Kenyans are equally divided between those suffering from Railamania and Railaphobia.
PHOTO | FILE Kenyans didn’t know much about Mr Odinga beyond his penchant for getting jailed without a court process. |
In Summary
- Kenya’s most celebrated politician says he will be around for a while to fight for the rights the people demand and need
There
is a poignant disconnect between Raila Odinga on the one hand and the
millions of Kenyans on both sides of the political divide, many of whom
are now engaged in a blazing civil war on social media, on the other. To
them, it is personal. To him, it is just ideological.
Mr
Odinga is seamlessly able to separate his person from the cause he
leads. His supporters and his opponents, at least many of them, cannot.
His supporters love him to the point where some committed suicide when
he lost the election. His opponents loathe him to a point where
discussing him is a no-go territory.
Because to him
President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto are not
personal enemies but ideological opponents, he was able to enjoy laughs
with them at State House just a few days after his devastating defeat.
As
he did this, his supporters and opponents were evicting each other from
rental houses, sacking each other from jobs and engaging in some of the
most incendiary hate speech since the invention of electronic media.
For them, it is personal; for him, it is just business.
The
late Michael Kijana Wamalwa, once Kenya’s vice-president and political
competitor of Mr Odinga’s, said many things in his life. But if one
stands out, it is the quip he made that Kenyans are equally divided
between those suffering from Railamania and Railaphobia.
In the first in-depth interview
since his loss in the March 4 General Election and its confirmation by
the Supreme Court, he spoke with equanimity – and even charity – towards
the Jubilee duo and repeated two things he had said before: that he
wishes President Kenyatta well in executing his agenda and that he will
not oppose for the sake of opposing; he will do it constructively.
He
looked drawn, and it is obvious that the marathon campaign and its
tumultuous aftermath has exacted its physical toll. Still, he is
comfortable in his skin and continues to run a tight schedule. Our
interview was wedged between engagements, and time was of the essence.
For
him, no questions were off-limits, and he didn’t request to see them
beforehand. He went into considerable detail on each, and it was time
that caught up with us. He is most alive when discussing ideological
issues and most reserved when talking about personal ones.
He
constantly, and rather painstakingly, establishes a distance between
his cause and himself, saying it will triumph with or without him some
day and that he has not even declared a presidential run for 2017. It is
a world away from that lived by his compatriots for whom the cause and
the person are one and the same.
Unlike some of his
colleagues in the Cord coalition who have been dismissed as intellectual
flyweights, he oozes gravitas, and maybe, just maybe you think, they
should also add university teaching among the many options being thrown
his way. The overriding question was what this colossus of Kenyan
politics, who has shaped the national political conversation for more
than 30 years, has on his mind after the failure of his third stab at
the presidency. He has a local and international constituency that wants
to know.
Starting from the late 1970s and culminating
in 2002, he was a general leading troops fighting Kanu’s dictatorship.
His base, civil society activist John Githongo believes, has been the
infantry of Kenya’s democratisation process. His entire early political
career was spent wrestling with Kanu, and he became Kenya’s most
detained politician – nine years in jail under his belt.
As
he matured politically, he started seeking the presidency, beginning in
1997. Like a gladiator who understands that failure means death, he
threw everything into this effort, especially in 2007 and 2013. But he
has failed in his objective. State House now seems farther from his
sights than at any time in his eventful life.
Interviews
with his supporters on the street reveal a dispirited and dazed lot.
Some have slowly and agonisingly come to accept his defeat. Many are in
denial; it hasn’t happened. Yet others, like Prof Makau Mutua, once one
of his most virulent critics before he underwent a “Road to Damascus”
experience and became a loud and provocative supporter, have
aggressively dismissed the election outcome.
After
President Kenyatta was sworn in, Prof Mutua tweeted: “As a matter of
freedom of conscience and thought, I can’t accept Uhuru Kenyatta as
President of Kenya. I can’t, and I won’t.”
Such has
been the despair and pity for him that Mr Odinga felt compelled to
address the issue directly: “I do not need any sympathy because I am not
dead,” he told a funeral gathering in western Kenya last month.
There
are those who have lost the faith completely. They have concluded the
game is up and that he will never become President under whatever
circumstances.
For this kind, it is time to back
another horse. As soon as the election result was announced, and even
before the petition was filed and dismissed by the Supreme Court, one
said:
“I have voted for him twice and both times I have lost. I have
always been his supporter because I believe he represents something
good. I also think he has always got a raw deal when he deserved better.
