Saturday, May 25th 2013
By Jacob Ngetich and Kipchumba Some
NAIROBI, KENYA: Details of how President Uhuru Kenyatta won over his deputy William Ruto against former Prime Minister Raila Odinga
in the run-up to the March 4 elections can now be revealed. Interviews
with multiple sources within TNA and URP reveal the intrigues, the
fears, the schemes and sheer organisation, leading to the steady rise of
the Uhuru-Ruto camp despite the huge odds against the âticketâ.
First,
Uhuru had to convince Ruto to play second fiddle at a time when their
two communities were seen too hostile to each to forge an alliance. The
decision to back Kenyatta was made by some 13 MPs from the Kalenjin
community after a nightlong meeting at Rutoâs home in Karen, Nairobi,
on October 12 last year.
Ruto had invited the MPs to deliberate
their options as the presidential race entered the final stretch. On
the table were three options: Back Raila, back Kenyatta or Ruto goes
into the elections alone.
At the beginning of the meeting at 8pm,
majority of those MPs were in favour of returning to Raila, said an MP
who requested not to be named. âNine MPs were in favour of
supporting Raila,â said the MP. âThey said Uhuru would be hard to
sell to the Kalenjin community,â he added.
Shouted down
However,
former Cherangany MP Joshua Kuttuny, former Eldoret South MP Peris
Simam and Kericho Senator Charles Keter fervently opposed retreating to
Odingaâs camp.
Bomet Governor Isaack Ruto supported former
Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka, but in the estimation of his colleagues,
the VP did not have a strong support base to mount a serious
presidential campaign.
Jackson Kiptanui, Moses Lesonnet, Sammy
Mwaita, Benjamin Lagat, Boaz Kaino, David Koech, Elijah Lagat, Julius
Kones and Luka Kigen backed the âRaila ticketâ.
Sources said
Kigen was even shouted down for his fervent support for Raila. The
option of Ruto going it alone was also dismissed on the grounds that it
would be expensive and at best, he would finish a distant third behind
Kenyatta and Odinga in that order. âThey implored their colleagues
that it would be hard to sell the man they had spent four years calling
names and that would call to question their moral fibre as leaders of
the community,â said the MP.
It was left to the trio to make the
case for why they ought to support Kenyatta, another hard sell, given
the bad blood between the Kikuyu and Kalenjin communities since the 2007
post-election violence.
The heated meeting nearly turned physical
at some point when Kutuny and Konoin MP Julius Kones could not agree on
the merits of backing Mr Kenyatta.
Some six kilometres away in the leafy suburbs of Lavington at an
office run by Uhuru, a close ally of the man who would become Kenyaâs
fourth president was pacing up and down, anxious of the Karen meeting
outcome. This was former Kikuyu MP Lewis Nguyai, who had been detailed
to keep tabs with the meeting and update Uhuru.
In the wee hours
of the morning, Uhuru proponents eventually carried the night. Ruto was
mandated to start serious talks with Kenyatta to form an alliance.Â
Nguyai relayed the meetingâs resolution to Uhuru. âHe was a little
bit surprised by that development,â said another close ally of
President Kenyatta. The next day, accompanied by Kuttuny, Chirau
Mwakwere and now Senate Speaker Ekwee Ethuro, Ruto met Kenyatta at his
offices in Lavington where he personally informed him of the Kalenjin
MPsâ decision.
Present in that meeting from Kenyattaâs side
were Nominated MP Johnson Sakaja, Uhuruâs personal assistant Njee
Muturi and former Justice minister Eugene Wamalwa.
Two days later,
they met again in Lavington where Ruto spelt out his demands. One of
them was that they would share the Government on a 50-50 basis.
Consequently, a team made of four from both sides, was formed to craft
the coalition agreement.
The team comprised Leader of Majority in
the National Assembly Adan Duale, Kuttuny, Keter, Mwakwere and Cabinet
Secretary nominee Kazungu Kambi.
Members of the committee from
Kenyattaâs side were Nominated MP Amina Abdalla, Kiambu Governor
William Kabogo and Taveta MP Naomi Shaban. And thus the Jubilee Alliance
was born to face off with Railaâs Cord Alliance.
At the
meeting, Ruto asked for a month to sell the alliance to the Kalenjin
community, which had expressed reservations about supporting Kenyatta.
Kuttuny and Keter were mandated to prepare the community for the
alliance through radio and other avenues.
