Remember the Turkana, the Somalis,
and etc that needs the same cake we are fighting for. Who will fight for
them, if leaders are struggling for the benefit of their own tribes, instead
of national?
Read the document below, and how
it is connected now with PNU (Kibaki, Moi & Kenyatta)
Regards
Kenyaluk-Nationalist
THE CONSTRUCTION AND DESTRUCTION OF THE KENYATTA STATE
By DAVID W.
THROUP
Kenya has been regarded as a successful African state by both academics
and journalists. Although it came under attack in the 1970s for its
neocolonialist policies and has encountered acute economic difficulties
with the end of the coffee boom and the second dramatic increase in
oil prices in 1979, it seems to have weathered the storm. Kenyatta's
death in 1978, the maize shortages of 1980, the attempted coup of
August 1982, the Njonjo affair, and the 1984 drought have all been
negotiated. Its critics are less sure of themselves than in the early
1970s
because leftist inclined regimes have also lurched from economic crisis
to crisis. Leys (1974, 1978) and Swainson (1976, 1978, 1980) have pointed
to the development of indigenous capitalism while Cowen (1972, 1974b,
1976, 1980), Kitching (1980), and the Cambridge historians have pro-
vided a more complex portrait of capitalist articulation, putting Afri-
cans back into Kenya's political economy as participants not simply
victims of history.
Most recent research has focused upon the processes underlying the
development of Kenya's political economy and particularly peasantization
(Leys 1971; Anderson and Throup 1985; Lonsdale 1986c). This
chapter relates this development to the nation's "high politics" and
seeks to examine the operations of the political process at two levels:
The high politics of elite competition for control over policy and patronage
at the center, and the "deep politics" of social and economic relations,
which legitimize the regime through the incorporation of local clients. We
shall see that the study of high politics provides insights into what has
happened since independence and more particularly since Kenyatta's death in
August 1978
Many observers have bemoaned that we have little understanding of how
the Kenyan state functions, of its composition, its relations with international
capital, or about the development of indigenous capitalism and the function
of the African intermediaries within a neocolonial relationship. Despite
these gaps in our knowledge, we can discern from the shifting factional alignments
of politics in Kenya certain insights into the underlying social processes,
if only because it is through the patron-client linkages of high politics
that Kenya's ethnic sub-nationalisms demonstrate their indispensability and
emphasize that their interests have to be accommodated. The distribution
of scarce resources lies at the heart of politics and it is through the rhetoric
of political competition that one can dimly perceive the state's reactions
to shifts in the influence of different constituencies and observe the struggle
for control between rival economic and ethnic interests. While we may not
know what the regime says to its multinational patrons, we can see how the
Kikuyu and Kalenjin elites have sought to divide the "pork barrel" and to
secure their own dominance (Lamb 1974, pp. 17-26, 132152; Swainson 1980,
pp. 182-284; Mohiddin 198~, pp. 97-128).
The Kenyatta state was a shifting series of coalitions both within and
without Kikuyuland. Kenyatta at times had to play certain Kikuyu factions
off against each other and to incorporate non-Kikuyu into his coalition to
maintain his dominance of the state. Moi has done the same but by diverting
resources into the northern Rift Valley to benefit his own people--the Tugen--and
their Kalenjin associates, he has clashed with Kikuyu capitalist interests
that dominated the state under Kenyatta. Kenyatta and Moi had similar ambitions
in that both attempted to promote the economic interests of their subnationalist
followers and have also used similar political methods of factional manipulation
to achieve these ends. Moi's Nyayo rhetoric, therefore, has deliberately
sought to conceal important shifts within the balance of power. The Kikuyu
hegemony of the Kenyatta era has ended as Moi has attempted to advance his
Kalenjin associates in the government, he civil service, the army, the parastatals,
and the private sector. Moi's endeavors to secure the rewards of political
incorporation for his own ethnic constituency is very similar to Kenyatta's
attempt to promote Kikuyu interests. Unfortunately for Moi, the Kalenjin
are not the Kikuyu; nor is it as easy in contemporary Kenya to reapportion
state resources as it was at independence. The end of colonial rule and the
opening of the White Highlands endowed Kenyatta with the resources to reward
not only his own Kikuyu following the old Kikuyu
Central Association faction--but to extend it to include former Kikuyu loyalists
(especially where they controlled important subclan followings), certain
elements of the Mau Mau forest fighters and the leaders of Kenya's other
subnationalisms, especially Odinga and Mboya's Luo, Ngei's Kamba, and eventually
Moi's Kalenjin .
Moi's attempt to restructure the Kenyan state to advance Kalenjin
interests and those of their Luhya allies has had to be conducted in much
less auspicious circumstances. The economy has been less buoyant, the trebling
of the population since independence to 20 million has meant that pressure
on resources is more intense, but above all Moi has faced the insurmountable
obstacle of Kenyatta's successful entrenchment of the Kikuyu. Every move
that Moi has made to reduce Kikuyu hegemony and to dismantle the Kenyatta
state has threatened
the stability of his government. The Kikuyu, unlike the European settlers
in the 1960s, cannot be pushed aside (Wasserman 1976).
During the last 30 years of the colonial era, rich Kikuyu peasants and
traders were locked in battle with the settlers to become Kenya's first national
capitalists. The cost of defeating Mau Mau (which was directed as much against
the Kikuyu proto-capitalists and land grabbers in Central Province
as it was against the settlers) and the adverse publicity the rebellion attracted
for British colonialism, ensured that the Macmillan government would abandon
the fight and acknowledge the victory of the Kikuyu elite in their
protracted battle with the settlers for control over the Kenyan economy
and government assistance.
Moi has, therefore, had to drive a wedge between Kenyatta's political
bailiwick in Kiambu and the other Kikuyu Districts, and has also sought
to undermine the political base of the Kikuyu capitalists by securing the
support of those who did not benefit from Kenyatta's patronage - particularly
discontented former Mau Mau and poor peasants who fear 'rural proletarianization’
. He has, however, made little attempt to enhance his political legitimacy
with Kikuyu urban poor because their interests
inevitably clash with his attempt to create a Kalenjin bourgeoisie and to
promote members of his own community as intermediaries between the multinational
corporations and Kenya's Asian capitalists and the state, at the expense of
the Kikuyu.
These attempts to redistribute economic opportunities provided by
control of the state have produced major factional realignments both
among the representatives of Kikuyu capitalism and their opponents--
Kenya's other subnationalist capitalists- -led by the Kalenjin, and in
their respective relationships with the peasantry and the urban masses,
especially the interests defended by the Kikuyu populists. These populists
are themselves divided between supporters of the new regime-
such as Kariuki Chotara and Fred Kubai in Nakuru and since Njonjo's
political demise possibly Waruru Kanja's supporters in Nyeri and more
socialist elements among whom should be counted Ngugi wa Thiong'o,
Mukaru-Ng'ang' a, and Maina-wa-Kinyatti, all of whom have been at
some stage imprisoned.
This chapter attempts to relate Kenyan politics since independence
to the processes of class formation during the colonial period and over
the last 23 years. In addition, we shall analyze these political realignments,
especially the class and political interests represented in the Change the
Constitution Movement of 1976. The chapter concludes
with an examination of the effect of Moi's attempt to undermine the hegemonic
position of the Kikuyu on the stability of the state with
particular reference to the economy, the military, and the police and
offers a brief appraisal of the prospects for the survival of Moi's endeavor.
It begins, however, with a discussion of the ephemeral nature of Kenyan political
factions and with Kenyatta's attempt as the founding
father of both Kenyan nationalism and Kikuyu subnationalism
to reconcile these conflicting interests at independence by healing the
division between the Kenya African National Union and the Kenya African
Democratic Union, and his successful incorporation of the leaders of Kenya's
other ethnically restricted subnationalist movements within his Kikuyu-centric
polity while he extended his control inside his Kikuyu bailiwick (Gertzel
1970, pp. 32-72; Bennett 1969, pp. 76-79; Mueller 1972).
THE EPHEMERAL NATURE OF POLITICAL FACTIONS IN KENYA
Superficially, Kenya's institutions have been remarkably stable but this
is a facade behind which political alignments have altered drastically. Various
factions have emerged and disintegrated both at the center and at the district
level since independence. Population pressure and social differentiation
have, moreover, destroyed many local coalitions and undermined the position
of district notables as political patrons and representatives of their localities
at the center. Members of the National Assembly have usually remained in
office for less than two terms--averaging 7.2 years--and in all post-independence
elections more than half the incumbents have been defeated in their bids
for re-election. Only five Kenyan politicians- -Moi, Kibaki, Ngei, Nyagah
(all cabinet ministers), and Francis Bobi Tuva in Malindi South-have been
returned at all five general elections since 1963, and only 24 of the 487
individuals who have sat in Parliament have won three consecutive elections.
Since the banning of the populist Kenya Peoples Union in 1969, Kenyan politics
has lacked a firm ideological base.
Coalitions have been ephemeral accommodations, lacking long-term cohesion.
Factional U-turns have been commonplace and large sums of money have had
to be dispensed in campaign and harambee (self-help) contributions to survive
(Gertzel 1970; Hornsby 1986, pp. 9-18,165-220; Widner 1986; Mueller
1984).
Kenyatta was a shrewd politician and his active work in Kenya's
struggle for independence over 40 years endowed him with a unique legitimacy.
He straddled Kenya's two most important political processes. As the editor
of Muigwithania (The Reconciler) in the late 1920s and in Facing Mount
Kenya (first published in 193(3), he created
a Kikuyu subnationalist ideology, which legitimized the accumulation of land
and capital by the proto-capitalists of the KCA, within the frame-work of
a revitalized traditional mythology. Between his return from
Britain in September 1946 and his trial at Kapenguria. six years later,
he also constructed a constitutionalist Kenyan nationalism for the Kenya
African Union, which could encompass all Kenya's conflicting sub-nationalisms
including, as he demonstrated at Nakuru in 1963, that of Kenya's "white tribe."
He could transcend the limitations of his ethnic bailiwick and was accepted
as the Father of the Nation, symbolized by his popular soubriquet, Mzee (Lonsdale
1986d).
Kenyatta's own political stronghold - Kiambu- had been seriously divided
first by the penetration of capitalism and the monetization of land, labor,
and commodity production, and then by Mau Mau, which was primarily
a protest against increased social differentiation. During the period between
the late 1920s and the late 1950s, the aramati (trustees or leaders
of subclans) and senior lineages of Kikuyu society had cast off their dependents
who became migrant laborers, squatters on
European farms, or a landless rural proletariat. As early as the 1930s,
land had become a scarce resource and clients' and dependents' lineages
were a liability rather than an asset. Kenyatta's political career had been
based on attempting the impossible: articulating the demands of Kikuyu proto-capitalists
for political and economic incorporation while mobilizing the peasantry
as a battering ram to break down the doors protecting the corridors of power,
despite the conflict of interests
between themselves and the possessive individualism of the Kikuyu
elite (Spencer 1985, pp. 145-249; Throup 1983, 1986).3
Since the 1920s, this small alternative elite of progressive farmers and
traders had been complaining about the monopolization of state patronage
by European settlers and the chiefs and their associates. The KAU in the late
1940s had attempted to secure incorporation and to widen the collaborative
basis of the colonial state. The "multiracial" future devised by Whitehall
for East and Central Africa after the war,however, was posited on the continued
paramountcy of European set tier not African peasant production. The transfer
of power in Kenya
was, therefore, bound to be much more difficult than in West Africa.
A few individuals -chiefs, former NCOs in the King's African Rifles, and
a select band of mission-educated schoolteachers and clerks-- could be co-opted
and rewarded but most of Kenyatta's supporters were spurned (Throup 1983,
pp. 47-90, 360-388; Gordon 1977).
