What do you do when you suddenly end up with the deputy president’s phone number?
Do
you send a funny and only slightly inappropriate video on WhatsApp or
do you forward a thoughtful critique of the government’s handling of the
security situation?
Better still, do you call to
inquire about where he and the president obtain their matching white
shirt and red tie combinations?
I wrestled with these
weighty questions just over a week ago when Deputy President Mr William
Ruto’s number unceremoniously ended up on my Twitter feed, along with a
cheeky little smiley icon.
It was nestled neatly in
between sanctimonious outrage about whatever it was the Internet was
condemning that week and another reference to the now mythical Kasarani
“concentration camp.”
EVIDENTLY A POSER
It
was the third time in a week that a government Twitter account had been
hacked by the aptly named Anonymous Kenya. Just a few days earlier, the
Kenya Defence Forces and its spokesman, Maj Emmanuel Chirchir, had also
had their Twitter accounts captured.
Instead of the
usual reports of airstrikes in Somalia — and endless irrelevant
commentary in Major Chirchir’s case — the accounts poured forth
anti-government propaganda that would outdo Hugo Weaving’s character in V
for Vendetta.
You see, the government’s “digital
assets” (pro tip: anybody who uses this term is evidently a poser and a
fake) are managed by folks like Dennis Itumbi, who goes by the
misleading and poorly crafted title, Director of Digital, New Media and
Diaspora at State House.
His exact qualifications for
this senior role are still a mystery, and have been questioned by no
less than a government agency. But the bigger mystery is what exactly he
does – besides creating new Twitter accounts, that is.
HACKING ICC WEBSITE
Right
up to the time he was appointed to the position, he had consistently
denied working for Jubilee candidate and then president, Mr Uhuru
Kenyatta.
You know, just the same way he denied ever
having hacked the ICC website and extracting information beneficial to
suspect Uhuru Kenyatta.
He did visit the International
Criminal Court during one of the trials, though whether he carried out
the alleged hacking has attracted surprisingly little debate.
In
an odd twist of fate, it now appears that the hacking flowchart has
come full cycle, and a man once accused of hacking the website of a
global court now finds himself fending off hackers from his “digital
assets.”
In the last month alone, nearly half a dozen
government Twitter accounts or websites have been captured. Anonymous
even bragged about Kenya being an easy target in an interview, and
promised more.
I tried counting how many government departments or agencies had been compromised since March 2013 but ran out of fingers.
POLICE TYPEWRITER
In
the grand scheme of things, hacking is the least of this government’s
digital challenges. We were sold this false premise of a digital
government for what is essentially an analogue administration.
How
else would they so memorably put out a tender for airlifting
presidential speeches in 2014? Granted, the tender was cancelled, but
only after sustained online consternation.
There was
also the tender for typewriters for a number of ministries. The
justification was that important documents such as title deeds and birth
certificates were still filled in manually.
I still
remember footage of a diligent police officer typing away noisily on a
typewriter at a police station. In almost all these bastions of law
enforcement, the all-important occurrence books are still outlandishly
manual and dog-eared.
I tried to assess the greatest
digital success of the Jubilee administration and came up hopelessly
empty. Starting new Twitter accounts and contradicting senior officials
does not count.
In any case, “governance by hashtag”
does not translate to measurable progress for citizens. Hashtags don’t
build schools or roads. Hashtags don’t give jobs or raise living
standards.
Hashtags can’t be called upon in place of a
policeman or an ambulance, they are only good for tracking the
government’s supposed progress on social media.
FREE WI-FI
Team
Uhuruto’s biggest promise – delivering laptops to impressionable little
ones joining primary school – is still stuck in the tendepreneurship
maze nearly two years later.
Even a plan to begin
cashless matatu transport using an electronic payment system just won’t
start. “Failure to launch” is a good title for this government’s grand
digital ambitions, and their customary disappointing conclusions.
Just
look at the over-publicised and spectacularly underwhelming free wi-fi
projects in Nairobi, Nakuru and Siaya counties. In the eyes of the
powers that be, free Internet connections are more important than clean
streets and working services.
The Jubilee
administration should just accept that it is hopelessly at sea with
technology, and drop the “digital” tag until it figures out how to
protect its “digital assets,” create strong passwords and deliver
laptops to the nation’s impatient children.
Appointing
a credible Chief Technology Officer would also be a good idea. I’m also
still taking ideas for what to do with the deputy president’s phone
number.
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