In Summary
- Nothing better demonises, disparages, harasses and harangues, embitters and embattles than the truth
When
I joined in the agitation for the establishment of a truth and
reconciliation commission, I also argued that truth does not unite or
reconcile. Truth, I said, divides. I, therefore, argued that whereas it
is important that we have a truth commission, it is also crucial that we
be prepared for the truth and how to handle it.
Now that the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) has handed over its long-awaited report
to President Kenyatta, I wish to buttress my position by emphasising
that, indeed, nothing better demonises and disparages, harasses and
harangues, embitters and embattles than the truth. This assumes that the
report of the TJRC is nothing but the truth.
Of
course, the TJRC was set up to expose the truth about past injustices so
that it may set us free. The way I understand it, the recommendations
of the report and implementation thereof should help us exorcise the
ghosts of the past that drove us into the madness and mayhem of
2007/2008 and lead us into a new chapter of reconciliation and amity.
My
concern is that the possibility exists that if the truth is not handled
properly it could become a monster that would burden and haunt us with
the ghosts of the past forever or, worse, turn the present into a hell
that consumes us all. We must be careful as a country not to expend a
substantial part of our time and resources on excavating the past to the
detriment of building the future.
While the past has
important lessons for us to learn, I am of the view that our future does
not lie in the past. Kenya’s best days, I would like to believe, are
ahead of it and not behind it. The future is built by executing the
visions of the present which must address and redress – or build on –
the deficits of the plans of the past.
Now, the TJRC
recommends that more than 400 people, most of them former senior figures
in government, be prosecuted. It calls for myriads of investigation
into the activities of many others, including its own chairman, Dr
Bethuel Kiplagat, and security agencies. TJRC proposes that President
Kenyatta apologises for Kenya’s human rights abuses since 1963.
The
TJRC wants the 1990 murder of Dr Robert John Ouko investigated afresh
and indeed names former President Moi as a person of interest in such an
investigation. The commission recommends that the National Land
Commission fast-tracks the process of addressing and recovering all
irregularly and illegally acquired land at the Coast.
The
recommendations are as legion as the injustices the commission covered.
So if these be objectives, can they be described as specific,
measurable, attainable, results-focused and time-bound? I get the
feeling that the TJRC is all over the place; that it wants to have its
finger in every conceivable pie and its footprint on everything.
Of
course, its mandate was wide, but I would have preferred two or three
recommendations that would have forced us into collective reflection and
also given us a clear path to national reconciliation. If we are going
to have a plethora of investigations, prosecutions and threats of or
actual land seizures, then we cannot rule out ethnic mobilisation by the
affected parties, especially politicians.
President
Kenyatta is expected to apologise within three months. What happens if
he does not? Suppose he argues that if he apologises he will have opened
the doors to thousands of Kenyans to sue the government for
compensation? Apologising amounts to owning the alleged sins of omission
and commission of the two living former presidents and the deceased
one, but they may not agree they sinned and may want to challenge the
TJRC report.
And might not the TJRC have tied itself in
knots? It mentions the President and Deputy President William Ruto
adversely in connection with the post-election violence of 2007 and 2008
and uses the Kenya National Human Rights Commission (KNHCR) report as
well as the report of the Justice Philip Waki Commission on
post-election violence.
President and Deputy have
nothing, and have preached nothing, but antipathy and anathema for these
reports. Will they implement that which embraces what they consider to
be speculation and hearsay by rented witnesses?
Given
the fiscal and especially emotional cost of implementing the TJRC report
and granted the fragility of Kenya’s politics and inter-ethnic
tensions, President Kenyatta should ask himself the value-add in
prosecutions vis-à-vis the promise of the Constitution. However,
recommendations on land must occupy his mind most.
Kwendo Opanga is a media consultant opanga@diplomateastafrica.com
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