Calculated rift

by robbie | September 15, 2011 8:38 pm

Pho­to cour­tesy of J Car­ri­er (www.j‑carrier.com)

NYANZA PROVINCE, Kenya — Bernard Orin­da Ndege, 54, lives out­side the Kenyan town of Kisumu, on a small patch of land at the edge of Lake Vic­to­ria. He moved there over three years ago, after vio­lence result­ing from the Decem­ber 2007 elec­tions over­took his home in Naivasha, in the Rift Val­ley. The com­par­i­son is unfa­vor­able: he knows few peo­ple in Kisumu, and hip­popota­mi rou­tine­ly squat on his land, which is less fer­tile than his old farm. But these are minor hard­ships com­pared to what prompt­ed the move. At the height of the vio­lence in the val­ley, in late Jan­u­ary 2008, thugs burned down his home and killed his eight chil­dren and two wives, one of whom had been due to give birth any day.

On the morn­ing of the attack, Ndege’s old­est son, 20-year-old Silas, went out to buy water and returned with the news that mem­bers of an out­lawed gang were approach­ing Naivasha. Mwai Kiba­ki, the eth­nic Kikuyu pres­i­dent, had been sworn in for a sec­ond term a month ear­li­er, despite claims of vot­ing irreg­u­lar­i­ties from his prin­ci­pal chal­lenger, Raila Odin­ga, a mem­ber of the Luo tribe. Over the fol­low­ing weeks, Odin­ga sup­port­ers through­out the val­ley tar­get­ed Kikuyus, who lost their homes if not their lives to machete-wield­ing mobs. Accord­ing to Silas, a Nairo­bi-based Kikuyu gang known as the Mungi­ki was com­ing to retaliate.

Ndege, a Luo, dis­count­ed his son’s report. “I did not believe it. I thought it was a joke. I told my son, ‘There’s no way the Mungi­ki will attack us because there are no Mungi­ki here,’” he recalled recent­ly. Police had also told him that they were guard­ing the homes of non-Kikuyus, just in case.

As night fell, a group of young men appeared out­side Ndege’s two-room house. The police chased them away. Not long after, how­ev­er, the police retreat­ed to the local sta­tion, and the young men, more agi­tat­ed now, returned and began lob­bing stones onto the roof. “When I heard the stones, that’s when I real­ized it was seri­ous,” Ndege said.

As lit match­es hit the floor, they tried to take cov­er. Their screams were quick­ly drowned out by the cheers of the Mungiki.

He raced out to place a pad­lock on the gate lead­ing into the com­pound, but the mob broke it apart with more stones and quick­ly sur­round­ed the house. The fam­i­ly gath­ered in the bed­room, hud­dling togeth­er as win­dows were smashed in. Through one of the frames, Ndege locked eyes with the leader of the mob, who told him: “Old man, today you are dead, and there’s noth­ing you can do about it. We’re behind the house and we’re at the gate.” The leader then turned to some­one and said, “Bring petrol.” Soon, mem­bers of the gang were reach­ing through the win­dows, emp­ty­ing gaso­line cans onto the floor.

I told my fam­i­ly, ‘Now, it’s every­body for him­self,’” Ndege remem­bers. As lit match­es hit the floor, they tried to take cov­er. Their screams were quick­ly drowned out by the cheers of the Mungi­ki. “Nobody could dis­cern between the sounds of the peo­ple ask­ing for help and the sounds of peo­ple cel­e­brat­ing,” Ndege said. He woke up the next day at Naivasha dis­trict hos­pi­tal, the only survivor.

