Liberal Debutante

05 Jan, 2008

Kenya Wounds Won’t Heal Quickly

Posted by: Katie Kish In: Africa| War| World

 04kenya01_600.jpg

Kibaki has stepped down for the betterment of his country saying he is willing and ready to form a government of national unity with Odinga. This isn’t enough for Odinga, who wants the entire election process to be redone in three months time, Kibaki is again being co-operative, and says this too is a fine idea. (Which isn’t really surprising, not only would Kabaki attempt to be co-operative for publicity reasons - but also he knows that he has a minority government that will absolutely no governing power what-so-ever.) With nearly 400 people dead and 1/4 of a million people displaced a solution that takes effect now would be much more beneficial to the country. .. But is it going to make a difference if the dispute is politically settled?

Kenya is made up of 7 primary ethnic groups. Kikuyu account for 22% of the population and occupy the central area of Kenya not far from Nairobi. (This also happens to be the ethnic group which Kabaki is a part of. The Luhya make up 14%, and the Luo 13%. The Luhya make up the most Western part of Africa, and the Luo along side the Kisii (6% of Kenya population) occupy Nyanza, just below the Western area. The Luhya and Luo are the two ethnic groups who primarily oppose the Kikuyu government. The other three primary groups are Kalenjin, 12 %, who occupy the Rift Valley just west of Central and Kamba, 11%  residing just east of Central alongside the Meru, 6% of the population.

A lot of the village ambushes, most recently gang rape, road blocks out side of towns and mobs hitting cities, churches, schools and villages are mostly comprised of youth. A unified government isn’t going to calm the anger that is inside of these 12 - 16 year old boys.

The mobs had smashed their way into their homes, the women told doctors. Attacking everyone they found inside with machetes and clubs, the youths raped them in front of their husbands, some of whom were later killed.

They have been trained to hate, and to fight and to kill. It’s not going to be as simple as saying “Okay, we got what we wanted, you can stop being jerks now”… Because it’s no longer just about the election. Now it’s about one ethnic group attempting to screw over a country that other ethnic groups call home and feel proud of.

Everyone seemed to have a sigh of relief when Kibaki seemed to give in a little to the other side. It seemed like some sort of progress - but the problem is already there, and changing the election outcome is no longer the root of the problem.

A problem as small as a fraudulent election is all it took to shake the strong African economy, good infrastructure and functioning education system. All of these things had been implement and the success was beginning to blur the lines between tribal division. Now that those lines have been suddenly and fiercely redrawn the reconciliation will be extremely difficult.

Remember when everyone thought that Bush election was rigged? Did you hear stories like this?

First the attackers pelted the church with rocks to pin down the women, children and elderly people seeking shelter inside. The armed men then slammed the church doors shut. They piled bicycles and mattresses outside the main entrance and blocked a smaller door at the back. They went about their business efficiently.

Inside the small Kenya Assemblies of God Church in Kiambaa, just outside the town of Eldoret in western Kenya, dozens of terrified people huddled together. They were Kikuyu, members of the tribe that has borne the brunt of the violence that followed last week’s disputed presidential election.

The attackers, members of the rival Kalenjin tribe, poured fuel on the mattresses and piled on dried maize leaves from a nearby field. Then they set the barricades alight and waited until the flames burned high.

This sort of violence doesn’t happen over a rigged election. It comes from deeply rooted ethnic segregation. Find, call another election. Created a unified government. But I’ll be damn surprised if the fighting stops.

11 Responses to "Kenya Wounds Won’t Heal Quickly"

1 | Ian

January 5th, 2008 at 7:01 pm

Avatar

“A unified government isn’t going to calm the anger that is inside of these 12 - 16 year old boys.”

Come now, you don’t have to make stuff up to make your story interesting!

2 | Katie Kish

January 6th, 2008 at 11:56 pm

Avatar

You don’t have to suck to keep living.

WHat do you mean make stuff up? I’ve read so many things saying that there are 12 - 16 year old boys participating in these mobs and gang wars…

3 | King

January 8th, 2008 at 3:21 am

Avatar

Thats an interesting analysis of the situation. I would even go as far as saying that nothing is ever going to get better in africa if we keep spoon feeding them the way we have. I think that in 10 years we will look back on all this forgein aid and have the same general feelings about it as we do the SAPs.

I think the reason that Korea was able to get back onto their feet so well is because everyone pissed off and left them alone to do their own thing.