Meanwhile, tensions within Kikuyu society, created as much by the protocapitalists
of the KCA as by their rivals for the accumulation of resources--the appointed
chiefs--were bubbling to the surface. In 1942, Harold Macmillan as undersecretary
for the colonies had warned that population pressure in Central Province
and the processes of internal social differentiation would provoke a serious
peasants' revolt within ten years. His timing was impeccable. The crisis was
compounded by
the increased capitalization of European farmers in the White Highlands
who secured guaranteed prices under the wartime marketing agreements with
metropolitan purchasing ministries and had both the financial security and
resources to invest in new equipment and grade cattle, and to replace squatter
labor with imported tractors and combine harvesters from America. This simultaneous
repudiation of their tenants by African "big men” in the Reserves and by
European farmers in the White Highlands destroyed the legitimacy of the colonial
state as a neutral arbitrator, abstracted from the conflicts of the political
arena, and clearly identified it as the servant of one specific interest:
the settlers.
The early 1950s were a dangerous time for Kenyatta and his proto-capitalist
supporters in the KCA. They were being squeezed not simply between the British
and the Mau Mau militants, but were challenged for the leadership of the
Kikuyu masses. Bildad Kaggia, Fred Kubai, Mwangi Macharia, and their radical
trade union associates based in Nairobi saw through Kenyatta's rhetoric and
denounced him and his protocapitalist associates as potential collaborators
(Spencer 1985,
pp.202-249;Kaggia 1975, pp. 78-86, 99-tl5).
Kenyatta's success after independence was to reconcile the interests of
these hitherto antagonistic Kikuyu elites--the KCA and the "loyalists."
Kiano of Murang'a
and Nyagah of Embu had been tempted after the 1961 "Kenyatta Election"
by offers of positions in the cabinet, despite the refusal
of the Kikuyu- and
Luo-dominated KANU coalition to form a government unless Kenyatta was
immediately released. Bernard Mate from Meru, who had been the first African-elected
legislative councillor from Central Province in 1957, had defected to the
Ngala-Blundell multiracial alliance. Kiano and Nyagah had carefully weighed
the short-term attractions of escaping from the political
thrall of Mboya and Odinga, but had recognized that it would be political
suicide to break the ethnic solidarity of Central Province and desert. If
they had done so the nature of Kenyan politics would have been transformed
since it would have meant that the Kikuyu "loyalists," the pro-British, established
protocapitalists would have been in Ngala's KADU, while the Mau Mau would
have remained supporting KANU. Kikuyu ethnic subnationalism would have fallen
apart along class lines, and Kenyatta's task of reconciliation inside his
own bailiwick would have been rendered
impossible
(Gertzel 1970, pp. 28--72; The Times, April 22, 1961, p. 7
and April 24, p. 10).5
From the moment of his return from Maralal he set about subsuming
their rivalries by appealing to Kikuyu ethnic solidarity. Thus, at the
moment of Kenyatta's triumph as leader of Kenyan nationalism, he had
to build a united Kikuyu ethnic subnationalism after the bitter divisions
of the Mau Mau conflict and the colonial regime's social engineering
schemes, to operate from a secure power base. He did this by rewarding
the conflicting factions with government patronage, political and civil
service jobs, and former European farms in the Rift Valley. There were
enough pickings for members of both the former "official" and "unofficial"
Kikuyu elites to share when the carcass of the colonial state was dismembered.
Other ethnic subnationalist leaders and their clients had also to be rewarded,
but the former settler presence ensured that there was enough for all. (Wasserman,
1976; Kenyatta 1968, pp. 167-
217; The Times Kenya Supplement, December 12, 1963).
THE ENLARGEMENT OF KENYA'S COALITION
Kenyatta was sensitive to the need to tie as many prominent local leaders
as possible to his regime, especially in Central Province. Upon his return
from Britain in September 1946, he had set up to secure his own bailiwick
by purchasing land in his mbari (subclan) and by courting the
established local potentates. He had quickly married into both the Koinange
and Muhoho families, who provided the most influential colonial chiefs in
southeast and northeast Kiambu. Both families had successfully acted as intermediaries
between the British and their Kikuyu clients in the 1890s, and had been incorporated
into the colonial structure as chiefs
and headmen. Charles Njonjo, the attorney general throughout Kenyatta's
presidency, Arthur Magugu, and Munyua Waiyaki, who succeeded Mungai as foreign
minister from 1974 to 1979, after having served in the exposed position
of deputy speaker of the National Assembly, were also descendants of prominent
early Kikuyu collaborators who had established large githaka (estates),
and had attracted dependent lineages through their control of trade, first
with the Masai, and
from the 1860s with Swahili caravans and then the British, who skirted
the southern frontier of Kikuyu migration in Kiambu. In this frontier area,
land had not been a scarce resource but had been available for occupation
by those who could construct a sufficiently large following to clear and
stump it, and then, even more importantly, to protect it from the depredations
of their neighbors, not only the Masai and the Machakos Kamba, but often
other Kikuyu mbari. Throughout the co-lonial period the aramati, or leaders
of these mbari, subclans had exercised considerable power and had been incorporated
into the power structure as nominated chiefs.
The Koinange, Njonjo, Magugu, Muhoho,and Waiyaki families and their mbari
alliances remain the key to political control in southern Kikuyuland and
after independence provided most Kiambu members of the cabinet.
Waiyaki's family had initially been the most successful manipulators of
the British presence, but the proximity of the British camp at Fort Smith
to their githaka had posed too severe a strain on his great-grand- father's
control, given the restricted authority of the aramati in Kikuyuland's segmentary
lineage ideology. Relations with the British had deteriorated and eventually
the Waiyakis were discarded. Waiyaki wa
Hinga was deported and died en route to the
coast and exile at Kibwezi. This failed collaborator has,
therefore, entered Ngugi wa Thiongo's pantheon of Kenyan nationalist heroes.
Ngugi, however, is not alone in regarding Waiyaki as a hero. The legend
of his fate has become a potent Kikuyu myth, and consequently it was his
descendant, the Western-trained doctor Munyua Waiyaki, whom Kenyatta sent
to negotiate with Brigadier Mwariama and the remnants of the Mau Mau gangs
who were still hiding in the Mount Kenya forests at independence.
An invented past has its uses in Kikuyu politics
and Munyua Waiyaki’s presence in the government enhanced its legitimacy in
Kiambu even though the family had lost their vast githaka to Kinyanjui wa
Gatherimu at the turn of the century (Muchuha 1967a; Muriuki 1972, pp. 147-154;
Mungeam 1966, p. 12; Ngugi wa Thiong'o 1981,
pp. 45-46).
Besides incorporating representatives of these elite Kikuyu families into
his local coalition, Kenyatta also increased the cohesion of his domestic
constituency by appointing local proconsuls wherever he could not find a
local potentate to incorporate. James Gichuru, his political opponent of the
1940s for control of the elitist KAU, was useful as supervisor of the volatile
Kikuyu communities around Limuru, which were composed of laborers on the
multinational tea plantations and
dispossessed squatters, thrown out of the White Highlands immediately
after World War II under the restrictions imposed on resident labor livestock
and cultivation. Gichuru's high political profile as president of KAU and
as the first president of KANU, while Kenyatta was still in detention, and
his own experience of house arrest during the Emergency contributed to the
legitimation of the regime in this potentially
troublesome area.
Despite the close identification of Kenyatta with Kenya, he was first,
Kikuyu, indeed a Kiambu Kikuyu. Thirty percent of the cabinet were Kikuyu
in 1969, 1974, and even as late as 1979 under Moi. During the last five years
of Kenyatta's life his brother-in-law, Mbiyu Koinange, exerted considerable
power. As minister of state in the Office of the
President he controlled the Provincial Administration and supervised the
paramilitary General Service Unit (GSU). Kenyatta's nephew, Dr. Njeroge Mungai.
was the first defense minister and from 1969 to 1974, foreign minister. Kenyatta
appreciated that he could not incorporate merely his own supporters and
members of the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction. Julius Kiano from Murang'a and Mwai
Kibaki, representative of
Nyeri Kikuyu interests, comprised with Gichuru, Koinange, Njonjo, and
Mungai an inner cabinet, evenly divided
between young technocrats and older, more traditional, Kikuyu politicians
adept at manipulating the labyrinthine entanglements
of local disputes and inter- and intra-mbari
competitiveness (Bienen 1974, pp. 66-81; Lamb 1971. pp·17-53; Goldsworthy
1982b, pp. 207-247; Africa Confidential. February
~978,pp. 1-3).
Once the settlers had been dispatched, the various factions of Kenya's
ethnic subnationalist elites could be included in Kenyatta's coalition, either
by election to the National Assembly or as local councillors, or by appointment
to the civil service, or as directors of parastatals. Loans and land were
available in unprecedented abundance. The dismantling of the colonial state
ensured that Kenyatta had enough resources at
independence to secure the support of both the loyalist and the former
KCA factions. The leaders of Kenya's other ethnic subnationalisms were also
incorporated into the new regime Those who had suffered
proletarianization did less well as the crumbs that reached the masses were
normally secured only by the clients of successful patrons.
The abilities of the Kiambu Kikuyu elite to reward their followers bolstered
their domestic constituency, but in the long term it posed a threat to Kenya's
political stability since it had been secured at the expense of other communities.
The Murang'a and Nyeri elite were much less successful
at securing land and employment for their clients. Moreover, those who challenged
the morality of the system or who appealed to their role in the "Mau Mau
War of Liberation" secured little. Their demands were subversive of the new
political order, which was predicated on the social engineering that had taken
place in Kikuyuland
under cover of the disruption caused by Mau Mau (Abrams 3979; Buijtenhulls
1973, pp. 21-37, 113-149).
Militarily, the British had defeated Mau Mau by October 1956, when Dedan
Kimathi was captured, but the Emergency remained in force until 1960 when
African politicians insisted on its end as one of their preconditions for
attending the first Lancaster House conference. During these months Kikuyu,
Embu, and Meru societies were dramatically restructured to promote the processes
of capitalist accumulation and to foster the development of dynamic, progressive
farmers on secure smallholdings, complete with the title deeds required to
secure loans from commercial banks. The Swynnerton Plan was designed to
create a "yeomanry" of rich peasants, cultivating remunerative cash crops
such as coffee, tea, or pyrethrum, and along with the land consolidation and
registration campaigns provided the essential economic foundations for the
new state, rewarding Kenyatta's ethnic subnationalist constituency of Kikuyu
protocapitalists and their rivals, the chiefs.
In fact, as Cowen (1972, 1976, 1979, 1981) had demonstrated, this belated
acceptance of capitalist forces by the colonial administration slowed down
social differentiation. The issuing of individual titles to all with claims
to land, which the Kikuyu elite had argued for since the 1920s, stymied their
accumulation and limited the displacement of junior lineages and tenants.
Once the poor peasant had a title he was less easy prey to the protocapitalists.
Social pressure, bribery of the Native Tribunals, and manipulation of mbari
customs all became ineffective. Thus, despite the aims of the colonial government,
land consolidation and registration have entrenched the Kikuyu peasantry
on the land since the Swynnerton Plan's encouragement of cash crops, and has
provided poor peasants with the financial resources to sustain the peasant
strategy (Kitching 1980, pp. 315-374).
This, of course, was unclear at independence, but the stability of the
Kenyan state depended on the legitimacy of the Kikuyu land reform. The new
state could not have survived the reopening of the colonial Pandora's box
of land disputes.
Land was available only for reallocation in the former White Highlands,
and by 1963 there were already many claimants. Their contradictory demands
had to be carefully balanced according to the scales of political expediency.
