence, appointments to state and parastatal institutions, etc. Since the days of Mzee Kenyatta, the Kikuyu in particular have been the beneficiaries of this process.
  7. Primitive accumulation is a process where people use both legitimate as well as illegitimate means of building their wealth. Take an example of Ruto. Unlike Uhuru whose father did the dirty work of primitive accumulation way back, Ruto started with virtually nothing. Today he is one of the wealthiest men in Kenya. This wealth was not amassed by the simple gospel of “hard work” that is preached to the everyday people!
  8. When people talk about “Kikuyu” this or that, thinking that all the Kikuyu have fared very well after years of “Kikuyu” domination. The reality is that the vast majority of the poor in Kenya today are Kikuyu. The same goes for the Kalenjin after years of Moi’s leadership. In fact during the heyday of Mzee Kenyatta and Moi, members of their respective constituencies in Gatundu and Baringo were among the poorest people in Kenya! How about that? But you would not know that when you hear the political rhetoric in “tribalized politics”.
  9. The GEMA (Gikuyu, Embu, Meru Association) “hegemony” has become a belief system that a vast majority of Mt. Kenya tribes subscribe to, whether rich or poor! Mzee Kenyatta started it all with the oath “the Flag of Kenya Shall Not Leave the House of Mumbi”. Mumbi being the mythical parent of all of the GEMA clans.
  10. “Nyayo” politics of Moi took a page from Kenyatta and created another hegemonic myth that saw the ascendance of the Kalenjin. Moi. who was described as “professor of politics” had learned well from Mzee Kenyatta, hence his famous political line of “nyayo” (following the footsteps)!
  11. Kenya today has come full circle with Uhuru (GEMA) and Ruto (Kalenjin), who have implemented the same political strategies and tactics of tribal hegemonies.
  12. Projecting the past into the future: Jomo Kenyatta (1964–78); Daniel arap Moi (1978–2002); Mwai Kibaki (2002–13); Uhuru Kenyatta (2013– ). Beyond this Uhuru would like to have his 10 years (constitutional statutory limits), Ruto 10 years, and then Uhuru’s son 10 years. You can understand why hegemonic myths are such powerful ideologies of domination. They are tried and proven instruments of power in Africa.

Intel Processors

Below is some information from Intel Corporation that may be helpful for making decisions about laptops for your children. Many computer retail stores in Kenya have been selling “new computers” with outmoded technologies. They have been using Africa as a dumping market place for computers that have been rendered obsolete by newer technologies. When it comes to processors in particular, that is where we see consumers being played! Here is a rough guide on the “genealogy” of processors.

Intel Processors

Intel® Core™ Processors

Manage 3D, advanced video, and photo editing, play complex games, and enjoy hi-res 4K displays.

Intel® Xeon® Processors

Deliver cloud computing, get real-time insights from data analytics, increase data center productivity, and scale easily.

Intel® Xeon® Phi™ Processors

Optimize performance for highly-parallel workloads, while maintaining a unified hardware and software environment.

Intel® Atom™ Processors

For mobile devices and energy-efficient servers. Get great perfromance and long battery life in a small package.

Intel® Pentium® Processors

Accelerate portable 2-in-1s, laptops, desktops, and all-in-ones with a feature-packed processor.

Intel® Celeron® Processors

Support basic consumer applications, HD video and audio, and web browsing with reliable performance and high value.

Intel® Itanium® Processors

Breakthrough performance, reliability, scalability, and availability for mission-critical applications and workloads.

Intel® Quark® Processors

For Internet of Things (IoT) devices. Get low power consumption, integrated security, and scalable architecture in a small form factor.