The attack on Ndege’s fam­i­ly, occur­ring amid spasms of post-elec­tion vio­lence, was dis­tinc­tive only in terms of degree: in no oth­er record­ed inci­dent did so many mem­bers of a sin­gle house­hold per­ish. Oth­er ele­ments of the killing—the mob vio­lence, the selec­tion of vic­tims based on eth­nic­i­ty alone—held through­out the coun­try. That same week, in a Rift Val­ley town north­west of Naivasha, a Luo woman I’ll call Car­o­line Anyan­go watched a Kikuyu mob chop off her Luo husband’s gen­i­tals and chase him into an aban­doned quar­ry, where he drowned. In Kisumu, David Mugo, a mild-man­nered Luo bar­ber, recalls tak­ing part in a sev­en-day “loot­ing spree” in ear­ly Jan­u­ary tar­get­ing Kikuyu and Kisii homes. In the expan­sive Nairo­bi slum of Kib­era, Con­so­la­ta Ngu­gi, a 49-year-old Kikuyu woman, was raped by at least three Luo men before los­ing con­scious­ness. The vio­lence end­ed only when Kiba­ki and Odin­ga signed a pow­er-shar­ing deal on Feb­ru­ary 28. By that point, more than 1,200 Kenyans had died and more than 500,000 had been displaced.

Despite this wide­spread dis­or­der, the mag­ni­tude of Ndege’s loss drew nation­al atten­tion. Odin­ga, who became prime min­is­ter in the pow­er-shar­ing gov­ern­ment, even called Ndege per­son­al­ly to express his con­do­lences and offer to pur­chase coffins; sev­er­al mem­bers of his polit­i­cal par­ty attend­ed the funeral.

Nonethe­less, Ndege has lit­tle hope that Kenyan law enforce­ment will iden­ti­fy the orga­niz­ers of the attack on his fam­i­ly and bring them to tri­al. Asked why, he gives not an explic­it rea­son but a list of names: Tom Mboya, J.M. Kar­iu­ki, Robert Ouko: all promi­nent politi­cians, all assas­si­nat­ed, in 1969, 1975 and 1990, respec­tive­ly. Because their killings—and those of men with sim­i­lar standing—never led to high-lev­el pros­e­cu­tions, they remain unsolved in the minds of most Kenyans. And far away from Nairo­bi, in areas that seem whol­ly dis­con­nect­ed from the cir­cles in which these pow­er bro­kers oper­at­ed, their names have become a handy form of short­hand for the impuni­ty that is seen as keep­ing the country’s lead­ers in pow­er today. Ndege is not the only farmer prone to men­tion­ing them in dis­cus­sions of the post-elec­tion violence.

Kenya has failed the test of jus­tice before,” Ndege said. “If until now we don’t know who killed Ouko, if until now we don’t know who killed J.M. Kar­iu­ki, if all of these peo­ple died and they were big peo­ple, how will we know who killed my fam­i­ly in Naivasha? I’m just a small man who nobody remembers.”

True to form, the gov­ern­ment has made almost no progress in pros­e­cut­ing post-elec­tion crimes, and this lack of account­abil­i­ty prompt­ed the Inter­na­tion­al Crim­i­nal Court to get involved. In Novem­ber 2009, after efforts to estab­lish a spe­cial tri­bunal foundered in par­lia­ment, ICC Chief Pros­e­cu­tor Luis Moreno-Ocam­po request­ed per­mis­sion to launch an investigation—the only time he has ever moved to open a case on his own. (Cas­es are usu­al­ly referred to the court, which began oper­at­ing in 2002, either by nation­al lead­ers or by the UN Secu­ri­ty Council.)

In Decem­ber 2010, Ocam­po iden­ti­fied six crimes against human­i­ty sus­pects from three eth­nic groups: three cab­i­net min­is­ters (two of whom have since lost their cab­i­net posts), the head of the civ­il ser­vice, the police com­mis­sion­er dur­ing the vio­lence (now the head of the postal ser­vice) and a radio jour­nal­ist. Since the announce­ment, the Kiba­ki wing of the coali­tion gov­ern­ment has tried to halt the ICC pro­ceed­ings, first argu­ing that they could jeop­ar­dize “inter­na­tion­al peace and secu­ri­ty,” then insist­ing, against ever-mount­ing evi­dence to the con­trary, that the cas­es could be han­dled in Kenya, by Kenya.

This effort by the Kiba­ki wing is wide­ly expect­ed to fail. The ICC is hold­ing hear­ings this month at its home in The Hague to deter­mine whether to for­mal­ly charge the so-called Ocam­po Six. But in spend­ing time try­ing to shield the sus­pects the gov­ern­ment may have lost an oppor­tu­ni­ty to stave off vio­lence next year, when par­lia­men­tary and the first round of pres­i­den­tial elec­tions will like­ly be held.