The Kikuyu elite came first; ruffled claimants for office could be assuaged
for some rebuff by an appropriate estate. Reluctant clients could be secured
more firmly to the Kenyatta regime. As part of this process, the most difficult
group of claimants to satisfy and the most dangerous to ignore, the Kikuyu
"have-nots" secured some reward under the British-financed Million Acre Scheme.
LAND AND THE EMERGENCE OF ARAP MOI AS LEADER OF THE KALENJIN
Kenya's population has grown rapidly since the 1920s and since 1963 it
has more than trebled. Moreover, only one-quarter of the country regularly
receives more than 20 millimeters of rain annually, the minimum necessary
to grow grain. Well-watered land is therefore a scarce resource, and Kenyan
politics have revolved around the land issue since World War I.
Much of the country's stability since independence has stemmed from the
reallocation of land in the White Highlands to Africans. Combined with land
consolidation and registration in Central Province in the late 1950s, the
transfer of settler farms in the Rift Valley and Machakos underwrote the
transfer of power and for a generation slowed down the process of rural proletarianization
(World Bank 1981, pp. 112-114; Wasserman 1976, pp. 171-175; Ndegwa 1985,
pp. 140-
143; Weekly Review, January 24, 1986, pp. 17-27; New York
Times, August 11, 1982, p. 23).
The politics of land was perhaps the key question dividing Kenya's ethnic
subnationalisms at independence. Land was the most important reward that
the peasantry expected from their patrons and the new African politicians.
The distribution of this scarce resource underlay most of the ethnic rivalries
at independence and the division between KANU and KADU. Mau Mau had been
a Kikuyu particularist movement for more land. It was essentially a struggle
for control of the White Highlands, where many forest fighters had been born
and raised as second-generation squatters, before their families were dispossessed
after World War II. At independence, however, it was not only the Kikuyu
who had to be incorporated. Kenya's other ethnic subnationalities, particularly
the Kalenjin and the Luhya, had their demands.
Even the Luo were rewarded with settler land in the former Kisumu- Londiani
settled area.
It was over the land question that Arap Moil first revealed his skills
as a political in-fighter. The Tugen are a marginal force in Kenyan politics.
Even within the Kalenjin coalition they are smaller in population and economically
less-developed than the Nandi or Kipsigis.
Following his appointment to the Legislative Council in 1956, Moi had
first become prominent by mobilizing the Tugen in southern Baringo to secure
the transfer of the Lembus Forest and the Essageri salient of settler farms
for Tugen settlement at the expense of the Nandi and Elgeyo. Although Taita
Towett had first raised the issue, he and his rival for the leadership of
the Kalenjin, Seroney, were preoccupied with the threat of Luhya and Luo expansion
on the western frontiers of the Kalenjin, and by their battle for the leadership
of Kalenjin ethnic sub-nationalism. Within the confines of Kaleniin politics,
therefore, Moi and the Tugen emerged as a compromise third force, and slowly
secured Elgeyo and Marakwet support as arbitrators in the conflict between
the Nandi and Kipsigis.
In most respects, however, Moi in 1963 was still less important than Seroney
or Towett. Indeed, the Tugen were marginal to the main political preoccupations
of the Kalenjin, who were primarily concerned about the allocation of land
in the western districts of the White Highlands, particularly Trans-Nzoia
and Uasin Gishu where they were in conflict with Luhya migrants (Sanger and
Nottingham 1964, pp. 20-23; The Times, March 7, 1963,p. 9; May 13, 1963,
pp. 9, 13).
Tugen ambitions were focused on north Nakuru, stretching from Subukia
to Eldama Ravine and the Lembus Forest. This was not a new development in
the 1950s. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, the southern Tugen had been engaged
in "a range war" with European farmers along this lengthy border, and had
regularly encroached on settler land for grazing, water, and salt licks.
In the 1960s, this expansion southward by the Tugen into the northern parts
of Nakuru District threatened to bring them into conflict with settlement
schemes for Kikuyu peasants.
Thus, while the Elgeyo, Marakwet, and Pokot came to regard Moi as a neutral
arbitrator between themselves and the Nandi, and between the Nandi and Kipsigis,
over the western Rift Valley, from the Kikuyu perspective he appeared to
be the most important Kalenjin leader, who had to be compensated elsewhere
if a confrontation was to be averted.
Moi's ambitions had to be diverted away from northern Nakuru to the western
Rift Valley by encouraging him to think as the leader of a united Kalenjin
ethnic subnationalism. He had to be persuaded that the Luhya presented a
much softer target than the Kikuyu (D. Anderson 1982, 1986, pp.l-2, 19-23;
Sanger and Nottingham 1964, pp. 21-23).
Nakuru District and town had been predominantly Kikuyu since the 1920s,
following the influx of squatters into the areas from "Kenia Province"
during World War I to escape from the exactions of the government, nominated
chiefs, and the threat of enlistment for the Carrier Corps
Kalenjin had only moved into the district in large numbers during the
1950s to fill the vacancies created by the large-scale detention and repatriation
of the Kikuyu during Mau Mau. In contrast, Trans-Nzoia and Uasin Gishu and
their urban centers, Kitale and Eldoret, were much more ethnically heterogeneous
societies. No one ethnic group predominated in the way the Kikuyu did in
Nakuru District and throughout the eastern White Highlands. Thus, Kenyatta
was able to direct Moi's ambitions away from Tugen expansion into northern
Nakuru toward the question of Kalenjin expansion into the western Rift Valley
at the expense of the Luhya (Seeley 1985, pp. 54-55, 72- 76; The Times, March
7, 1963, p. 9)·
Both Kalenjin and Luhya claimed possession of Trans-Nzoia, the maize granary
of the White Highlands. The two most prominent leaders of these ethnic subnationalisms,
Moi for the Kalenjin and Masinde Muliro of the Luhya, were supporters of
Ronald Ngala's conservative, regionalist coalition of small ethnic groups--KADU.
The seven Kalenjin “subgroups" had all returned KADU candidates with secure
majorities in both 1961 and 1963.
In contrast, the Luhya had been divided, splitting three ways in 1961,
when Musa Amalemba's Abaluhya Political Union had secured nearly 40 percent
of the vote and had emerged as the dominant political force. Amalemba was
a nominated legislative councillor and had been selected by the British as
the first African minister under the Lyttleton constitution. The Abaluhyia
Political Union, in contrast to the other district-focused parties permitted
under the Lennox-Boyd constitution, chose to become one of the strands of
Michael Blundell's multiracial coalition, whose mainstay were the liberal
Europeans of the New Kenya Group. Instead of attempting to establish a niche
within the nationalist coalition, they became the most important African element
in this last-ditch attempt by Kenya’s settlers to preserve some political
role in the transfer of power. Luhya ethnic subnationalism, therefore, lacked
legitimacy in the opinion of the wider African political nation once the
focus of competition switched from the district-oriented politics of accommodation,
which had dominated the
1950s, to the nationally orchestrated campaign by multi-ethnic coalitions
for control of the central bastions of the colonial state.
As a nominated minister, moreover, Amalemba was too closely identified
with the colonial regime and even among the Luhyia was unable to extend his
support beyond his home area in the south of the region. Muliro's election
in 1957 to the Legislative Council with the support of the northern and eastern
locations ensured that he automatically became the most senior legitimate
nationalist politician from North Nyanza and Elgon Nyanza. This position
was bolstered by his conspicuous national political role as effective deputy
leader and national organizing secretary of KADU (Bennett and Rosberg 1961.
pp- :-1-174)."
By refusing to fit neatly into either the, KANU or KADU coalitions and
remaining loyal to their locally focused ethnic subnationalism, the Luhya
were isolated from the mainstream of Kenyan politics and despite Muliro's
attempts to drag them into the contest for central resources, their domestic
political rivalries undermined their potential collective strength as Kenya's
third largest ethnic group. Thus, as the contest to inherit the colonial
state gathered momentum, Muliro had to fight with one arm tied behind his
back against a Kalenjin community united behind Moi. The failure of the Luhya
to plump for KANU or KADU weakened Muliro's bargaining position as their perceived
ethnic leader. He therefore failed to secure Kitale as the capital of the
Western Region, the center of a discrete Luhya-controlled polity under the
Majimbo constitution
Moi provided to be a hard-headed political realist. Throughout his career,
until perhaps Njonjo's carefully orchestrated fall from power in 1983, Moi's
rivals have underestimated his skills as a political tactician. In fact,
at three stages in his career Moi has demonstrated consummate ability to survive
the dirtiest political infighting. He is a master of back-room coalition-building·
This was first demonstrated in 1963-64, when he secured Kenyatta's support
for Kalenjin, not Luhya, primacy in Trans-Nzoia and Uasin Gishu. During the
politics of state formation the Kalenjin, united behind Moi, were a more
important element in the political nation than Muliro s divided Luhya. Moi's
maneuvering to secure land for the Kalenjin at the expense of the Luhya severely
strained the internal balance of power within KADU, to which both Moi and
Muliro belonged. Their dispute paved the way to the party's dissolution in
November 1961 and its absorption within Kenyatta's governing coalition. A
political bargain seems to have been struck whereby the Kalenjin would secure
access to the former White Highlands in return for destroying the logic of
KADU's anti-Kikuyu coalition. These timely concessions
at the expense of the divided Luhya had the additional advantage as far as
Kenyatta was concerned of diverting Tugen ambitions from the Subukia area
where their encroachment clashed with Kikuyu expansion from Naivasha and
Nakuru and enabled the former Kikuyu squatters to become firmly entrenched.
THE POLITICS OF THE VICE-PRESIDENCY
After the demise of Odinga in March 1966, the vice-presidency had been
entrusted to two marginal politicians. Kenyatta's first choice, Joe Murumbi,
was the child of an Asian-Masai marriage and had a European wife. He represented
the ethnicaIly mixed constituency of Langata, which included not only the
plush European suburb of Karen, but also the old Nubian settlement at Kibera
that in the 1970s became Nairobi's second largest shantytown. Within nine
months Murumbi had abandoned the contest against the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction.
As an intelligent, articulate politician he represented, as Mboya and Kariuki
were to do later, too powerful an antagonist to have been permitted to survive.
Moreover, he had radical tendencies, and from 1963 to 1966 he had been
associated with most of the intrigues of Odinga's group against Mboya and
KANU's procapitalist leadership. Murumbi's appointment was an attempt by
Kenyatta to minimize defections to the KPU by convincing those radicals, especially
the non-Luo who had not become completely alienated from the regime, that
their interests would best be served by remaining within the governing
party. In December 1966.
Murumbi resigned, ostensibly to devote his energies to business, but in
fact to escape from his Kikuyu political enemies (Goldsworthy 1982b, pp.
237, 241, 247; Hornsby 1986, pp. 10-15).7
His successor as vice-president in January 1967, Daniel Arap Moi, was
a cautious politician who had never been identified with the radical populists.
He had shown himself during the scramble for the White Highlands to be an
effective
spokesman for Kalenjin interests, willing to endanger the cohesion of
KADU for the advantage of his ethnic constituency. KADU had never recovered
from these self-inflicted wounds, and Moi had been rewarded at the merger
with KANU in November 1964 with the most senior position in the cabinet offered
to the new recruits. These two incidents had demonstrated Moi's intuitive
political skill. In addition, as vice-
president he brought to the weakened government the support of the non-kikuyu
parts of the Rift Valley and delivered the Kalenjin to the ruling coalition.