Unfortunately, I am beginning to feel the cause is lost forever. I fear
that he has the curse of Sisyphus.”
Sisyphus was the
founder of the city of Corinth in Greek mythology. He was made to roll a
huge stone from the bottom to the top of a hill by the gods. His ordeal
would end only if he heaved it over the top. Each time Sisyphus was
about to roll the stone over the summit, it pushed him back to the
bottom of the hill and he had to start all over again. This went on
eternally.
Stanley Mbagathi is a Kenyan economist
working for Comesa in Lusaka. At 63, he belongs to the same age group as
Raila. He was in East Germany for his university education at the same
time as Mr Odinga was studying mechanical engineering there.
Shaped
by the political and social convulsions sweeping the world in the late
1960s and early 1970s – the Prague Spring, the American Civil Rights
Movement, Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, African decolonisation, the hippie
generation – he has been enamoured of Mr Odinga and his politics of the
Left for decades. But he, too, now sees the presidency as a bridge too
far.
“As a child growing up in the 1940s and 1950s, his
early life was shaped by Kenya’s war of liberation of which his father
was a champion. He was a Mau Mau supporter,” said Mr Mbagathi. “The
Civil Rights Movement in America and Third World decolonisation of the
1960s shaped his political ideology. It was a time of idealism and you
can still see too much of that in him.
“I think his
entire education set him up to fail as a campaigner. It duped him to
believe that goodness and idealism by themselves could appeal to the
masses and win. I’ve always voted for him, but it is over now. Raila has
matured as a politician when so much change has taken place in Kenya
and the world. These changes have overtaken him. The era of Leftist
idealism is dead; it was defeated when the Berlin Wall collapsed.”
Nothing
gets Mr Odinga more agitated than such a view. Suddenly, his clasped
hands open on the table, he waves his arms in the air, and his tired
face suddenly bursts life. “Nothing could be further from the truth,” he
says and proceeds to make a detailed exposition of the evolution of the
Left and the Right in Western democracies to make the case of the
enduring relevance of political leanings.
On the day
after they cleaned up the mess made by horses and pigs at the gates of
Parliament, I went there to seek out some MPs. I was interested more in
those who had stuck with him for decades. This is because the Cord
leader has gained an unenviable reputation of making political friends
easily but seems unable to keep them for long. As the journalist David
Margolick once wrote of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, he
“picks people poorly, goes through them fast”.
Mr Mpuru
Aburi, the first- time MP for Tigania East, is a dramatic character. It
is impossible to lose him because he keeps tapping your arm to
emphasise his points. “I don’t support a pay increase for MPs,” Mr
Aburi, who won his seat on an ODM ticket, said as soon as we had secured
a quiet corner with some difficulty. What had happened the previous day
was inescapable. “Raila never taught me to make money; he taught me
public service. I first met him in 1991, and I am going to stick with
him until I die.”
Mr Aburi is sure that if it were not
for Mr Odinga’s intervention, he would be a dead man, thanks to the Kanu
state. Mr Odinga wasn’t there when he got himself into trouble; in
fact, he didn’t know him at that time. He would surface afterwards.
He
said: “It started like this – I was attending a harambee meeting in
Meru when the priest invited me to make the closing prayer. I stood up
and started praying. I prayed like this – ‘Oh Almighty God! God of power
which is beyond any man on this earth, God of mercy! Our country is
full of darkness because of an evil regime! God of great power! We are
suffering! Come to our rescue, oh God! That aeroplane that Moi bought
using our money, bring it down so that Kenya can have a new leader ...”
He
didn’t finish. He opened his eyes to see handcuffs being clasped on his
wrists. He was then hustled into a police van. From there, it was a
stop from one police or prison cell to another after every few days. He
was locked up variously in Isiolo, Nyeri, Meru and Machakos over a
period of three months.
One day, locked up in Meru, he
heard a large commotion outside his cell. It turned out it was Mr Odinga
leading protesters and demanding his release.
How he
had learned of his predicament, he couldn’t tell. Why he had decided to
act was still more mysterious. But Mr Aburi was tremendously moved. At
that time, he feared that he wasn’t going to leave those cells alive. He
instantly became famous. Thus began his lifelong association with Mr
Odinga.
Today he is adamant that the Cord leader must
not return to Parliament. “He is too big for Parliament,” says Mr Aburi.