As the year drew to an
end, Ruto and Kenyatta met to share Cabinet positions, where it is said
the latter came out feeling outwitted by the former. âUhuru came
with a list of the Cabinet positions he wanted. But Ruto outwitted him
by proposing they share the positions one by one. Uhuru would pick one
post and then Ruto would pick the next until the positions were
exhausted. Thatâs how Rutoâs side came out with strong
ministries,â said an MP privy to the meeting.
Something
interesting happened on November 9. Ruto secretly met Raila at the home
of an aide of former President Moiâs. The two leaders agreed to form a
coalition government and Ruto toyed with the idea but for fear of
backlash from his allies and the Kalenjin community, they agreed to keep
it under wraps until December 4, 2012.
However, the idea withered
soon on a fiery backlash from close allies of Mr Ruto, some who
threatened to abandon him. In November, Raila, Kalonzo and Bungoma
Senator Moses Wetangula unveiled their alliance at the Kenyatta
International Conference Centre. The sheer number of people at the KICC
seemed to have shocked the Uhuru, Ruto team.
Core team
An
ally of the President and his deputy said when they saw the number of
Cord supporters at KICC they panicked. Intelligence officials told them
they would lose the elections unless they backed someone else because of
their cases at the International Criminal Court.
Meanwhile, multiple sources have confided in us that the re-alignment
for the presidential race began in earnest in mid-2012 and the date
that both Uhuru and Ruto core teams were looking at was April 11, when
the ICC trials were originally scheduled to commence.
Both were
facing charges for crimes against humanity, and their communities were
starting to coalesce around them. Their combination of votes could
potentially be the winning ticket if rallied well.
Despite the ICC
tag hanging over them, Uhuru and Ruto were now seriously considering
running, the issue was who would be the torchbearer?
According to a
source, Ruto was prevailed upon to abandon his presidential ambitions
and take the running mate position behind Uhuru.
âThe argument
was simple, first it was easier to sell Uhuru in Rift Valley since he
had run in 2002 on a Kanu ticket and been embraced by the Kalenjins.
Secondly, they believed Kalenjins would be on the winning side in the
first round with Uhuru on top of the ticket as opposed to Ruto having to
convince them as a presidential candidate to vote for him again in the
second round in the event that there was a run off between Ruto and
Uhuru,â the source told The Standard on Sunday.
Another
dimension was how to sell the two ICC indictees and convince voters they
could govern the country while attending hearings many miles away.
Simple, you rope in a third alternate candidate into the coalition.
âWe zeroed in on Eugene Wamalwa,â the source revealed.
He
added: âWe were convinced Western would not vote solidly for Mudavadi
and Raila would eat into the votes. If we could get a Bukusu onto the
coalition, it would give Jubilee a share of the rich Western vote,
alongside Central and Rift Valley.â
Hague cases
The
strategy to sell the coalition to Wamalwa was simple; he would be
guaranteed the Speakerâs post, in effect as the third in line to the
Presidency. When both the President and his deputy are out of the
country, the Constitution gives the Speaker executive authority. âWith
the Hague cases calling and the possibility that both Uhuru and Ruto
would be away for an extended period of time attending the trials,
Wamalwa would be in charge.â
Jubilee watched Wamalwa dilly-dally
with the proposal, flickering on and off like a light bulb dancing to
the tune of a diesel generator. The next thing they heard he was with
pambazuka and then Amani coalition. They gave up on Western and decided
to focus their energies and resources elsewhere.
They pursued
another front, the Akamba vote. Kalonzo had been hanging around the G7
alliance believing he was the best option to take on Raila. Uhuru and
Ruto insiders in the alliance confided to The Standard On Sunday that
they were dealing with the predicament of Kalonzoâs firm stand:
âKalonzo had made it clear he would not settle for anything less than
being number one on the ticket. Being number two was out of the
question.â
Towards the end of October, the source said Kalonzo
was on a trip from Israel heading to London. Ruto called Kalonzo and
told him the number one and two slots on the ticket had been taken.
Effectively, Ruto told Kalonzo he could choose another position from
Majority Leader to Cabinet Secretary if he wished to remain with the
group. Kalonzo hit the roof. It was clear he would not come along with
them and they needed to urgently rope in Charity Ngilu. Kalonzo later
joined hands with Raila to form the Cord coalition.
Additional reporting by Machua Koinange
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