Vehicles stop as digital traffic lights control the jam in Nairobi |
I had a terrible time last week. One of our very good reporters had a Freudian moment.
Back-grounding
an innocuous little story about the First Lady, Mrs Margaret Kenyatta,
he referred to her as Mrs Margaret Kibaki. I have seen references to
President Uhuru Kibaki as well, a couple of times.
Now,
you are free to speculate as to why seasoned, hard-bitten reporters
would make errors like these. I think it has something to do with the
way the brain trains itself. If you say President, it fills the rest,
from habit.
Editors looked at that little construction,
they read ‘First Lady’ and their brains used experience and frequent
usage to fill the rest.
Because it was a little story,
or perhaps because we were having a bad day, it was not fondled by as
many editors as it normally would, and therefore it went to press with
one of the worst mistakes of the year.
The calls
started coming in at 4am, at which point there was not much we could do.
Hundreds of thousands of copies of the Daily Nation had already been
printed and were in vans en route to the market.
The
Twitterati were the first to work on us, followed by the rest of the
netizens. I had little conversations with the First Lady’s press team
which left me feeling not very clever.
As for my
bosses, let us just say that they were not sending flowers and biscuits
for publishing 127 clean stories and one with a few morphemes wrong.
The
whole world was at my door. It was clear in their minds whose fault the
whole thing was. The moral? Responsibility. It was my responsibility to
ensure the accuracy of the newspaper I am entrusted with.
If
anything goes wrong, there is no hole big enough to hide me. Many are
the nights I get home, then come back to the office to make sure.
Well,
I am not quite writing this to boast about what a fantastic system
newspapers have. I am writing because people in public life in Kenya
have no sense of responsibility and are never held to account.
This
week we have had the most horrible traffic in Nairobi. Even at 10pm, it
is sometimes still impossible to get around. Two days ago, I took
almost an hour to move barely two kilometres. Thousands of other
motorists were in the same position.
That day the
economy lost millions of shillings in squandered man hours and good
petrol burnt for nothing. And it is happening nearly every day. So whose
responsibility is it?
Who spends sleepless nights because he knows that it is his responsibility to keep the city moving?
In
the coming days, hundreds, possibly thousands of Kenyans, including
young children, are going to be killed. They will be driven at breakneck
speed on the wrong side of the road and massacred by maniacs who have
no regard for life. Whose responsibility is it?
Maj-General
Hussein Ali, a man I have some regard for, once said something
profound. He said you can delegate authority, but never responsibility.
He means the mistakes of your juniors are your responsibility.
If
I was the President, I would issue a memo spelling out my expectations
of every public official. So, if Kenyans died in a bus because an
officer was bribed to overlook that it did not have a speed governor,
the Inspector-General of Police would take responsibility.
If
students failed exams, the Minister for Education would take
responsibility. If doctors misdiagnose patients, the Minister for Health
would take responsibility. Their job would be to find solutions.
In
six months, there would be pools of bureaucratic blood on the floor,
many mistakes would have been made, a lot of people would have lost
their jobs unfairly, but this would be an efficient and well-functioning
place.
And the systems would be refined to eliminate their mistakes and we would have a civilised country.
Responsibility is the price you pay for authority. You can have authority without responsibility if you are Attila the Hun.
* * * *
Where I come from, there is a saying that to an idiot, his foolishness looks like the pinnacle of refinement.
Where I come from, there is a saying that to an idiot, his foolishness looks like the pinnacle of refinement.
Do
you really think that a shackled press is in anyone’s interest? Do you
think it is a smart way to do business? Do you think anyone will respect
a country that respects no rights?
Do you think investors will be interested in a country whose leaders do not value democracy?
Kenyans,
your leaders have planted a little breeze. Please take out your baskets
for the typhoon harvest that will surely follow.
mmathiu@ke.nationmedia.com
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