Moi did not, however, appear to be a formidable new challenger to the
dominant Kiambu faction. He had been a member of the National Assembly since
1956, and was the only survivor from the colonial generation of nominated
African members. but had rarely attracted popular attention. His unimpressive
personality, halting English, and weak grasp of the complexities of government
were to prove political
assets. The Kiambaa-Gatundu faction regarded Tom Mboya and J.M. Kariuki
as much more serious challengers to their domination of the Kenyatta State.
Koinange, Mboya, Mungai. Kibaki, and Njonjo, all exercised more influence
within the government than Moi, whose ministerial portfolio was whittled
away with the transfer of control over the police to Mbiyu Koinange in the
Office of the President. As the years passed, powerful contenders for the
succession died or lost their
seats, until by 1976 Moi's survival as vice-president had transformed
the situation. Despite the fact that he had little power within the cabinet
and could not even enter Nakuru without running a gauntlet of police roadblocks,
his political longevity ensured that he had become the candidate whom the
Kikuyu had to stop. During these years he had avoided controversy and accepted
every political humiliation from his
Kiambu rivals, but he had also constructed a formidable network of supporters
who were equally disillusioned with the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction (Goldsworthy
1982b, PP 268-270; Hornsby 1986, pp 10-15; Karimi and Ochieng 1980, pp 3-S1;Africa
Confidential, various issues, 1978)
Kenyan politics is held together both at the national level of competition
between its ethnic subnationalities and in the districts by a complex series
of interlinking patron-client relationships.
Kenyatta's unique legitimacy was derived from his role as the founder
of its populist political ideology, and as the leader of nationalist action
in the colonial period, at both the Kenyan nationalist and Kikuyu subnationalist
levels. Moi lacked such legitimacy in the political maneuvering before Kenyatta’s
death, these proved to be advantages, since everyone who had been antagonized
by the Kiambu hegemony and opposed a
"family" succession could agree to support Moi. He appeared open to influence
and unlikely to claim for himself more than the role of primus inter pores.
Moreover, although vice-president, he had avoided becoming identified with
unpopular government actions and was not held responsible for its errors,
such as the death of JM Kariuki.
The various opposition factions gradually came to regard Moi as a candidate
with whom they could deal. He assiduously courted such potential recruits,
particularly disgruntled Kikuyu whose support was essential if he was to
assuage the doubts at all levels of Kikuyu society about the wisdom of letting
power slip from their grasp. His task was eased by the support of Kibaki and
Njonjo, the two most influential Kikuyu technocrats in the cabinet, and by
Kenyatta's enigmatic neutrality.
During Kenyatta's last years, the Kiambu hierarchy divided into two factions.
The first group, which contained most, but not all, of the
immediate family, and the majority of Kiambu politicians and businessmen,
wished to ensure a Kikuyu, and if possible, a "family" succession. Until
his unanticipated electoral defeat at Dagoretti in 1974 by Dr.Johnstone Muthiora,
the foreign minister, Njoroge Mungai, had been the favored candidate. His
defeat left the "family" without an agreed choice. The obvious alternative,
Mbiyu Koinange, at 70 was too old and would outlive Kenyatta by only three
years. Koinange had also made too many enemies during his long career in
both pre-and post- independence politics. As minister of state in the Office
of the President responsible for overseeing provincial Administration and
the GSU, his name had figured prominently in the Kariuki enquiry. A sinister
back-room figure, adept in the Byzantine subclan intrigues of Kikuyu politics,
who reflected the traditionalist side of Kenyatta's character, Koinange was
feared more than he was respected, and he found it virtually impossible to
construct a Kikuyu coalition, let alone a multiethnic one (Karimi and Ochieng
1980, pp. 65--67; Kareithi and Ng'weno 1S7Sa, pp. 41-45)
Kenyatta's own attitude was ambiguous. The "family" assumed that he would
wish to preserve their wealth and authority, but in his lucid moments, which
became rarer as he grew older, Kenyatta remained a shrewd political tactician.
He appears to have recognized the need to divert criticism away from his
family and to reduce the concentration of development schemes on Kiambu in
particular, and Kikuyuland in general. Encouraged by Charles Njonjo
and Mwai Kibaki, he sought to ensure political stability after his death by
bringing other regions and ethnic subnationalities into his coalition. This
process of incorporation was facilitated by the boom in world coffee prices
in the mid-1970s as money became available for new development projects outside
Kikuyuland. The appearance, if not the reality, of power had to be devolved.
Non-Kikuyu had to share some of the political power and secure
some of the rewards of the statist economy in order to protect the long-term
hegemonic position of the Kikuyu within Kenya's political economy.
Two of Kenyatta’s key advisers, Charles Njonjo and Mwai Kibaki encouraged
these thoughts. Neither of them was a member of the Kiambaa- Gatundu axis,
both were members of a second, more technocratic faction.
Kibaki comes from Othaya in Nyeri and Njonjo from Kikuyu in southwest
Kiambu. Along with Mbiyu Koinange, they were Kenyatta's closest advisers,
but while Koinange supervised the provincial administration and the shifting
factions of Kikuyu politics, holding the paramilitary GSU in reserve whenever
more heavy-handed tactics were required, Kibaki and Njonjo were technocrats.
They operated the economy and ensured that the due processes of the law favored
the regime as minister of finance and attorney general. Kibaki had been
admitted to the inner circle because of his skills as an academic economist
and because the Nyeri Kikuyu required one powerful representative in the
cabinet. Intellectually; he was probably the most able
man in the government, although inclined to periodic bouts of lassitude (Weekly
Review, September 15, 1978, pp. 2-6; October 6, 1978, pp. 9-13: and
October 13, 1978, pp. 10-17).
In contrast, Njonjo's attributes were more pedestrian, but over the years
he had secured the reputation of being the defender of Kenya's Asian and
European communities, who were believed by Western governments and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) to be indispensable to the efficient operation of the
economy. Njonjo became a symbol of Kenya's political stability and commitment
to capitalism, which attracted further foreign investment. Moreover, Njonjo
had one additional major political asset, which despite his occasional disputes
with the Kiambaa-Gatundu "family" faction made him indispensable to Kenyatta.
He was the son of Josiah Njonjo, who since the early 1920s had controlled
the segmentary lineage-based politics of southwestern Kiambu following the
death of Kinyanjui wa Gatherimu. Kenyatta's marriage alliances in the late
1940s had secured his ties with the Koinanges of Kiambaa and the Muhohos
in Mukinyi, but Dagoretti Division had remained outside his control. Political
patronage in this area of Kiambu even in the 1960s could be operated only
in cooperation with Josiah Njonjo's established network. As a result, Josiah's
son Charles was rewarded with the post of attorney general and a seat
in the cabinet.
Yet although Njonjo came from Kiambu, he was never a member of the "magic
circle" around the "family," who resented his influence with Kenyatta (Weekly
Review, October 13, 1978, p. 7; April 18, 1980, p. 10; June 6, 1980,
pp. 4-5; September 16, 1983, pp. 7-9; September 30, 1983, pp 5-7; Clough
1977, pp 17-18, 138, 142, 227, 238-241).
THE MBOYA AND KARIUKI ASSASSINATIONS
The Kiambaa-Gatundu faction made two serious political mistakes. Under
attack in 1969 and 1975, first from outside Kikuyu subnationalism from Tom
Mboya, and then from inside by Josiah Mwangi Kariuki, they had overreacted
politically and there is at least partial evidence indicating that they were
not entirely without some responsibility for the assassinations of Mboya
and Kariuki. On both occasions the drastic solution had rebounded and provoked
widespread opposition and had severely damaged the regime's internal stability
and its international
Reputation. Alone among the cabinet, Kibaki had distanced
himself from the Kiambaa-Gatundu bloc and had attended his friends' funerals.
Mboya had posed a challenge at two levels. His following in the trade unions
and his childhood on a sisal estate on the borders of Machakos and Kiambu,
which enabled him to converse colloquially in Gikuyu and Kikamba as well
as in Swahili and Dholuo, meant that he was able to secure support from outside
his own ethnically restricted subnationality. More than perhaps any other
politician, Mboya had a Kenya-wide following. In his ethnically mixed Nairobi
constituency, Kikuyu out-numbered Luo, but Mboya had demonstrated his ability
to secure their support. His international reputation and his close relationship
with the American labor organizations, dating from the 1950s, and his network
of former "airlift'' students, who had benefited from his patronage, meant
that he could not be isolated like Odinga and Kaggia by allegations of socialist
tendencies. Moreover, as minister of economic planning, Mboya had been instrumental
in the preparation and publicizing of Kenya's official statement of commitment
to capitalism, the misleadingly named "Sessional Paper on African Socialism."
At the national level, therefore, Mboya appeared to threaten the position
of the Kiambu elite, which was based on their successful manipulation of
Kikuyu ethnic subnationalism, and more capable than anyone else of undermining
it with an appeal to Kenyan national solidarity (Otiende 1969, P· 35;
The Standard, October 14, 1969 and November 25, 1969; Goldsworthy 1982b,
pp. 267-275. 284-285).
In terms of Nairobi local politics, Mboya stood in the path of Charles
Rubia, the city's first African mayor, who had ambitions of securing a parliamentary
seat. Rubia's power base in the City Council was in Mboya's Starehe constituency,
and he recognized that although an appeal to Kikuyu subnationalism, or indeed
the particularist interests of Murang'a migrant workers in Nairobi, might
work in city council elections, it would not succeed against Mboya. Both
the Kiambu hierarchy and Rubia's Murang'a-Nairobi- based factions were eager
to remove Mboya and either might have been sufficiently unscrupulous to have
arranged his assassination (Goldsworthy 1982b, pp. 267-275, 284-285).
J. M. Kariuki was a threat to the Kenyatta State because he was attempting
to subvert Kikuyu subnationalism from within. Whereas Mboya or Odinga, as
Luos, had been compelled by their ethnicity to work from the outside and
secure support by their populist rhetoric or trade union past, Kariuki was
a former Mau Mau detainee and could challenge the authority of the Kiambu
elite by mobilizing a populist Kikuyu following of discontented former Mau
Mau and by appealing to particularist rivalries among the Kikuyu. In a conflict
within the Kikuyu community, Kariuki threatened to mobilize the rest against
Kiambu by emphasizing the unequal distribution of state resources, and to
destroy the stability of the regime from within Kenyatta's political bailiwick.
Kenyatta, of course, had attempted to ensure that Nyeri and Murang'a benefited
from development and welfare schemes as much as Kiambu, and that the Kamba,
with their important position in the senior officer corps and in the army's
ranks, and the Embu and Meru also prospered.
Political power, however, and the distribution of economic rewards and
development measures, was concentrated in the hands of loyal Kiambu Kikuyu.
While Murang`a. Nyeri, Embu, Meru, Machakos, and Kitui had only one cabinet
minister each under Kenyatta, Kiambu MPs occupied six key government ministries.
Gichuru had been minister of finance from 1963 to 1969, and then served as
minister of defense from1969 to 1979, replacing Mungai who became foreign
minister from 1969 to 1974 before being succeeded by Munyua Waiyaki. Thus,
with Koinange as minister of state and Njonjo as attorney general, five of
the key posts in the government were held throughout Kenyatta's presidency
by Kiambu Kikuyu, and for the first half of his rule so was the ministry
of finance until it was transferred to the politically reliable
academic Kibaki in 1969.
Kariuki was murdered because he was drawing attention to the hegemonic
position of the Kiambu Kikuyu and to the privileged position of the Kikuyu
capitalists. By mobilizing successfully these divisions
within the Kikuyu, Kariuki threatened to destroy Kenyatta's political base
among the peasantry. Kariuki himself was as acquisitive as any other member
of the Kikuyu elite, and had bought a large farm and considerable business
interests, including a major shareholding in the Nairobi International Casino.