“I can’t imagine him coming here to argue with Duale.” Mr Aden Duale is
the House Majority Leader.
Mr Chris Bichage, MP for
Nyaribari Chache, was racing to the airport and running late. “I wish I
knew in advance what you wanted,” he said on the phone after our meeting
failed. “I would have reorganised my priorities and given you a
six-hour interview. There is so much I can tell you ... Even now as I
think about that, inside me, I am trembling.”
These are
some of the troops who won’t hear of surrender. They have worthy
opposites inside and outside Parliament who won’t countenance a Raila
recovery from his present predicament come sun or hail.
Once
in 1989 or 1990, a close relative of GG Kariuki, the senator for
Laikipia, and a man who once called the shots in the early years of
President Moi’s administration, recalled a dinner for the President in
GG’s Rumuruti home. The President seemed pre-occupied.
After every few bites, he would shake his head and mutter:
“Raila! Raila!” At that time, Kenyans didn’t know much about Mr Odinga
beyond his penchant for getting jailed without a court process. But
clearly, President Moi knew something, and it was interfering with his
appetite.
Last month, when the Supreme Court handed
down its fateful verdict, social media was awash with claims that Mr Moi
was very pleased with the verdict. Maybe he was, but nobody asked him.
How
potent a player does Raila Odinga still remain? Dr Joyce Nyairo, a
former lecturer at the University of Nairobi and leading commentator on
cultural issues, offered this searing appraisal of Mr Odinga: “To know
the true worth of Raila Odinga’s brazen courage and audacious mouth, you
need to have lived under Moi’s dictatorship. For it is only in a time
of acute and widespread fear, in a world of one state-run TV station;
one national radio broadcaster; a world of no fax, no Internet and of
land line phones said to be regularly run by state eavesdroppers that
the compelling charm and mobilising power of a man unfazed by handcuffs
and filled with the audacity to dream-up an alternative leadership that
the heroism of Raila Odinga shines on high.
“Against
the expansive freedoms of the Kibaki state – in a world where every
teenager with a cell phone is a formidable reporter, broadcaster,
opinion-shaper, and crowdsourcer, the lustre of loud, shrill naysayers
dims against the din of countless others. There is no longer any value
in shrill voices; no novelty in speaking, in writing, in arguing and in
demanding.
“Everybody has the space to say, to gossip,
to be aired and to be recorded. So what does it matter that Raila Odinga
is a fiery presidential candidate promising implementation of a
Constitution?
“Was Raila a victim of his past? Did he
fail to edit his message to update his status and change his grammar?
Was his 30-year-old reputation of brave protest and cunning sabotage of a
repressive state too old and jaded for the 18-year-old voter who has
never known a world of one TV station and detention without trial?
“Simply put: had Raila Odinga lost his relevance and grown too complacent about his assured place in our songs of protest?”
That
is a question, not an answer. To which Mr Odinga’s fellow former
detainee and veteran of the democratisation trenches, constitutional
lawyer and senior counsel Gibson Kamau Kuria, adds yet more questions:
“Opposition politics in the 1980s and 1990s required sound command of
democratic theory and constant practice of democratic ideals and
principles. These were attributes that were significant in their absence
amongst the country’s political leadership of the time.
“Following
the March 4 General Election, these attributes are now badly required
because the Opposition must re-invent itself as the country implements
the Constitution in its entirety. The questions are: Does Cord manifest a
thorough grasp of that democratic theory and practice? Do the records
of the Cord leaders manifest a consistency in upholding or practising of
democratic principles and ideals? What is their capacity?”
Only
a person of Raila Odinga’s political stature can get the nation’s
heaviest intellectual artillery this engaged. In a portrait penned in
2007, one writer remarked that a trait of Mr Odinga’s is the ability to
dine in the king’s palace one moment and to disappear in the crowd the
next. He thrives in both. There is an unmistakable authenticity to his
assertion that it doesn’t have to be him, that despite all the
appearances, he doesn’t have to be president.
But he
has a street, a village and the academy, and these just won’t let him
go. And they drive him. He says he is their servant, but more
appropriately, he is their slave – when they call, he responds. For this
reason, and despite his crashing loss on March 4, Raila Odinga will be
around for a while. He cannot help it. But it is not personal – just
political business.
Roy Gachuhi is a former Nation Media Group reporter. He writes for The Content House (@contenthouseKE).
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