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The following essay was
originally published by Pambazuka News. Pambazuka
News is the weekly electronic forum for social justice in Africa,
www.pambazuka.org (Pambazuka
means arise or awaken in Kiswahili) it is a tool for progressive social change
in Africa. Pambazuka News is produced by Fahamu, an organization that uses
information and communication technologies to serve the needs of organizations
and social movements that aspire to progressive social change.
Campaign against corruption in Kenya: A convenient
smokescreen?
by
Onyango Oloo
Onyango
Oloo, a Kenyan political activist and ex political prisoner, argues that there
is a deepening crisis of legitimacy for the Kenyan government. The implication
of key government officials in grand corruption has struck yet another nail in
the coffin of the shattered and battered National Rainbow Coalition. Oloo sees
corruption as driven by two factors; internally by a lack of democratic
institutions, structures and culture and externally as one of the by-products of
the disastrous neo-liberal policies imposed by the West and its
institutions.
As I write these lines, Kenya is being rocked
hard by the ramifications of the dossier unleashed from the United Kingdom by
John Githongo, the country’s former anti-corruption czar. Githongo has since
fled the country after uncovering the deep involvement of key Kibaki insiders in
one of Kenya’s most notorious scandals - the Anglo-Leasing
Affair.
Earlier in the week, the President appeared on live television to
inform his compatriots that Kiraitu Murungi, the Energy minister and Prof.
George Saitoti, the Education minister had ‘stepped aside’ to allow for
unimpeded investigations of the twin graft scandals of Anglo-Leasing and
Goldenberg.
Some observers believe that this dramatic announcement may
have been a desperate, even deft move to stave off, pre-empt or undercut the
looming mass actions announced by a consortium of 76 civil society organizations
and to scuttle a planned meeting of parliamentarians ratcheting up the pressure
for the re opening of the National Assembly to allow members of Parliament to
debate the corruption scandals.
Whatever the case, these latest
resignations - coming hot on the heels of the firing of State House official and
Kibaki right hand man Alfred Getonga, the resignation of long-time Presidential
confidant and former Finance minister David Mwiraria and the dropping of former
cabinet minister Dr. Chris Murungaru in the post-referendum reshuffle last year
-have if anything deepened the crisis of legitimacy for the Kenyan government
and struck another nail into the coffin of the shattered and battered National
Rainbow Coalition which rode to power on a landslide victory, with a mandate to
fight graft and deliver a new democratic constitution.
Many have hailed
John Githongo as Kenya’s knight in shining armor and have lauded the critical,
sometimes strident opinion pieces of former British envoy Sir Edward Clay. The
Kenyan media, especially the Nation Media Group, has been giving itself a pat on
the back, preening in self-congratulation about their role in publicizing and
exposing the scandal.
Indeed, the feistiness of the Kenyan press is
ironically one key indicator of how much democratic space has opened up since
the ascendancy of the Kibaki-led NARC regime. Truth be said, the courage of the
Kenyan media and the almost unfettered expressions of critical views by ordinary
Kenyans has happened in spite of, rather than because of the NARC government.
Indeed, many are the times when demonstrators have been shot dead in cold blood,
clubbed senseless, tear gassed, arrested and vilified by leading politicians
allied to the ruling elite. The freedom of the press in Kenya is a direct by
product of the burgeoning democratic struggles within the country over the last
fifteen years or so.
In as much as the ongoing campaign against
corruption in Kenya has highlighted the need for clean, transparent and
accountable governance, it also throws up several convenient smokescreens when
it comes to unraveling the enabling environment for grand graft in
Kenya.
Many Nairobi-based pundits and observers have focused on the
personal greed, moral foibles and even psychological make up of the leading
villains. A few have probed the links to the need for the NAK faction to have a
war chest to perpetuate itself in power come the next presidential elections in
2007.
Laudable as these insights are, I am of the opinion that they do
gloss over two fundamental factors - one internal and the other external that
seem to fuel the waves of corruption scandals that have bedeviled Kenya for
decades.
The internal factor has to do with the refusal of successive
ruling cliques to take the lead in democratizing the structures of power -
especially in the economic sphere. In the particular case of the Kibaki regime,
there is a justifiable national ire at the NARC government because it is the one
formation that rode to power with a pledge and a popular mandate to deliver a
new democratic constitution within its first one hundred days in power.
The fact that a national constitutional conference concluded its
deliberations by ratifying and proclaiming a new draft constitution that was
effectively trashed, thrashed and shelved sent strong signals that the parvenu
rulers - especially in the NAK faction fronted by the President himself - having
tasted what KANU had enjoyed for 39 years were quite reluctant to forego the
perks of power - like the latitude given for ministers and government insiders
to circumvent procurement and conflict of interest policies for self-enrichment.