He was an unlikely hero for the nation's poor, a "WaBenzi" with a flamboyantly
extravagant life-style. Kariuki, however, like Kenyatta
was a powerful stump orator, especially in Kikuyu, and his simple message,
attacking social inequalities, had considerable impact in Nyeri, Nyandarua,
and the other forgotten parts of Kikuyuland.
MOI'S SEARCH FOR KIKUYU LEGITIMATION
In a much quieter way Moi was involved in a similar task during the 1970s.
If he was to secure the presidency when Kenyatta died he needed to have the
support of as many Kikuyu local factions as possible to block a candidate
from the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction. Like J.M Kariuki, he had to base his strategy
on emphasizing the divisions within the Kikuyu polity and dislodging Nyeri
and Nyandarua, and if possible Murang'a and Nakuru, from the Kiambu-dominated
alliance. In Murang'a he made little progress since his main supporter in
the area, Kiano, was under attack from the representatives of Kikuyu capitalism
and could not afford to become too losely identified with Moi and his chief
Kikuyu "election agent," Njonjo.
The rival Matiba faction also chose to remain aloof from national political
alliances. As successful capitalists they were in many respects natural supporters
of the “Change the Constitution” faction, who were fighting to preserve
Kikuyu hegemony and represented the interests of Kikuyu capitalism Matiba
and his associates, however, were wary of becoming mere clients of their
Kiambu rivals, who dominated the movement, especially when Kiano had not
completely severed his ties with individual members of this group and committed
himself wholeheartedly
to the pro-Moi coalition. Both local factions in Murang'a, in fact, were
attempting to keep open their political options and to avoid fore-closing
the opportunity of using either national group to bolster their own local
position. Neither leader wished to disrupt his own local constituency by
supporting one of the rival national factions, since both Matiba and Kiano
had associates on both sides of the national political struggle.
Moi was much more successful in Nyeri and the Rift Valley. Kibaki's role
in dislodging Nyeri from the “Change the Constitution” group was vital, and
earned him the vice-presidency, Once Kibaki retreated from Bahati, his Nairobi
constituency to his home district in 1974, Moi began to court Nyeri support.
He regularly attended harambee meetings in the district and held various
private sessions with local politicians whom he encouraged to become less
dependent on the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction. Kibaki's support in 1978
was a crucial element in Moi's accession to the
presidency. A united Kikuyu opposition might well have been able to thwart
his ambitions even at this late stage.
Moi's most difficult task was in Nakuru, where he has managed to reconcile
the conflicting interests of his own Tugen people with those of disillusioned
Kikuyu. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Moi's strongest opponents came from
this district.
They had planned to dispatch him in the same way as Mboya and J. M. Kariuki.
Today the new Kikuyu political leaders in Nakuru, Chotara and Kubai are among
Moi's staunchest supporters and play an essential role in the president's
efforts to legitimize his authority among the Kikuyu.
MOI'S KALENJIN COALITION
As noted, Moi's emergence as the leading Kalenjin politician was achieved
not merely at the expense of the Luhya and KADU, but also of the southern
Tugen. The problem of reaching an agreement with the Kikuyu
over north Nakuru and the demarcation of the frontier between their respective
spheres of influence had required Moi, quite literally, to give ground along
the Subukia-Eldama Ravine border. As a result, his hold over southern Baringo
was weakened. In the late 1950s and early 1960s these southern locations
had been an important element in his political following - especially once
they had been rewarded by the acquisition of the Lembus Forest and Essageri
farms--but as Moi's national political ambitions developed the frontier, Tugen
became increasingly concerned. They feared that Moi, who comes from central
Baringo, might be willing to sacrifice their interests to ingratiate himself
with Kenyatta and to promote his own ambitions. Popular support for Moi over
the last 20 years had been weaker along this Tugen southern frontier than
elsewhere in Baringo. The Elgeyo and the Marakwet have
become more firmly incorporated into his coalition than the Tugen in south
Baringo, who are wary of his leadership.
In central and northern Baringo and in Elgeyo-Marakwet, Moi is firmly
entrenched. His longevity as the dominant politician in the region since
1956 has enabled him to construct an effective political machine. Clan control
among the Tugen, Elgeyo, and Marakwet is very weak and Moi has operated
through a personal network of old school friends, business associates,
and small-time entrepreneurs- -his peer group when he was a village schoolmaster
in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Many of his local lieutenants are not
directly involved in elective politics but they control a powerful patronage
system. His friend "Sadala," known as "the Mayor of Kabarnet," for example,
oversees patronage in south and central Baringo, while Cheboiwo, the member
of Parliament (MP) for Baringo North, operates the system in the northern
locations and is widely believed to be a "front man" for Moi's business
interests in the area and in the Mombasa Peugeot Service. For the last 30
years few measures have succeeded in Baringo without Moi's support. Even
as vice-president he dominated the district administration, and district
commissioners hostile to Moi's interests were quickly removed. He is widely
respected throughout the district for the development schemes he has brought.
The new road, new employment opportunities at Marigat, irrigation, and
agricultural betterment programs have all enhanced support for Moi in his
bailiwick. Political opponents have been excluded from the rewards stemming
from his patronage and their support has withered away since it pays to be
"a Nyayo man" (personal interviews).
Eric Bomett, the brother of Moi's estranged wife, in south Baringo during
the late 1960s, and Zephaniah Kipkebut Chepkonga, in the north in the late
1970s, challenged Moi's authority and have secured considerable support by
promoting local issues. Moi's popularity is weakest in the southern locations
because of the macro-political compromises he has made with the Kikuyu over
Nakuru, both in the Kenyatta era and in recent years when Kariuki Chotara,
the Nakuru District KANU chairman, has provided an important element in
the president's attempts to secure political legitimation among the Kikuyu
poor. His weak standing in south Baringo has been further undermined since
1980 by land adjudication, which has aroused intense local conflict. People
have returned to the district as in Central Province during the 1950s to assert
claims dating back 50 years. As this process moves gradually northward, Moi's
domestic power base is being disrupted and his lieutenants are being dragged
into local land squabbles that discredit their patron. The president has
no alternative but to ride it out and hope for a return to tranquility in
a few years. Aware of these problems, early in 1986 Moi restored his
relationship with Bomett and secured Chotara's support for his election as
member of Parliament for Nakuru North where the defeated Kikuyu candidates
alleged that the district administration had intervened to secure the victory
of the president's brother-in-law.
In contrast to central and southern Baringo, the northern part of the
district is ethnically mixed as many Pokot have moved
into the area. Opposition to Moi's henchman, Cheboiwo, who is regarded as
a political nonentity, since the late 1970s has centered around Zephaniah
Chepkonga. Chepkonga encountered considerable obstruction from the administration
and the police during the 1979 election campaign, disguising himself as a
woman to evade police roadblocks so that he could
present his nomination papers. The regime moved swiftly to overturn the
1979 result in an election petition to the High Court, and Chepkonga is
widely believed
to have been prevented by the authorities from presenting his nomination
papers. Cheboiwo was elected unopposed at the by-election and Chepkonga
was so frustrated that he did not attempt to contest the 1983 election
when Cheboiwo won again on a very high poll. Given the comparative backwardness
of the constituency and the
turnout in the surrounding seats, one student of elections has suggested
that there may have been widespread irregularities in the poll. Certainly,
many local inhabitants doubt the legitimacy of Cheboiwo's election, and Chepkonga
is respected for having challenged the system. Yet despite these local tensions,
Moi's bailiwick will remain loyal and reconciled to his political associates
while he remains president and
can direct government patronage on an unprecedented scale to Baringo
The weakest links in Moi's Kalenjin coalition are probably the Nandi,
among whom the erudite lawyer JM Seroney for many years established an independent
bailiwick with his populist rhetoric. Since independence, many landless Nandi
have migrated to Eldoret in the former European settled area of Uasin Gishu,
where they have clashed with Nandi capitalists and Moi's supporters from
the smaller ethnic groups within the Kalenjin coalition. It is in Eldoret,
therefore, that the strains within the president's own constituency between
various local elite factions and incipient class interests are most evident.
Uasin Gishu District politics shows how weak Moi's power
base is and how easily it could disintegrate. Eldoret is one of Kenya's fastest
growing towns, expanding from 18,196 inhabitants in 1969 to an estimated
100,000 today. At independence, the two dominant African groups were the
Luhya and the Kikuyu, both of whom had over 5,000 members in the town, followed
by nearly 2,000 Luo and only 1,200 Kalenjin. Kikuyu and Asian businessmen
dominated commercial life throughout the 1960s, but as Kikuyu control of Nakuru
became more absolute, the Kalenjin began to focus their ambitions on Eldoret.
Even the Tugen from Baringo, close to Nakuru, have switched their business
interests in the 1970s to Eldoret and have acquired European and Asian enterprises
and farms in Uasin Gishu.
The town reflects in microcosm many of the changes that have occurred
at the national level since Moi's accession to power in 1978.
The council has been polarized between Kalenjin and Kikuyu interests,
and Kalenjin "big men," fronted by Kipchoge Keino, the Olympic athlete,
have invested heavily in farming land. Local politics is based on this conflict
between Kalenjin and Kikuyu for control of the town council and the two parliamentary
seats. In the 1960s the Kikuyu and the Luhya dominated politics in Eldoret·
At independence, for example, there were no Kalenjin councillors, but during
the 1970s the Kalenjin have asserted their primacy and have captured all
the key positions.
As they have become numerically dominant, however, their ethnic coalition
has splintered into three factions, partly along sub-ethnic and partly on
class lines. This explains the volatility of Eldoret politics and the sensitivity
of the government to research in the area.
There are three major Kalenjin factions--the Nandi poor and elite, and
the other Kalenjin people. The Nandi poor are led by Chelegat Mutai (the
MP for Eldoret North in 1974-76 and 1979-81) and her uncle, William Murape
arap Saina, who represented the constituency from 1969 to 1974, and was reelected
in 1983. Faced by a land crisis in Nandi, highlighted by violent clashes
against Luhya encroachment around Kapsabet
on the frontier between the two ethnic groups and Seroney's district, the
poor have moved into the shanty areas surrounding the town.
Eldoret North, Mutai's constituency, contains several peri-urban squatter
settlements just outside the town boundary. These have grown dramatically
over the last decade and are scheduled for demolition as land prices inside
the town rise. These sites have become attractive for speculative development.
Their inhabitants are an unpredictable but major element in local politics.
In contrast, Eldoret South has been controlled by Nandi protocapitalists,
who for many years supported Charles Murgor until his defeat in 1983.
The third faction, which has become progressively more important and captured
Eldoret South at the last election, is a coalition of the smaller Kalenjin
groups, particularly the Tugen, Elgeyo, and Marakwet.
Their most important leader is the mayor, a Tugen, Joseph Lesiew, who
has held office since 1974. Lesiew comes from a comparatively privileged
background His family were among the first Roman Catholic converts in Baringo,
and he received a mission school education. The mayor has good political
contacts in Nairobi through his uncle who is a friend of Moi. Since moving
to Eldoret in the early 1960s, Lesiew has prospered as a businessman and
is part owner of a hotel, a shareholder in the leading Asian-run pharmacy
in the town, and the owner of a wine store, a farm, and other property. His
position as councillor, and since 1974 as mayor, have provided useful business
contacts that have enabled him to entrench his economic and political positions.
The Nandi, the largest Kalenjin subgroup
in the town, have remained aloof from this pro-Moi camp, and in the 1970s
looked to Seroney for leadership. Despite the fact that Nandi politics is
riven by highly localized,
subclan factions, as is evident from the competitive mobilization of the
peasantry for harambee projects, arap Saina and Chelegat Mutai have constructed
a resilient political alliance of Eldoret's Nandi ''have-nots, '' which has
won the last four general elections in Eldoret South despite harassment from
Moi's associates.