4 | Katie Kish

January 8th, 2008 at 3:24 am

Avatar

Yeah but you also gotta consider that Korea was unified - where as with Africa - in Kenya alone you’re looking at over 50 different tribes… Trying to get them to unify isn’t so easy as when ur dealing with just one country with common goals in mind.

I don’t think we’re spoon feeding them the right way. Too much of our aid is going directly to governments, so we see a lot of government officials sitting up in their high chairs living off the poor, sort of like post present day Tibet. It looks good on the outside, but on the inside segregation has gotten so bad that there are literally surfs.

I think if we are going to help Africa at all we’re going to have to stop donating money, and we’re going to have to start donating man power. Build some infrastructure, send more teachers over, glamorize it a bit so more westeners want to go over. In the end we get our fill of being “the best helping the little guys” and the little guys actually get help.

5 | Ian

January 8th, 2008 at 9:48 am

Avatar

Seeing as i’m actually from there and i’m talking about things I actually witnessed rather than just read about somewhere…I’d like to think I know what i’m talking about, and maybe you should question what you read a bit more, being a bit cynical is not necessarily a bad thing!

Oh, and by the way, anyone who says “Africa” and then proceeds to analyse it as if it were an undifferentiated whole probably doesn’t know what they are talking about, but i’m just an African…what do I know. I’ll just sit here and wait for you guys to send a few westerners over to spoonfeed me/us, after all, that worked out really really well for us the first time it happened!

6 | Ian

January 8th, 2008 at 10:35 am

Avatar

Oh, and the fighting has stopped!

7 | Katie Kish

January 8th, 2008 at 3:02 pm

Avatar

…your ip address is from norther Europe. you must have fantastic vision to see africa all the way from up there!

and that’s what i said - Korea = a whole. Africa = not a whole but tons of different groups.

and i dont “believe everything i read”… i believe facts that appear in at least 10 different new sources.

8 | Ian

January 8th, 2008 at 3:45 pm

Avatar

Read back what I wrote and it does seem a bit snarky, sorry about that. I’m usually a nicer person than that, especially to strangers. I blame this tinternet anonymity thing! I just got a bit fed up reading things which do not even seem to describe what’s going on there. What astounds me is even big media houses which, surely, have enough money to hire some decent researchers also seem to get it wrong.
Anyway, the reason i’m in Northern Europe is because I go to university here but I happened to be home for Christmas and was there when this thing kicked off and the terms in which it’s being addressed(tribalism blah blah) don’t even begin to capture the complexity of the situation. I don’t want to use your blog to delve into the minutiae of Kenyan politics but if you are interested in getting a bit of background:
http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/4249/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,2235988,00.html
http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/nmgcontententry.asp?category_id=25&newsid=114132
http://www.insightafrica.tv/
the video reports in the last link are especially informative for someone who maybe doesn’t know Kenya very well.
Anyway, if any of my posts offended you(or rambled on for too long), feel free to delete

9 | Katie Kish

January 10th, 2008 at 1:36 am

Avatar

Sorry Ian, I didn’t mean to come off as harsh either. Thank you very much for the links. … I rarely consider that the information that we may be getting over here is nothing like what is going on. I figure if all the newspapers are saying it, then it must be at least a little bit true.

Feel free to delve my blog in the minutiae of Kenyan (or any) politics any time - I’d rather learn than remain ignorant.

10 | king

January 11th, 2008 at 9:36 am

Avatar

it’s over?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7182642.stm

That sure doesn’t make it look like it’s over, Ian.

11 | Ian

January 11th, 2008 at 12:01 pm

Avatar

I didn’t say that the political issues had been resolved…that’ll take time(years even maybe) I said the fighting’s stopped!

Comment Form

Categories

Google!


  • Angry Chinese Driver: Alon: Can you please explain why these TAs/GAs/RAs would take on the job in the first place then? They obviously didn't sign the original contract bli
  • Angry Chinese Driver: It amazes and saddens me at the same time to find a seemingly-infinite number of undergrads who think pretty much exactly the same as me. As in, it wo
  • Joelle: I agree with you 100% after countless ATFs, and 3 missions trips I feel Teen Mania, Ron Luce and everything they stood for completely destroyed my fai

About

This is an example of a WordPress page, you could edit this to put information about yourself or your site so readers know where you are coming from.