Eric Kiraithe, must really be well paid. Being the official spokesman of the Kenyan Government, is, in the words of Jerry Maguire, “an up-at-dawn, pride-swallowing siege” that I’m sure he will never fully tell us about. We got a glimpse of what the job entails when the government sent him out this week to defend the indefensible: US President Donald Trump’s description of Haiti, El Salvador and African nations as “shithole countries” and his declared preference for immigrants from Northern Europe.
The mental
gymnastics Kiraithe had to engage in were a spectacle to behold. No doubt trying
to curry favor with the famously petty and vengeful Trump, he declared that Kenya
had no problems with African countries being called “shitholes” but nonetheless
supported the African Union in condemning the comments whose context, he
claimed, the government was still studying “to see whether it is worth the
attention”, even though it had already determined that they were not directed
at Kenya.
Still, there perhaps was an easier, and perhaps less humiliating,
way for Kiraithe and his minders to extricate themselves from the bind. Trump may
be an ignorant, racist, pathetic excuse for a human being but if we are honest,
his sentiments are not dissimilar to attitudes held by many of the
“respectable” people lining up to condemn him in the West and even here in
Africa.
As any African applying for visa will tell you, the
indignities visited upon us in the process make it plain that we are not
exactly welcome. It is humiliating to have to demonstrate to strangers that one
is not about to abandon one’s family and nation to live on the streets of
Europe or America, to have them stand in judgment over your acceptability as
human being. And that is just how the system treats those seeking a legal route
for a temporary visit.
The reaction to the so-called European migrant crisis which
saw more than a million unwanted migrants and refugees from the middle east and
Africa cross into Europe in 2015, shows the extremes that will be considered in
order to turn them back. “Europe has decided to cooperate with Libyan
authorities, knowing the kind of torture, abuses, detention that migrants and
refugees are exposed to in Libya,” Amnesty International’s Maria
Serrano told Voice of America last month.
Of course, the idea of a crisis is not extended to the
nearly 12.5 million Europeans who are resident in a country not their own
within the European Union, even when 95 percent of these are hosted in just six
countries. It is only a crisis when they come from “shithole countries”.
And it is not just Europeans. Israel’s Prime Minister,
Benjamin Netanyahu, who was in Kenya in November declaring how he loves
Africans, seems
to only love them when they stay at home. Back in Israel, he has taken to
branding African asylum seekers “infiltrators” is deporting thousands of them.
In Libya, slave markets have re-opened with many of the same Africans Europe is
turning away being treated as commodities.
But African citizens do not even need to try to leave the
continent in order to experience the dehumanization associated with
immigration. Kenya’s abysmal
treatment of refugees from Somalia -who are crammed into crowded camps,
forbidden from seeking work, regularly demonized as terrorists and even illegally
forced back into the war zone across the border – is no less humiliating.
Neither are the hoops Kenyans themselves – as well as other Africans - are
forced to jump through when attempting to visit South Africa, formerly the
continent’s largest economy, are no less humiliating.
In fact, Africans don’t even need to try to go outside their
countries’ borders to be insulted or have heir humanity questioned. Hollywood as
well as Western aid agencies and media regularly does it right in the comfort
of our homes with their portrayal of Africa as a troubled, exotic paradise
peopled by childishly simple, naïve beings unable to deal with the challenges
of life and who need white saviors to rescue them from other white devils or
from themselves.
Rounding out the parade of insulters are African elites,
especially in the media and in politics, who have become our very own Uncle
Toms, loyally regurgitating and fleshing out the worst stereotypes that the
West has of us. Having opted not to reform the racist, extractive colonial
states they inherited in the late 1950s and early 1960s, these elites have
trouble seeing the humanity of the masses of citizens they prey on. So, like
the Europeans before them, rather than fix dehumanizing political and economic
systems, they try to beat and shame the natives into compliance with them, into
accepting the space that the world has allocated to them at the back of the bus
- which is the reason so many try to leave in the first place.
This brings us back to Trump and his comments. So should
Kenyans be offended by them? You bet they should. But no more so than by the
treatment and representations Africans have to endure every day from a world
that has decided that they come from “shithole countries” and so must be shitty
people.
And the supreme irony of it is, up till less than a century
ago, Africans were quite content to stay on the continent. It was shitty people
from other places who came here and forced them out. It was shitty people who took them to places
like Haiti, where, after they fought for and won their freedom, more shitty
people blockaded and invaded them and created the very conditions today that a
shitty American President, blissfully unaware of this, today disparages.
However, it is an irony that is completely lost on Kiraithe
and the folks he speaks for.