MOI'S PROMOTION OF KALENJIN INTERESTS AT THE EXPENSE OF THE KIKUYU
The years since Moi came to power have been difficult for many African
economies, following the second major increase in oil prices in 1979 and
a continuing decline until recently in the value of their commodity exports,
such as tea and coffee, which provide 40 percent of Kenya's foreign exchange.
Kenya's economy, moreover, has not been sufficiently broadly based to escape
the international depression. The
Kenyan state, under pressure from the IMF, has had to retrench and
since the attempted coup of August 1, 1982, has reassessed its policies
toward the promotion of inefficient import substitution industries protected
by high tariffs, the expense of peasant agriculture. Prices for peasant
produce, the exchange rate, and import licensing policy have all been rethought
as has the position of the parastatals, a major source of political patronage
under Kenyatta. Since the 1982 report by Philip Ndegwa on government expenditure,
stricter controls on government spending and domestic borrowing have increased
gold and convertible currency reserves from a low of 1.7 billion shillings
at the end of 1982 to over 4 billion, which provides a reasonable three-month
import cover.
Kenya, after certain delays, also met the requirements of the World Bank's
first and second structural adjustment loans negotiated in April 1983. The
third expected loan, however, encountered delays because the World Bank was
concerned about the collapse of the Kenya Farmer's Association (KFA) and
the undefined role of the Grain Growers' Co-operative. In addition, Kenya
failed to meet the free importation of essential items on "List 1A".
The 1984 drought had a serious destabilizing effect. Emergency imports
were required until June 1985, and there was a serious shortage of seeds
and fertilizers for the 1985 long rains, although the National Cereal Board
and the task force headed by Professor Terry Ryan originally in the
Treasury, and now under Robert Ouko in the revived Ministry of Economic Planning,
distributed relief grain imports effectively, despite inefficiencies within
the Ministry of Agriculture and the fact that the quantity to be distributed
was 14 times greater than Kenya had ever needed before.
Since coming to power, Moi has undermined the stability of his regime
by attempting to destroy Kikuyu hegemony
and to dismantle the economic foundations of the Kenyatta State under the
disguise of the Nyayo philosophy. Government patronage has been diverted
from Kiambu, and to a lesser extent Muranga, and directed toward Kalenjin
districts, although Kibaki has effectively protected Nyeri. Kikuyu busi-
nessmen have been squeezed as state finance houses, such as Andrew Ngumba's
Rural and Urban Credit Finance Company, have collapsed when they have been
unable to call on their associates in the government to bail them out. Kenya’s
economic difficulties have justified these changes but they have increased
popular discontent and have made Moi acutely conscious of Kikuyu opposition.
During the Kenyatta era political repression fluctuated. There were three
distinct phases of reaction: the era of the Shifta War against Somali irredentists
in 1963-64, the detention of the KPU's leadership following the murder of
Tom Mboya and the events at Kisumu in October 1969, and the persecution of
the Kariuki populists after March 1975. Mueller (1984, pp 399-400) has recorded
how the provincial administration ,systematically obstructed the KPU and
has argued that it was KANU's "monopoly of key coercive sanctions and economic
resources... in-
herited from the colonial period and consolidated afterwards, rather
than the KPU's ethnic base among the Luo, that really explains the party's
demise." Although Mboya's murder and the banning of the KPU provided the
Kenyatta regime with its first serious crisis, apart from Odinga's resignation
in March 1966 which the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction and their ally, Mboya, had
themselves provoked--it was the "Kariuki affair" that most disturbed the
government since it endangered the stability of the faction's own political
bailiwick among the Kikuyu.
The regime's reaction was swift. Jean-Marie Seroney and Martin Shikuku
disappeared into detention and criminal prosecutions were brought against
Mark Mwithaga and Chelegat Mutai. Kenyatta's regime never recovered its self-confidence
and subsequent manifestations of left-wing or populist discontent were rapidly
crushed. Thus, when George Anyona, who had provided a one-man opposition
in the National Assembly, queried the renegotiation of a major railway project
in 1977, incriminating Njonjo, he was detained, and Ngugi wa Thiong'o followed
in December 1977, after the banning of his Kikuyu language production of
“I Will Marry When I Want” at the Kamirithu village theater, which
attacked land grabbing by the petite bourgeoisie of middle- and large-scale
farmers and traders.
Following his accession to the presidency, Moi attempted to end these
divisions, releasing all Kenya's detainees at the Uhuru Day celebrations
on December 12, 1978. Even some of the former KPU leaders were rehabilitated
and Odinga was appointed chairman first of the Cotton Lint and Seed Board
and then of the more important Maize Board, while Achieng Oneko became chairman
of the Kenya Film Corporation. Moi's first error was made when KANU headquarters
refused to clear Odinga and his KPU associates to contest the September 1979
general election. This sent students at the University of Nairobi on to
the streets for the first time under the new government.
The following year was bleak. Confronted with acute
economic difficulties as expenditure on oil rose to 40 percent of imports
while prices for Kenya's tea and coffee exports declined, corruption within
the Ministry of Agriculture and the Maize Marketing Board further diminished
the regime's legitimacy. Lines for posho appeared in Nairobi
and before the long rains of March-May 1981, rumors of a coup became wide-spread.
Moi's refusal to dismiss Nyagah, the minister of agriculture responsible
for the grain fiasco, demonstrated a reluctance to tackle corruption within
the government and the civil service. Moi and Njonjo attempted to divert
criticism by denouncing subversive elements,
concentrating their attacks on the promoters of "foreign ideologies” in
the university.
Meanwhile, the Kikuyu were becoming alarmed as under cover of the economic
decline and Nyayoism, Moi diverted resources away from Central Province to
the Kalenjin. The demise of the Gikuyu-Embu- Meru Association
(GEMA) in 1980 along with other "ethnic" associations, which were held to
divide Kenyans, exemplified the new regime's gradual undermining of the
essential institutions of the Kenyatta State. The Kikuyu capitalists, however,
were able to safeguard their interests in the reconstituted Agricultural
and Industrial Holdings Ltd. Middle-ranking Kikuyu officials, civil servants,
and parastatal managers, in contrast, found themselves overtaken by less-qualified
Kalenjin or other members of Moi's coalition. These processes have accelerated
since the coup, presided over by Simeon Nyachae, who replaced Njonjo’ss associate,
Jeremiah Kiereini, as chief secretary and head of the civil service.
The composition of the new government after the September 1979 elections
provided the first dramatic indication of Moi's ambitions to institutionalize
Kalenjin capitalism through political power and state patronage.
Although only two Kalenjin were appointed
to the cabinet, Henry Kosgey and Dr. Jonathan Ng'eno, six became assistant
ministers: Wilberforce arap Kisiero,Francis Lotodo. Stanley
Kiptoo Metto. Edward Cherutich Kiptanui Mulwa, Charles Murgor, and Isaac
Salaat. Several also rewarded, such as Elijah Mwangale, whom the new regime
has attempted to install as leader of the Luhya instead of the discredited
Masinde Muliro, and Moses Mudavadi, Moi's brother-in-law, who both became
cabinet ministers, and Mark Mwithaga, now out of jail, who was incorporated
as the most senior member of the anti-Ngwataniro Kikuyu from Nakuru District
to have secured election.
During the past six years a Kalenjin-dominated inner cabinet has developed,
excluding Kibaki and the other Kikuyu ministers. It contains Isaac Salaat
(Moi's former bodyguard), now an assistant minister in the Office of the
President, and Aaron Kandie, another Tugen, who has been appointed director
of personnel. Other prominent Kalenjin ministers are Nicholas Biwott (Moi's
former political secretary), Henry Kosgey, Jonathan Ng'eno, Henry Cheboiwo
(Moi's henchman in northern Baringo and another Tugen), Edward Kiptanui, and
Stanley Metto.
Whereas the Kikuyu held 30 percent of cabinet posts throughout Kenyatta's
rule, they have now fallen to four full cabinet ministers--Kibaki, Matiba,
Magugu, and Maina Wanjigi--that is, one for each of the three main Kikuyu
Districts plus Nairobi, and eight junior positions. In the meantime, the
number of Kalenjin ministers has nearly doubled from 9 to 17 percent.
The president has also advanced Kalenjin interests through his control
of parastatal appointments and by exerting pressure on private industry,
particularly Asian and multinational interests. His former Kalenjin rival,
the Kipsigis Taita Towett, for example, replaced Eliud Mathu as head of Kenya
Airways; Vincent arap Too of the Grain Growers' Co-operative supervises the
remnants of the collapsed KFA; and Udi Gecaga, Kenyatta's former son-in-law,
was replaced as the chairman of Lonrho (Kenya) in 1979 by Mark arap Too.
Gecaga has been too closely identified with the Gatundu-Kiambaa faction.
Not only was he Kenyatta's son-in-law but his uncle was Njoroge Mungai, the
former foreign minister and Nairobi KANU chairman,
who in 1977 had threatened to stand against Moi for the party's national vice-presidency.
During the “Change the Constitution” campaign, Gecaga had used The
Standard, Kenya's second largest but
most prestigious English-language newspaper, to promote the movement. Following
Moi's accession, Rowlands was pressed by the new regime to remove Gecaga,
first from his position as chairman of The Standard and also from the board
of Print-pak, its printing subsidiary, which produces packages and labels,
and once this was achieved in September 1979, from his position as chairman
of Lonrho East Africa.
Most of the literature on muItinational corporations emphasizes their
power over Third World governments but the Gecaga affair demonstrated Lonrho's
sensitivity to local political forces. The relationship can be a two-way process
when peripheral interests become too important a share of the multinational'
s total investment to be lost. In the year before Gecaga's dismissal, Lonrho
companies in East and Central Africa made a pretax profit of British Pounds
35,030,000 or 34 percent of the group's
total earnings. Although this region includes earnings from Zambia, Malawi,
Uganda and Zaire, most of the profits come from Kenya, which earns more for
Lonrho than any other part of Africa, or indeed the group's interests in
the United Kingdom, which accounted for only 23 percent of its profits. Lonrho
in Kenya controls a large number of subsidiaries and would seem to exert
a stranglehold over the economy. In fact, this conspicuous position has enabled
Kenya's "state capitalists" to treat Lonrho as if it was another parastatal
and to use it as a source for their own additional accumulation. Its reputation
as an international conglomerate and the important position of its Kenyan
interests to the group's profitability made it an easy target for political
takeover, first by the Kiambaa-Gatundu "family," and since 1979 by Moi and
his Kalenjin business associates. Asian companies have
also provided soft targets for the Kalenjin as they have sought to challenge
Kikuyu economic hegemony.
Recent interpretations of Kenyan politics that have explained Njonjo’s
demise as a result of a struggle between international and indigenous capitalists
have missed the point. Both factions in the struggle for local political
and economic dominance have been willing to reach agreements with their multinational
associates. Moi and his front man, Mark arap Too, have been involved in a
struggle not to promote indigenous capitalist forces but to oust the Kikuyu
from their special relationship with international capital. Gecaga and the
Kiambaa-Gatundu faction had, therefore, to be ousted from control over Lonrho.
Njonjo was an obstacle because he remained the leading intermediary between
British and Asian interests and the Kenyan economy. Kibaki, who has emerged
as the patron of Italian interests in Kenya, such as Fiat which is now assembling
family cars, posed less of a threat to the incorporation of the Kalenjin
elite.
Kikuyu businessmen, who prospered from their privileged access
to state resources during the Kenyatta era, feel threatened because Moi has
used his political power in the same way as Kenyatta to direct economic opportunities
to the small coterie of Kalenjin businessmen.