Many of the fac­tors that fueled the last cri­sis, notably the high lev­el of nation­al eth­nic polar­iza­tion, remain unad­dressed. Again, Odin­ga is a fron­trun­ner for the pres­i­den­cy, and he could very well be run­ning against two of The Hague sus­pects, cre­at­ing an even more com­bustible ros­ter of can­di­dates (Kiba­ki can­not run because of term lim­its). This time around, Kenyans could take steps to arm them­selves in advance—if they haven’t done so already.

The fear is that peo­ple will be much more pre­pared, and that the fight­ing will be car­ried out not with machetes but with guns,” Njon­jo Mue, head of the Inter­na­tion­al Cen­ter for Tran­si­tion­al Jus­tice in Kenya, said. “And let’s not for­get that Kenya has very porous bor­ders with Somalia.”

Amid these pre­dic­tions of unrest, Ndege sup­ports him­self with earn­ings from a few crops (cas­sa­va, onions) hardy enough to with­stand the degrad­ed soil and harass­ment from the hip­pos. Oth­er vic­tims of the vio­lence are worse off: tens of thou­sands con­tin­ue to lan­guish in camps for inter­nal­ly dis­placed per­sons. Ndege’s appar­ent resignation—“I am just a small man”—reflects his pro­found­ly low expec­ta­tions for his nation and its pol­i­tics. It would seem entire­ly appro­pri­ate to any­one who attend­ed a polit­i­cal ral­ly held in Nairo­bi on April 11, just days after the sus­pects’ first appear­ances at The Hague, and saw first­hand how the alleged per­pe­tra­tors of the post-elec­tion vio­lence so effort­less­ly co-opt­ed the atten­tion that might oth­er­wise be direct­ed to victims.

***

Beyond con­firm­ing that the sus­pects knew of the alle­ga­tions fac­ing them, these hear­ings offered lit­tle sub­stance and even less drama.

The first thing to say about the spec­ta­tors at the ral­ly is that most were paid to be there; among the Kenyan jour­nal­ists gath­ered in front of the dais that Mon­day morn­ing, the esti­mates topped out at 500 shillings—between five and six dollars—per per­son. Upon being dri­ven in from the slums, these spec­ta­tors, who gen­er­al­ly have their Mon­days and most oth­er days free, gath­ered on the grassy slope fac­ing the dais, form­ing a crowd of well over a thou­sand by mid-morn­ing. Then they wait­ed. The ral­ly orga­niz­ers had said it would be over by lunch, but the cars car­ry­ing the most promi­nent politi­cians did not begin arriv­ing until just after three.

Some spec­ta­tors, most of whom were mem­bers of the Kikuyu or Kalen­jin tribe, had received signs and ban­ners, and they pro­ceed­ed into Uhu­ru Park in waves, chant­i­ng, danc­ing, and singing along to the songs played over the loud­speak­ers. The recent alliance between two of the Ocam­po Six—Uhuru Keny­at­ta, the Kikuyu finance min­is­ter and son of Kenya’s first pres­i­dent; and William Ruto, the Kalen­jin for­mer high­er edu­ca­tion min­is­ter (sacked last month in a cab­i­net reshuffle)—was remark­able, giv­en that their tribes had engaged in some of the fiercest fight­ing of the post-elec­tion peri­od. But the two lead­ers, along with their sup­port­ers, were unit­ed in their oppo­si­tion to the ICC, and the most pop­u­lar sign in the crowd fea­tured Kenyatta’s face on one side and Ruto’s on the oth­er, as well as the Kiswahili slo­gan tuko pamo­ja: “we are together.”

