Another election. Another failure of systems. Another
dispute, another anxiety laden wait. Another bout of violence. The routine has become
depressingly familiar. Over the past week, Kenya has been at a standstill, holding
her breath as votes were counted, announcements made and politicians bickered
over the results, praying these would not summon the spectre of 2008.
Kenyan presidential elections have always been contentious -
a legacy of our history dictatorship. Within a decade of independence from Britain
in 1963, the country had been transformed into a de facto one party and as long
as the centre was not challenged, other aspects of a competitive, democratic
system were allowed to function.
This meant that for the first 30 years, while parliamentary
races were fiercely competitive -with more than half of incumbent Members of
Parliament regularly thrown out- at the presidential level, they remained a
placid affair. Jomo Kenyatta and his successor, Daniel arap Moi, as heads of
the party were “re-elected” unopposed at every turn.
A year to the 1992 elections, however, everything changed.
Following a sustained two-year campaign of protests and international pressure,
Moi was forced to reverse a decade-old change to the constitution which had
formally banned political parties other than his own. This led to the first
ever competitive race for President, which set the tone for all presidential
contests to come -it was marred by large-scale, ethnic-based, violence,
irregularity and outright theft.
The 1992 polls were preceded by government-instigated
“tribal clashes”, in which 5,000
people were killed and another 75,000 displaced in the expansive Rift Valley. Just
months before the 1997 elections, politically instigated violence killed over
100 people and displaced an estimated 100,000. While both 2002 and 2013
election campaigns were marked by several incidents of violence, with no
incumbents running, the violence was somewhat limited.
At first glance, the violence of 2007/8 seems to sit pretty
well within this picture. But, on closer inspection, there are fundamental
differences. All previous large scale electoral violence was instigated controlled
and perpetrated either by the government or with its acquiescence. The 2008
violence was the first time Kenyans confronted the prospect of a Hobbesian “war
of all against all”, with the opposition also able to mount significant
violence.
Kenya’s electoral violence had previously been controlled
and limited in geography and scope. Though the 2007/8 was not the worst the
country had suffered, it provided a glimpse of a possible and very scary
future, where the threat of violence did not stem primarily from the state, but
from one’s neighbours and friends.
Kenya has always been a violent country, one silently at war
with itself. The colonial state is at the center of that conflict. The various
communities and fractions of communities that make up the nation are constantly
fighting to control the state which ironically was created to facilitate others
preying on them. At independence, rather than reform it, the clique that
inherited it, which includes both Uhuru’s and Raila’s fathers used it to enrich
themselves and their friends and relatives at the expense of the rest of
society.
Throughout it all, as Matt Carotenuto writes, the state has
learned to weaponize the language of “peace” to avoid scrutiny of its actions
and a discussion of the past. “From the days of Jomo Kenyatta’s regime to the
Presidency of his son Uhuru, Kenya’s five decades of independence have been marked
by wide ranging uses of “peace” to silence more messy notions of reconciliation
and political change.”
As Kenyans settle down to the daily grind, there is a danger
that they will once again be urged to as Kenyatta put it in 2002 “forget the
past, however bitter we may be, and forge a common front to be able to overcome
our emotions”. But that would be a mistake because, if there are any lessons to
be learnt from Kenya’s history, it is that a true “common front” will not be
forged through “forgetting he past” but by facing and dealing with it.
Kenya is thus has a choice. The country can either try to
recreate the brutality that its colonial state wielded previously and attempt
to force the genie back into the bottle, or it could actually attempt to confront
and deal with its traumatic past and to begin to create a state that works for
all. Kenyatta appears to have settled
for the former, judging by the viciousness with which post-election riots have
been put down – at least 24 people have been shot dead and many more, including
a six-month old baby, badly beaten.
What prevails in Kenya now, what has always prevailed, is
not peace but rather, an uneasy calm -a ceasefire of sorts. But it won’t last,
nor be translated into a deeper peace unless the country has the courage to fix
its frayed national fabric.
The 'mtuwetu syndrome' if our biggest enemy.
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