Ben Kipkorir's appointment as chairman of the Kenya Commercial Bank has
demonstrated Moi's intention to assist the Kalenjin petite bourgeoisie with
easier access to loans. Development measures have also been directed to
Baringo and Elgeyo-Marakwet, of which the most notable is the Kerio River
project. This use of the government-controll ed "porkbarrel" is inconvenient
to Central Province, particularly given the depression in the Kenyan economy,
but it does not threaten the regime's stability. Kikuyu commercial farmers
and local traders have continued to prosper because of the economic foundations
created in the area before 1978. Where the regime is in greatest danger
is its attempt to oust the Kikuyu elite from their positions in the statist
economy.
The devaluation of the Kenya shilling between 1980 and 1981, and again
by 15 percent in December 1982, the imposition of tighter import controls,
and high interest rates have all hit Kenyan capitalists, most of whom are
Asian or Kikuyu. Francis Macharia, the chairman of the National Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, and Joe Wanjui, chairman of the Kenya Association
of Manufacturers, have both contended that the measures will increase rather
than reduce Kenya's indebtedness, making it more difficult for companies
to meet their debt repayments while increasing the cost of new imported capital
equipment.
These capitalists are having to adapt to a state that is hostile to Kikuyu
interests. Asian businessmen and the multinational corporations
now appoint Kalenjin directors to act as intermediaries with the government.
Kikuyu businessmen are being excluded from positions that provide inside
information, easy access to loans, and new investment opportunities.
Discontent is also rife among the Kikuyu old guard who provide the bureaucracy
in KANU headquarters. They consider that the party for which they have worked
since the early 1960s has been "captured" by their former rivals, KADU.
Apart from Moi, Justus ole Tipis is the national treasurer and Robert Matano
was, until July 1985, the national secretary. Both were prominent KADU figures.
Following Matano's defeat in the KANU elections, he was replaced by Ronald
Ngala's son, Noah Katana Ngala, as the senior politician from Coast Province.
A minister of state in the Office of the President, ole Tipis
performs for Moi the services that Mbiyu Koinange provided for Kenyatta,
supervising the provincial administration, the GSU, and internal security.
As national treasurer of KANU he also occupies one of the key posts within
the party from which he can control the election clearance procedure and
exclude opponents. This KADU revival has awakened Kikuyu fears that Moi is
attempting to destroy the Kenyatta State and to replace it with a Kalenjin-centered
polity.
MOI, THE MILITARY, AND THE POLICE
Following the attempted coup on August 1, 1982, Moi has consolidated his
hold over the army and the reconstituted air force. Rumors had abounded of
another coup, or possibly two, which were supposed to have been timed to
take place the following weekend when Moi had left to attend the Organization
of African Unity conference in Tripoli. These were supposed to have been
organized by rival factions among the middle-ranking officer corps, many of
whom were Kikuyu or Kamba who resented the rapid promotion of Kalenjin officers
and the destruction of the Kenyatta State. The air force coup was perhaps
a preemptive populist bid by the noncommissioned officers and the ranks,
following the example of Master Sergeant Doe and Flight Lieutenant Rawlings
in Liberia and Ghana. Certainly, the fulcrum of the atttempt was the Eastleigh
Air Force Base, situated next door to Mathare Valley - Nairobi's worst shantytown.
Most of those subsequently court-martialed and imprisoned for their role
in the events of August 1 were Kikuyu or Luo. These ethnic groups during
the colonial era had benefited from widespread mission education.
In contrast to the army, recruits to the air force were comparatively
well educated, and many of them had been school friends of students at the
university, who soon became entangled in the attempt to seize control of
the Voice of Kenya Broadcasting Station, which is situated next to the university
and student hostels.
The government initially attempted to blame Odinga and the Luo for the
coup. News of Moi's overthrow had been warmly received in Nyanza Province
and among Nairobi's Luo population. Raila Odinga, the Jaramogi's son, Otieno
Mak'Onyango, and Professor Vincent Otieno were arrested and subsequently
detained and implicated in the coup. Yet despite its efforts the government
could not prove that Odinga had financed the attempt, although during the
previous six months he had been holding secret meetings with Iraqi diplomats
at his daughter's house. Suspicion had fallen upon Odinga and the Luo because
they had been in confrontation with the regime in the previous three months,
following Odinga's announcement to British MPs that he was planning to form,
with George Anyona, a Kenyan Socialist Party. Legislation had been rushed
through the National Assembly by Njonjo to turn Kenya from a de facto into
a de jure one-party state. Odinga's meetings with the Iraqis may well have
been to discuss financial support for the new party rather than for a coup.
The former KPU leader, however, was placed under house arrest that was only
lifted in October 1983. Both Moi and Kenyatta have had an exaggerated sense
of the threat he poses to the regime.
In practice the group that lost most from the abortive coup was Njonjo's
supporters. Bell Gethi, the commissioner of police; Peter Mbuthia, his successor
as commandant of the GSU; and Major-General P. N. Kariuki, the commander
of the air force, were all dismissed and subsequently convicted of having
failed to take immediate action to prevent the coup. They had hesitated for
three hours before moving against the rebels at six o’clock on Sunday morning.
Not until nine o'clock, after another three hours of preparation, did forces
loyal to the government reach the Mombasa Road roundabout and begin to edge
their way along Uhuru Highway into the city center. It seems likely that
these senior officers were implicated in one of the Kikuyu coups and had
been caught off guard, uncertain how to react to the air force's preemptive
bid. Only when Kariuki had made it clear that as air force commander he did
not know what was going on did the GSU and the army act.
Chief of Staff Mulinge, a Kamba, in contrast remained loyal to Moi throughout
and was not implicated in the coup prepared for August 8.
Support for Moi in the army remains weak despite the changes at the top
since August 1982. In May 1985, for example, it was reported that 40 middle-ranking
officers were detained. They had planned to assassinate Moi on Madaraka Day,
June 1, as he reviewed the armed forces. The lower and middle ranks of the
officer corps remain full of discontented Kikuyu and Kamba. Mulinge is extremely
unpopular and is regarded as being too closely associated with Moi and to
have amassed
too much wealth. Many have speculated that following his retirement as
chief of staff, Moi may appoint him minister of defense, a post that has
been incorporated in the Office of the President since 1979, as a reward for
his loyalty although this has not yet happened. In the recent reshuffle, pressure
within the army against further
Kalenjinization and warnings from the Special Branch have forced Moi to
abandon his protégé, Lt Gen. John Sawe, the former
army commander and deputy chief of the General Staff, whose promotion seemed
to have been cleared by the removal of more senior Kikuyu officers
such as Major General Joe Musomba, who was dispatched in 1985 to be ambassador
to Pakistan. Under pressure from his advisers, Moi decided to promote Air
Force Commander Lt· Gen. Mahmoud Mohammed-the brother of Moi's minister
of state in the Office of the president-to Mulinge's position as military
supremo This is an astute move since as a Somali, he lacks an independent
political base and will be entirely dependent upon Moi's support. Mohammed,
moreover, will not be tempted to become involved with one of the Kikuyu,
Kamba, or Luo factions in opposition to Moi or to stage a coup. Major General
Lenges, has been selected to replace Sawe, a Samburu, for the same reasons
(who has been appointed Kenya's high commissioner to Canada) as
army commander. In addition, the president has attempted
to reduce Kikuyu criticism by the appointment of Major General Dedan Gichuru
to Mohammed's former post as air force chief. The Kikuyu and Kamba, however,
still form the largest element in the officer corps. One-third of lieutenant
colonels and colonels and one-quarter of the higher ranks of brigadiers and
above are Kikuyu and the Kamba component is even larger, while the Kalenjin
hold only one-fifth of the senior posts, the same proportion as the Luo in
the middle ranks.
The number of Kikuyu in the police and the GSU has also been drastically
reduced since Kenyatta's death. Both are now commanded by Meru-- Bernard
Njinu and Evaristus M'Mbijjiwe-- and senior Kalenjin officers have been promoted.
In consequence, Moi has had to be sensitive to Meru interests and has incorporated
Jackson Angaine, “The King of Meru," into his coalition, despite the fact
that he was a prominent member of the Change the Constitution Movement, and
has ditched Gilbert Mbijjiwe, who had become a political liability because
of financial improprieties that were attracting much adverse publicity.
Harrison Musau, a Kamba, remains Njiinu's deputy in the
police, but three of the eight provincial heads of Special Branch are now
Kalenjin, as is the new head of the CID, Noah arap Too. The deputy commissioner
of the GSU, Kosgey, is yet another recent Kalenjin appointment and a relative
of the cabinet minister. In the army, police, and the GSU, and to a lesser
degree in the air force, Moi has successfully destroyed the Kikuyu hegemony
left by Kenyatta.
THE NJONJO AFFAIR AND MOI'S SEARCH FOR
LEGITIMACY AMONG THE KIKUYU
Moi, like Kenyatta, has attempted to construct a coalition of Kenya's
ethic subnationalist leaders to legitimize his authority. In particular,
he has sought support from Luhya in Western Province and in Nakuru District
from the Kikuyu of the diaspora who were dissatisfied with Kenyatta's performance.
Elijah Mwangale, the foreign minister, and Peter Okondo, another survivor
from the KADU era, now minister of commerce and industry, have been promoted
as the main Luhya leaders
to forestall the resurrection of Moi's old rival--Masinde Muliro. An attempt
was even made to incorporate Martin Shikuku as an assistant minister, although
his strident denunciation of Kenya's Asian community and multinational corporations
undermined confidence in the regime and made Moi's task of insinuating Kalenjin
into their board rooms more difficult.
Njonjo's downfall was an essential ingredient in the construction of these
new alliances. He had become an over-mighty subject. Moreover, during his
20 years as attorney general and minister of constitutional affairs in control
of the police, judiciary, and the processes of political and company registration,
he had made enemies, not least among the Kikuyu. The remnants of the Kiambaa-Gatundu
faction led by the former GEMA chairman, Njenga Karume, and Ngengi Muigai,
Kenyatta's nephew; the Chotara-Kubai- Kanja ex-Mau Mau group and Kibaki's
political associates among the Kikuyu capitalists- -all had good reason to
hate Njonjo. His position as the defender of Asian and British interests
also hindered the Kalenjinization of the economy, and ever since the trial
of his cousin--Andrew Muthemba--for treason in 1980, his loyalty had been
suspect.
Moi was pushed into the move by Shikuku, who held the former attorney
general responsible for his detention in 1975; Elijah Mwangale, then minister
for tourism; and the radical Bungoma MP, Daniel Sifuna, who was to emerge
from the affair as KANU's chief whip. They were supported by Justus ole Tipis
from Narok, and John Keen from Kajiado North, who wished to settle scores
with Njonjo and his Masai ally, Stanley ole Oloitipitip. Njonjo's disgrace
seemed to provide the president with an easy way to enhance his support and
to balm the wounds created by the 1982 coup attempt.
Since the Kariuki affair in 1975, and the Change the Constitution
Movement in October 1976, Njonjo had enjoyed little support within his
own Kikuyu community outside of his bailiwick in southwest Kiambu. It appears
that Moi, Shikuku, and ole Tipis were convinced that he could be sacrificed
to assuage the regime's populist critics without threatening Moi's already
precarious relations with Kikuyu capitalists and Kenyatta's former following.
Indeed, the disgrace of their archenemy seemed designed to secure support
even within Kikuyuland. This proved to be a serious miscalculation. Njonjo's
bailiwick in southwest Kiambu remained loyal. Three of the ex minister's
leading supporters-- Peter Kinyanjui in Njonjo's former seat at Kikuyu, Andrew
Ngumba in Mathare Valley, and Clement Gachanja in his battle with Dr. Njoroge
Mungai in Dagoretti--emerged victorious from the September 1983 elections.
