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Heretical Thoughts on Kenyan Politics - - Prof Ngugi on Raila
forwarded by Tom Atinda
--------------------------
From: Joel Ngugi
Sent: Wednesday, September 19, 2007 11:45:05 AM
Warning: This is a long contribution I recently made to Bushfire (the Alliance
Alumni discussion forum). We have talked about these issues before.
To my surprise, it was well received -- so, perhaps, we are ready to move
on in Kenya.
Here are my heretical thoughts on Kenyan politics -- written copiously
as they flowed through my head as I thought about the season of
politics in Kenya.
1. Raila should be elected Kenya 's next President. My reasoning
is pragmatically clear-eyed rather than romantic or idealistic. In my view,
at the next General Elections, Kenyans should make their decision on the
basis of three key issues I discuss below. Without trashing the Kibaki regime,
and even while, in context, applauding its (limited) successes, it is possible
to come to a reasoned conclusion that Kenyans should seriously think about
giving Raila a chance to be President.
a. To continue on, and accelerate the path of economic prosperity of
the last 5 years. No doubt Kenya has prospered moderately under the Kibaki
regime (I so advisedly recalling Victor Owuor's constant but surely correct
admonitions that we must distinguish economic success that is the result
of the regime's governance record, and that which has come in spite of the
regime's nonfeasance and malfeasance). Still, there are many economic governance
decisions that have been made correctly, and they chiefly account for the
economic growth. However, we can, and should do better. Some of the current
regimes missteps in economic governance are legendary (Anglo-leasing; lack
of strategic engagement with the international community on key issues important
to Kenya's economic interests (e.g. tea trade with German where Vietnam recently
overtook Kenya as the biggest supplier of tea); lack of adequate provision
on key infrastructural needs such as main arterial roads.... The list is
endless. Point is, compared to Moi, Kibaki's regime stands heads and shoulders
above; but that is not enough. With another Kibaki presidency, we are unlikely
to see much radical change in economic governance issues. However, with
the key decisions - including institution building decisions - made under
Kibaki, a new president stands a very likely chance of deepening the reforms;
with, barring Idi Aminisque dictatorship (which is unlikely), little risk
of defection. This is a case for a new president - with a pat on the back
to the outgoing president for a job well (but not-excellently) done.
b. The opportunity to construct an autochthonous institutional mechanism
for sharing national wealth - across regions and classes - that will supplement
without supplanting the on-going economic prosperity. Granted that we
must continue and deepen the economic policies that have bequeathed to us
the Kibaki economic prosperity, we must also guard against the likely validly
righteous but deeply disruptive; democratically populist but ominously anti-economic
politics that might discourage continued investment by both local and international
investors. To do this, we must simultaneously encourage the on-going economic
growth while putting in place effective mechanisms for sharing the prosperity.
Here, I think Raila's articulated social democratic ideology is useful.
I do not mean to romanticize Raila by imagining that his political articulations
will become policy on December 30th upon election. But I think political
ideology matters. While Kibaki's mainly neo-classical economic thinking will
take care of the front-end of things (economic development brought by an
enabling environment that rewards private initiative and incentives) as it
has done for the past five years; Raila's social democratic hues in his political
ideology will take care of the back-end of things (social cooperation and
cohesion brought about by redistribution and other mechanisms for managing
social conflicts and reducing moral hazards).
c. The possibility and promise of national healing of the deep wounds
of tribal suspicions and prejudice that have been re-opened recently
. The Kibaki presidency has, wittingly or unwittingly, deepened the ethnic
cleavage in Kenyan politics. We cannot bury our heads in the sand and pretend
that we will become a nation by default. We must make political (and institutional)
choices that will take us there. The next General Elections provides Kenyans
with an opportunity to begin a post-tribal political discourse in Kenya
. By post-tribal political discourse, I mean, not a politics where ethnic
affiliation and tribal identity miraculously become extinct, but one where
individuals can think across ethnic affiliations in a socially rational
way that foregrounds the interests of the whole. Granted this may, at times,
involve ethnic interests, but this should be but one of the factors that
individuals take into consideration - others being class interests, regional
(as opposed to strictly tribal) interests, national interests, moral values,
etc. In such a dispensation, people make political decisions based on a complex
matrix in which all these conflicting and competing interests are important
but not necessarily decisive. The necessity of putting in place mechanisms
for solving social and political conflicts in ways that imbue confidence
to economic actors to invest in risky and long-term enterprises makes this
task even more urgent. I suggest that a necessary first step to getting there
is a Raila presidency. Because of Kenya 's unique tribal politics, President
Raila will be a powerful symbol that we are in a new post-tribe era. This
is not because I have purist thoughts of Raila as a saintly anti-tribal leader.
Rather, it is because, if Raila is to be elected President, it will be (largely
because of media representations) in spite of his tribe. This, in itself,
would be a big first step.
Secondly, and controversially, I think a Luo presidency will put to rest
the idea that some Kenyans cannot be President because of their tribal affiliation.
Thirdly, the notion that Luos have been mistreated in Kenya 's political
history is real because it is deeply felt by many Luos in Nyanza. In my
view, it would be difficult to move forward in building a unified nation
unless and until we address this perception (which, as always, is the reality).