The politi­cians’ jour­ney had begun the night before, on the red-eye from Ams­ter­dam. A few days ear­li­er the Ocam­po Six had appeared before judges at The Hague for the first time. Beyond con­firm­ing that the sus­pects knew of the alle­ga­tions fac­ing them, these hear­ings offered lit­tle sub­stance and even less dra­ma: the sus­pects were vol­un­tar­i­ly com­ply­ing with sum­mons­es, and they have not yet been for­mal­ly charged, so there was no chance they would be detained. (Dur­ing the hear­ings tak­ing place this month, Ocam­po is try­ing to show there is enough evi­dence to send the sus­pects to tri­al; the defense teams are try­ing to have the cas­es thrown out). In Kenya, how­ev­er, the papers had been hyp­ing the hear­ings for weeks, and the sus­pects’ first face-off with Ocam­po gripped the nation like a high-pro­file Eng­lish Pre­mier League clash, albeit with graver stakes. Restau­rants and hotels with tele­vi­sions were full-to-over­flow­ing; in areas with­out elec­tric­i­ty, as well as in cars, taxis and mata­tus (minibus­es), radio broad­casts suf­ficed. The sus­pects them­selves, per­haps brac­ing for con­fronta­tion, enlist­ed more than 40 MPs to trav­el with them to The Hague in a show of force. Though no con­fronta­tion mate­ri­al­ized, and no vic­tor emerged, some of the orga­niz­ers had nonethe­less dubbed the ral­ly a “heroes’ welcome.”

When the big men arrived at the ral­ly, stand­ing through the open roof of an SUV, the rel­a­tive order of the morn­ing briefly gave way to may­hem: some of the more vis­i­bly intox­i­cat­ed male spec­ta­tors removed their shirts in what appeared to be eupho­ria, and the wood­en pho­tog­ra­phers’ plat­forms shook and wob­bled in the crush of the crowd. After per­haps five full min­utes of wav­ing and chant­i­ng, the police man­aged to cre­ate enough space for the lead­ers to find their chairs on the dais. The crowd set­tled, wait­ing to hear what they had to say.

First, dozens of MPs pro­claimed their sup­port for the new alliance between Keny­at­ta and Ruto. These low­er-lev­el fig­ures embraced the Kenyan elite’s fram­ing of the ICC as an impe­ri­al­ist impinge­ment on Kenyan sov­er­eign­ty. Days before the hear­ings, Ngi­na Keny­at­ta, Uhuru’s moth­er and the country’s for­mer first lady (pop­u­lar­ly known as “Mama Ngi­na”), presided over a “prayer cer­e­mo­ny” in which she com­pared her son’s legal trou­bles to her late husband’s fight for inde­pen­dence from the British. “The colo­nial­ists gave us prob­lems and it is now clear they have nev­er relent­ed,” she said. In keep­ing with this theme, the rally’s ear­ly speech­es were heavy on pleas for Kenyan solu­tions to Kenyan prob­lems, argu­ing essen­tial­ly that the coun­try could right itself before the next vote even in the absence of tan­gi­ble reforms. Odin­ga, the lead­ing pres­i­den­tial can­di­date (who was not present), was round­ly con­demned, in no small part for his pro­fessed doubts about Kenya’s abil­i­ty to inves­ti­gate the post-elec­tion vio­lence on its own.

As they stepped to the micro­phone, each speak­er began with the same word: haram­bee, a Kikuyu word mean­ing “self-help.” Then the crowd repeat­ed it back. That word revealed more about the nature of the rela­tion­ship between politi­cians and elec­torate than any­thing else that was said. Haram­bee is a sys­tem where­by local com­mu­ni­ties raise mon­ey to cov­er start-up costs for schools and clin­ics and oth­er devel­op­ment projects, and then the state cov­ers run­ning costs. Haram­bee long required MPs and oth­er pub­lic fig­ures to pledge large dona­tions at pub­lic gath­er­ings. (Pres­i­dent Kiba­ki banned MPs from par­tic­i­pat­ing in haram­bee activ­i­ty, though Kenya schol­ar Nic Cheese­man has not­ed that the arrange­ment per­sists via “alter­na­tive path­ways.”) Through this process, vot­ers assume the role of clients depen­dent on a polit­i­cal patron, with the under­stand­ing that well-treat­ed clients repay their patrons with obe­di­ence. Because MPs typ­i­cal­ly rep­re­sent con­stituents of the same eth­nic group, this leaves lit­tle room for polit­i­cal move­ments that cut across trib­al lines, rein­forc­ing Kenya’s per­va­sive eth­nic divi­sions. It is in part for this rea­son that, for all the recent talk of uni­ty, most observers doubt the dura­bil­i­ty of the Keny­at­ta-Ruto alliance.