Arthur Magugu in Githunguri, Njonjo's closest remaining defender in the cabinet,
was also returned, having successfully mobilized the members of the Mbari
ya Igi, which had been constructed by his grandfather in the 1890s, to defeat
Joe Karanja's challenge from the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction. Josiah Njonjo's
old patronage network of mbari alliances delivered support for his son even
when he was being denounced by everyone else, including many Kikuyu, as a
traitor.
The long saga of the judicial commission of inquiry under Justice Cecil
Miller, which sat from January until August 1984, was a miscalculation by
the anti-Njonjo forces. Njonjo's attackers were unable to find any major
misdemeanors with which they could identify him, without discrediting Moi
and his cabinet supporters. As the "trial" continued, support for Njonjo
rallied among the Kikuyu. Moi's position became extremely precarious as the
group closed ranks, and the crisis was exacerbated by the complete failure
of the long rains in 1984, which resulted in severe famine in certain pastoral
districts and food shortages elsewhere. In August, when Njonjo threatened
to take the stand and to disclose governmental corruption, the inquiry was
hastily concluded within three days. It would appear as if a deal was negotiated,
once Njonjo had called the bluff on his critics, whereby he would be allowed
to retire and to receive a presidential pardon in return for keeping quiet
and for not implicating Moi in his financial transactions. By then, however,
considerable damage had been inflicted upon the regime
To restore his shattered influence the president had to seek new allies
among the discontented Kikuyu factions. Following the 1983 elections, Matiba
was appointed to the cabinet, along with Maina Wanjigi, thereby binding
the Kibaki faction more firmly to Moi. This, however, could only be carried
so far because their interests, like those of the Kiambaa-Gatundu faction,
clashed with the president's efforts to advance his Kalenjin business partners.
He had to be more adventurous and redraw the system of factional alliances.
Moi demonstrated his political creativity, or perhaps merely his desperation,
with an attempt to divide the Kikuyu by co-opting the anti-Ngwataniro faction
in Nakuru and their ex-Mau Mau allies in Central Province. This process had
started as soon as Moi became president, although little progress was made
until Njonjo was toppled by his Kalenjin and Luhya enemies in 1983,
when the courtship began in earnest as Moi sought Kikuvu support. The president's
task is extremely difficult because Kenyatta effectively bound the most
prominent leaders of the rival Kikuyu political and economic factions into
his ethnic subnationalist coalition during the early 1960s and tightened
their loyalty to his regime by judicious dispensation of patronage until
1978.
Any faction that really mattered was incorporated into the Kiambaa- Gatundu
alliance. Those who were left outside were marginalized and lost their
popular support. Consequently, Moi has been able to entice only the weakest
Kikuyu factions into his coalition, while the macro-political destruction
of Kenyatta's patronage network by the new government has severely damaged
the legitimacy of his Kikuyu allies.
These charges have produced significant shifts in local balances of power
in several Kikuyu Districts--most notably in Nakuru. Dixon Kihika Kimani--one
of the leaders of the Change the Constitution group and treasurer of GEMA
and its various holding companies--fell from power in 1979. The Ngwataniro
faction disintegrated when confronted with the new regime's hostility and
withdrawal of patronage. Kimani’s local rivals, Mwithaga, Kubai, and Kariuki
Chotara, have been rehabilitated, although, Mwithaga, (like Shikuku) proved
to be too populist to be accommodated and has been dropped.
Since 1983, Chotara, now Nakuru KANU chairman and a nominated MP - and
Kubai, who became an assistant minister in the Office of the President in
July 1985, have enabled the president to court the Kikuyu masses (especially
former Mau Mau) who had settled in the Rift Valley and to become less dependent
upon Kibaki and Kenyatta's associates as mediators. Chotara has even been
able to secure the support of Waruru Kanja, which has enabled Moi to undermine
Vice-President Kibaki's position in Nyeri.
Chotara, however, seems recently to have antagonized too many people with
his draconian control over Nakuru, and despite desperate attempts to "twin"
his KANU branch with those in the surrounding districts to promote joint
harambee schemes, his political days may be numbered.
His crude populism may have been too great a political embarrassment for
Moi, although Fred Kubai might survive Chotara's demise. Certainly, Kanja
at the February 1986 Mau Mau gathering at Ruringu made strenuous attempts
to disassociate himself from Chotara’s clique. This suggests that yet another
major realignment may be taking place in Kikuyu politics, incorporating certain
elements of Njonjo’s support, such as Kamotho (Njonjo’s Mau Mau) and perhaps
Kanja's former enemy, G. G Kariuki, but not Njonjo himself, in a new Kikuyu
populist movement based on Central province and Laikipia rather than Nakuru
and Naivasha. This would seem to have the president's support but given the
hostility that has emerged within the ex-Mau Mau camp to Chotara during the
last six months, Kikuyu politics is in a state of flux and Moi may find it
very difficult to disentangle his alliance with Chotara without destabilizing
North Nakuru and Baringo.
CONCLUSION
Faced by the fairly united opposition of Kikuyu capitalists and diminishing
support for his henchmen, Chotara and Elijah Mwangale, Moi's position is
extremely insecure. Although the upswing in the economy --especially the rising
price of coffee and tea--will buy the president a little time, Kenya is
still faced in the next decade with acute
economic difficulties. During the 1960s and early 1970s, Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) grew by 6.6 percent per annum, but between 1979 and 1983,
it increased at only 4 per cent, and in 1984 it was zero,
while GDP per capita declined throughout this period. Kenya's population
growth rate of 4.1 percent annually means that over 300,000 school leavers,
mainly at the primary level, enter the job market every year while only 20,000
new jobs are created. It is estimated that out of a labor pool of 7 million,
only 1 million are in wage employment.
Since nearly half of Kenya's population, which numbers 20 million, are
under the age of 15, the situation can only deteriorate as people leave
the rural areas for the towns. In recent years Nairobi's population has grown
at 11 percent per annum. Moreover, the time bought by land consolidation
and the opening of European farms in the Rift Valley to African settlement
a generation ago has been exhausted. Planners have warned that Kenya's economy
must grow by at least 15 percent per year for the remainder of this century
if disaster is to be averted. With a population predicted to reach 34 million
by the year 2000, Kenya faces sufficient problems without Moi's attempts to
dismantle the Kenyatta State, which was so successful, to advance his own
Kalenjin ethnic group and its supporters among the Kikuyu Diaspora and the
Luhya.
Time is running out. Since the Ruringu meeting, Moi, through Mwangale
at the national level and Kanja in Nyeri has been attempting to discredit
Kibaki, who has been a loyal and effective vice-president.
Rumors of coups and assassination plots abound and it briefly appeared
in April 1986 as if Moi would be tempted to replace Kibaki with Mwangale
as vice-president- Mwangale, like the president himself, however, lacks the
abilities required to operate a sophisticated state despite his effectiveness
in the Byzantine intrigues of Kenyan politics. He enjoys little support in
his own district, which had the highest number of people arrested for prematurely
celebrating the 1982 coup attempt, and most Luhya continue to regard Masinde
Muliro as their leader.
During this phase when the ground appeared to be being prepared for Kibaki's
demotion or destruction, tension rose. This was a dangerous moment for Moi
since the Kikuyu might have decided that it was essential to act to defend
their economic hegemony before Kibaki's demise, for once he ceases to be
vice-president their only recourse will be a military coup.
The spate of arrests of the Mwakenya Group in April and May 1986
for publishing "Mpatanishi” demonstrated Moi's political paranoia and the
widespread hostility to the regime among the Kikuyu, Luo, and Taita. In
themselves, this group is a powerless clique of discontented intellectuals
and former student leaders, many of whom had been on the fringes of earlier
left-wing and populist movements. Like Ngugi wa
Thiong'o and his associates in London, or Maina-wa-Kinyatti and David
Mukaru-Ng'ang' a and the Kikuyu radicals inside Kenya, they
do not represent a threat to the regime. Their disorganized activities, however,
provided the government with a useful excuse to clamp down and to demonstrate
the power of the state. More people are now detained than at any period
since the Somali Shifta campaign shortly after independence. This spate
of detentions, moreover, provided a warning to discontented factions in
the army and among Kikuyu businessmen as to what will happen to them if
they plot against the regime. Nevertheless, it is the Kikuyu capitalists
rather than the Kikuyu populists that the Moi government has most to fear.
The weakness of the regime stems from the fact that Moi has been less
successful than Kenyatta at using the state to promote the interests of
his own ethnic following. Kenyatta had emerged from detention in 1961 to
find Kikuyuland, particularly Kiambu, deeply divided after 30 years of class
formation and increasing conflict. Yet despite four years of civil war between
1952 and 1956 and the social engineering campaign of the colonial administration
to promote a conservative African yeomanry, he quickly asserted his control
and created a relatively united Central Province coalition that incorporated
Murang'a, Nyeri, Kirinyaga, and Nyandarua as well as other interests into
the Kiambu alliance.
Tensions, of course, existed but Kenyatta's political legitimacy enabled
him to transcend district and class divisions within his Kikuyu ethnic constituency.
In contrast, Moi has not been able to weld the Kalenjin into a coherent
coalition. Unlike Kenyatta's Kiambu Kikuyu, Moi's Tugen are too insignificant-
-both numerically and economically- -to enable the president to use them
as the focal point of a Kalenjin-centered Kenya State.
Even the larger and more sophisticated subgroups in the Kalenjin coalition
- the Nandi and Kipsigis--are wary of becoming too closely identified with
Moi. Their attitude to the new regime is schizophrenic.
While they welcome the influx of development funds and new job opportunities
that Moi has brought to the Kalenjin, they also resent the primacy of the
Tugen and Baringo. Moreover, Nandi and Kericho Districts are densely populated
areas and many people are suspicious of Moi's Luhya allies. In addition,
class consciousness is increasing, and the poor and landless are beginning
to resent accumulation by Moi's associates. This was, of course, equally true
of the Kikuyu landless under Kenyatta, but Moi's Kalenjin capitalists have
been less able to secure support from the peasantry.
In Central Province during the 1960s and 1970s ordinary Kikuyu benefited
from secondary industrialization, cheap loans, and government marketting
policies. Although Moi has disbanded the KFA and has attempted
to destroy the Kikuyu control over the co-operative movement and to divert
resources toward the Kalenjin and Luhya, the rewards have not yet filtered
down to the rural population of the Rift Valley and Western provinces.
The Kalenjin elite are therefore
, much more isolated in their own communities than were Kikuyu capitalists
once Kenyatta had resurrected his subnationalist constituency.
The Rift Valley lacks the self-sustaining
dynamic rural economy that developed in Central Province during the 1960s.
In deed, such an economy is unlikely to develop in the agriculturally
marginal Kalenjin heartland.
As a result, even Moi’s control over the wider Kalenjin community is far
from secure.
Kenya’s recent political difficulties and the increasingly repressive
measures taken against academics and dissidents, however, reflect the president’s
insecurity and fear of the Kikuyu. They have been alienated
by his endeavors to promote economic development in the Rift Valley and Western
Kenya and are fighting to preserve their privileged economic status, which
was Kenyatta’s legacy to Central Province, and to prevent Moi’s restructuring
of the patronage network. Unless Moi abandons his efforts,
this struggle will probably grow worse and bodes ill for the future stability
of Kenya.
NOTES
The author would like to thank Jennifer Widner for many conversations
on Kenyan politics and for her kind hospitality, and
the Master and Fellows of Magdalene College. Cambridge, for providing an
academic home
DAVID W. THROUP
|