Therefore the adamant refusal by the ruling clique to acquiesce to the national
demand for a new constitutional dispensation was a direct factor that led to the
rot of institutional safeguards against corrupt practices. Indeed the injection
of political agendas directly propelled the Anglo-Leasing scandal - with
disclosures that one of the motivating factors that drove key Kibaki insiders to
loot state coffers in collusion with shady hoodlum business types was to stuff a
war chest full of loot that NAK would use to fight its electoral rivals in
2007.
The external factor is best described in the following excerpt from
Sue Hawley in a July 2000 publication by the Corner House titled ‘Exporting
Corruption: Privatization, Multinationals and Bribery’:
‘The
growth of corruption across the globe is largely the result of rapid
privatization of public enterprises, along with reforms to downsize and
undervalue civil services, pushed on developing countries by the World Bank, the
IMF and western governments supporting their transnational corporations’ (http://www.globalpolicy.org/nations/launder/
general/2001/0705sng.htm)
If we accept the argument that I am
advancing - namely that corruption is driven internally by lack of democratic
institutions, structures and a culture that militates and acts as a check on
abuse of power by political barons and other state-connected thieves and that it
is one of the by-products of the disastrous neo-liberal policies imposed by the
West and her institutions like the IMF on ‘Third World’ countries like Kenya,
then it follows that corruption is a fundamentally political problem rooted
firmly within certain local and global ideological constructs and
parameters.
To put it more colloquially, graft is a manifestation of a
rotten neo-colonial regime gutting the country at the behest of the imperialist
powers. This means that at an ideological level, a consistent fight against
corruption in societies like Kenya has to be embedded in a broader struggle for
national democracy and against imperialist neo-liberal policies and
machinations.
That is why I find it bizarre to see so many of my Kenyan
compatriots look to places like the UK and individuals like Sir Edward Clay for
mentorship and support in the war on corruption.
It is surreal to find
the sleaze engulfed states like the United States and the United Kingdom - with
their ENRONs, Haliburtons and so on - presume to act as the 21st Century
champions against graft and other economic crimes and go further not only to
lecture and harangue, but to sanction and punish states and governments that
they consider ‘corrupt’. These mark you, are the very states which consciously
assisted pariah governments in Africa like Ian Smith’s illegal regime in the so
called ‘Rhodesia’ and the racist cabal in the apartheid South Africa circumvent
international censure and sanctions for their repressive and corrupt practices
in years gone by. These are the same governments which turn a blind eye to the
erection of the apartheid wall in Israel and the series of scandals implicating
the now ailing Ariel Sharon.
We must therefore openly question the
motivations and ideological intentions of these imperialist powers when they
jump into the fray in battling corruption in places like Kenya and so
on.
This is not to say that we have swallowed the demagogic populist
appeals of discredited Kenyan ministers caught in a web of deceit who suddenly
discover their mythical anti-imperialist credentials only when they are caught
with their pants down. It is so easy to pierce through their threadbare
rhetorical flourishes - especially when these ministers are confronted with
compromising facts and startling admissions on tape - even when these
surreptitious recordings are executed in less than ethical fashion.
By
interrogating the motives of the Western powers in ‘fighting’ graft in countries
like Kenya, we are also putting a question mark on the local actors who, like
the embedded journalists during the Iraqi invasion seem to be snuggling in bed
with the Sir Edward Clays of this world.
One litmus test that would
indicate whether these actors are driven by purely patriotic motives rather than
being proxies and conduits for nefarious imperialist - even regime change
agendas - can be gleaned by the extent that these local players participate in
national democratic struggles and oppose neo-liberal imperialist
policies.
We are aware that the anti-corruption campaign the world over
has provided a convenient platform for many a would be imperialist friendly
Presidential aspirant in this or that neo-colonial outpost. Of course, the
surest testing ground is the arena of mass struggles where progressive and
democratic forces meet to know each other more, struggling for unity and clarity
while pursuing concrete pro-people goals.
Onyango Oloo is a Nairobi-based political activist and
former political prisoner who is currently the National Co-coordinator of the
Kenya Social Forum. He returned to Kenya in late October 2005 after an 18-year
stint in exile where he lived in Toronto and Montreal, Canada. The views
expressed are his personal opinions and do not in any way reflect the positions
of the Kenya Social Forum - which in the spirit of the World Social Forum
process, does not in fact hold or express any political or ideological
viewpoints as an entity.
This
essay is reprinted herein with the author's
consent.
Posted February 19,
2006
URL:
www.thecitizenfsr.org
SM
2000-2011
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