A Raila presidency does that.
Fourthly, as a pragmatic matter, a Raila presidency is likely to re-align
political and economic forces - hence making tribe less of a factor in politics
and economic governance. This is because, first, despite his socialist and
progressive ethos, Raila is deeply capitalistic; a hard-core entrepreneur.
He is therefore unlikely to destroy the economic base but is likely to forge
class-based alliances across the political divide. Second, short of assuming
draconian dictatorial powers, President Raila will not easily afford to
be complacent: he will be facing well-heeled political opponents. Yet, these
would be opponents who have a solid economic base and would not crumble
easily due to the use of moderate state power against them. Lastly, President
Raila will direct some much needed infrastructural finances towards Western
Kenya and Nyanza. As Fred Ollows correctly pointed the other day, the Lake
Basin is the least developed part of Kenya in terms of its potential. Imagine
the increased prosperity of Kenya when that potential (including a savvy
renegotiation of the Nile River Treaty) is unleashed.
2. Kenya should find a way to deal with corruption on a firm going-forward
basis. For me, controversially, t his means making a pragmatic decision
to absolve past corruption from criminal persecution. In my view, the attempt
to investigate past corruption for in our complex political situation merely
encourages political strife and perpetuation of existing networks of patronage.
Imagine Deputy Prime Minister Ruto defending the decision by President Raila
to go against MP Murungaru in 2008 or, assuming Raila's presidency in 2007,
President Uhuru going against Minister Henry Kosgey in 2013 for economic
crimes committed before 2002. I think a time has come for us as Kenyans to
consider facing the trauma of corruption realistically. We will realize that
as bad as the trauma was; we risk re-living it and compounding it if we
don't start preventive therapy to avoid it's continued effects. We cannot
do so if we create an incentive for those manning the institutions charged
to fight it to sabotage to the task because their interests are obliquely
implicated. Rather than remain obsessed about past corruption, we should
be obsessed about designing institutions - both formal and informal - that
make it extremely costly for future corruption to occur.
Fundamentally, I agree that there is an urgent need to address the structures
of corruption both within (and especially) outside the country.
It is in the how where we may differ. After looking at the
situation in Kenya, it seems to me that we stand a more realistic chance
to address both structures if we drew a line in the sand
on a forward-going basis. Here are my reasons.
First, with the developments in international law (including the Convention
against corruption and the various OECD Guidelines) it would be much easier
and attainable from a political stand point for a new government to
approach past enablers of corruption ( Canada, Switzerland, etc) asking for
their prospective assistance to ensure no future corrupt funds are deposited
in their stream of commerce. From a pragmatic point of view, such a
stance does not instigate the culpability of these countries for past
corruption and is therefore more likely to succeed. In my view, this
was one of Kibaki's worst failures: missing the chance to draw the line in
the sand, and with the aid of righteous past enablers of that corruption
put an end to present and future corruption. Without trying to wake
up sleeping dogs, I would suggest that this was the strategy in the independence
struggle. I do not claim that it went stupendously well -- but at least
we got independence.
Second, to a large extent, only two ways have proven effective in world
history in dealing with past atrocities: Truth and Reconciliation or
"illiberal" sanctioning. By "illiberal" sanctioning (a term used by
Ruti Treitel in her book on Transitional Justice), I mean tactics which, in
context, do not conform to the newly-established "rule of law" as a way of
dealing with the past. This is often necessary because it is realized
that the just overturned regime retains an ability to subvert the new democratic
system.
The repertoire for transitional justice basically contains three "illiberal"
tactics:
One, a very activist judiciary that is imbued with a strong sense of human
rights ethos.
Two, a "militant democracy" – the attempt to guard from within
against subversion of the new democratic system by its old or new enemies
including the use of "authoritarian" means -- for example in the suppression
of a genocidal, anti-democratic party such as the Nazi Party shortly after
WW2.
Three, the process of "lustration" (Treitel's term) –
the administrative practice of investigating, publicizing, humiliating, and
purging from public employment those individuals with ties to the former regime
-- as used in Czechoslovakia and Germany.
None of these "illiberal" tactics would seem ideal for Kenya. Our
judiciary is not primed for the task (there is pervasive lack of trust
in our judicial institutions, and there is little promise that the judiciary
will pursue pragmatic transitional jurisprudence e.g. on corruption cases)
while, because of the incomplete transition (no matter who gets into power
-- whether Kibaki or Raila) these two more "militant" tactics would likely
lead to civil strife or the postponement of the moment of reckoning (as happened
with Kibaki). The more we defer the definitive decision on the matter,
the harder it would be to get a complete transition.
It seems therefore that the better course of action would be to presently
put in place institutions which will unwittingly turn the robber baron into
the vanguard against corruption.
Don't get me wrong: even as I write this with my pragmatic right hand,
my deontological left hand is wincing in sheer disgust at the prospect of
some of these fellows getting off the hook. But sometimes it is virtuous
to "cut and walk."
Joel M. Ngugi
Assistant Professor of Law
University of Washington School of Law
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