While eth­nic polit­i­cal divi­sions are decreas­ing over­all across Africa, Kenya is one of two coun­tries where the oppo­site holds true—the oth­er is Zimbabwe.

At the April ral­ly, then, the call-and-response of haram­bee was “kind of a cul­tur­al ref­er­ence point, like singing the nation­al anthem,” Cheese­man said in an inter­view. “In the con­text of the ICC, the com­mu­ni­ty is pulling togeth­er against what seems to be an impo­si­tion of exter­nal interference.”

More oblique ref­er­ences to haram­bee are cod­ed into basi­cal­ly any talk from a Kenyan leader. Two days before the ral­ly, Vice Pres­i­dent Kalon­zo Musyoka toured a strong­hold of his Kam­ba tribe to mobi­lize sup­port for a sec­ond pres­i­den­tial run. Atten­dees expect­ing grandiose cam­paign promis­es, how­ev­er, instead received a dress­ing-down for not uni­form­ly back­ing him the last time around. “Pet­ty home griev­ances should not be allowed to derail my sec­ond quest for the top seat,” Musyoka declared, before going on to char­ac­ter­ize vot­ing pat­terns in the area as “very dis­turb­ing.” “We must demon­strate our force,” he said. “While oth­er com­mu­ni­ties vote as a bloc, we must also avoid split­ting our numer­i­cal strength.”

Data col­lect­ed by Afro­barom­e­ter, a pub­lic sur­vey project, indi­cates that while eth­nic polit­i­cal divi­sions are decreas­ing over­all across Africa, Kenya is one of two coun­tries where the oppo­site holds true—the oth­er is Zim­bab­we. As Cheese­man and Robert Ford wrote in a 2007 paper, “For these coun­tries eth­nic cleav­ages are becom­ing entrenched, rather than dilut­ed.” And since the elec­tion the trend in Kenya has only con­tin­ued. “The next elec­tion may see the strongest eth­nic ties and eth­nic vot­ing pat­terns that we’ve ever seen in Kenya,” Cheese­man said.

Eth­nic­i­ty is a loaded con­cept, bound up with wealth, polit­i­cal rep­re­sen­ta­tion and broad­er sig­ni­fiers of social class. “Peo­ple often treat eth­nic­i­ty as some­thing that’s imag­ined,” Cheese­man said. “Well, it is an imag­ined iden­ti­ty, but it also has very direct, prac­ti­cal con­se­quences in Kenya. If you’re from the wrong eth­nic group, you’re like­ly to die younger, you’re like­ly to be poor­er, you’re like­ly to have less access to edu­ca­tion.” So it is mis­lead­ing to refer, as the New York Times did, to the vio­lence that fol­lowed the 2007 elec­tion as “atavis­tic,” an expres­sion of time­less trib­al griev­ances. But it is sim­i­lar­ly mis­lead­ing to dis­count the eth­nic dimen­sion of the vio­lence alto­geth­er. “Trib­al­ism didn’t cause the vio­lence, pol­i­tics did,” Kenyans will some­times remark. Or: “This wasn’t a con­flict about eth­nic­i­ty, it was a con­flict about devel­op­ment.” Such state­ments obscure, per­haps will­ful­ly, an impor­tant aspect of long­stand­ing divi­sions in mod­ern Kenyan society.

In the weeks before the April ICC hear­ings, rumor and innu­en­do fueled the antic­i­pa­tion. One of the more alarm­ing pre­dic­tions was that the court would arrest all six sus­pects as soon as they reached The Hague—despite the absence of arrest war­rants. Dur­ing the hear­ings, this sce­nario became some­what more real­is­tic, as a judge warned the sus­pects not to make inflam­ma­to­ry state­ments or risk hav­ing war­rants issued. Per­haps because of this, when Keny­at­ta and Ruto final­ly stepped to the micro­phone at the ral­ly they were care­ful to pro­mote peace and non­vi­o­lence. “Nev­er again shall a Kenyan lose his life or his prop­er­ty due to polit­i­cal com­pe­ti­tion,” Ruto said. But instead of address­ing the very real forces that under­lay the last election’s vio­lence, the lead­ers kept the focus on the threat fac­ing them. “We want to thank God for hav­ing seen us through this,” Keny­at­ta said, in appar­ent ref­er­ence to hear­ings that required them to board a plane to Europe, sit qui­et­ly in a court­room and then fly home. “Many said that we shall go to The Hague and not come back. We have proved them wrong… the dev­il has been defeated.”

Res­i­dents lucky enough to come across offi­cers from their own tribe were assist­ed; those who did not were met with hostility.

***
Pamela Akwede doesn’t need to attend a polit­i­cal ral­ly to under­stand the patron-client rela­tion­ship between politi­cians and vot­ers. As head of the human rights office at Christ the King Church in Kib­era, Kenya’s largest slum and the sec­ond-largest slum in all of Africa, since the last elec­tions she has spent her days watch­ing clients recov­er, or not recov­er, from the bat­tles that were fought on their politi­cians’ behalf.

This slum and oth­ers in Nairo­bi pro­vide the paid crowds at ral­lies like the one thrown for Keny­at­ta and Ruto. “In 2012 we will see a lot of MPs com­ing to Kib­era because they want to be vot­ed for,” Akwede said. “But even after peo­ple fought for them in 2008, you didn’t see them any­where on the ground after the vote.”

As for gov­ern­ment ser­vices and resources, her expec­ta­tions are even low­er, in no small part because of the way secu­ri­ty forces respond­ed to the last cri­sis. An offi­cial inquiry point­ed to evi­dence that the police were just as eth­ni­cal­ly balka­nized as the slum they were tasked with reg­u­lat­ing: res­i­dents lucky enough to come across offi­cers from their own tribe were assist­ed; those who did not were met with hos­til­i­ty. Reports have high­light­ed the secu­ri­ty forces’ use of live ammu­ni­tion to dis­perse demonstrators—a prac­tice that all too fre­quent­ly killed bystanders as bul­lets pierced the flim­sy set­tle­ments of wood, mud and met­al. Near­ly four years lat­er, Akwede said she still dis­cour­ages those seek­ing help at Christ the King from report­ing their cas­es or sit­ting for inter­views with police—particularly sex­u­al vio­lence vic­tims, some of whom have been told by inves­ti­ga­tors that they “must have enjoyed” being assaulted.

Mean­while, the ques­tion of how to ensure a peace­ful vote—national elec­tions are ten­ta­tive­ly sched­uled for August 2012—goes unan­swered. Akwede said: “What the peo­ple need now is for the gov­ern­ment to come up with a new pol­i­cy so that MPs will be removed from office if there are clash­es. This will encour­age them all to preach peace.” Besides being mis­guid­ed (MPs, after all, are not direct­ly respon­si­ble for vio­lence in a lot of cas­es), this solu­tion and oth­ers like it depend on the unlike­ly prospect of the gov­ern­ment hold­ing itself accountable.

While some argue that Kenyans will be reluc­tant to engage in vio­lence so soon after the killings of 2007-08, Cheese­man, the Kenya schol­ar, said the oppo­site could prove true. “The only pat­tern we know that real­ly holds is that vio­lence and con­flict become more like­ly the more vio­lence and con­flict you have,” he said.

Mem­o­ries of the pre­vi­ous fight­ing, com­bined with a height­ened sense that res­i­dents will be left on their own, could make oth­er­wise reluc­tant com­bat­ants more proac­tive. “You basi­cal­ly get an arms race in which every­one is arm­ing defen­sive­ly against every­body else,” Cheese­man said.

The end result could again be thou­sands of ordi­nary Kenyans with lit­tle to gain fight­ing a war that orig­i­nat­ed with the Kenyan elites, and flour­ished because these same elites would not and could not con­tain it. Even Ndege, the farmer whose entire fam­i­ly per­ished in a Naivasha fire, finds it easy to imag­ine more destruc­tive out­comes. “What we had in 2007 is not a storm in a teacup,” he said. “What hap­pens next year will be worse.”

The orig­i­nal ver­sion of this arti­cle can be found here.

Source URL: http://robbiecoreyboulet.com/2011/09/calculated-rift/