One of the most significant moments
behind Kenya earning global recognition as a crusader for animal
conservation was witnessed in 1989, when President Daniel arap Moi made a
bonfire of a heap of elephant tusks, rhino horns, and other game
trophies.
Last Friday, President Uhuru Kenyatta sought
to create his own iconic moment by witnessing the Kenya Navy consign to
the depths of the Indian Ocean a seized drug smuggling ship and its
illicit cargo.
With that, the President declared total
war on those engaged in the narcotics trade. That is a war that deserves
all support, especially when we consider the ruinous effects of heroin,
cocaine, and other hard drugs that are wasting our youth.
In
addition to destroying the lives of so many young people, the trade in
illicit drugs also ruins governments. Drug barons thrive only when they
capture and subvert to their own ends the political leadership,
government administration, the judiciary, the police, and all other
institutions of governance.
Kenya grows nary a bud,
leaf, twig, flower, or whatever else goes into the production of heroin
or cocaine, yet it has become a major transshipment hub for the
substances originating in Asia and South America headed for markets in
Europe and the United States.
The country’s rise as an
international drug smuggling centre is proof that those who control the
nefarious trade have partners and protectors at the very heart of
government, especially in the political, security, and judicial arms.
Whenever
drug barons can buy and control the government, the country is in
danger of becoming a narco-democracy or a narcocracia, with all the
corruption and instability that this entails.
That is
the risk facing Kenya unless we can take the anti-drug campaign beyond
mere rhetoric, public relations gimmicks, and publicity stunts.
Sinking
a drug-laden ship and prosecuting the crew is just a small and
ineffective gesture unless the real owners of the contraband, together
with their protectors and partners in government, are arrested and
punished to the fullest extent the law allows, including stiff jail
terms and confiscation of all their ill-gotten wealth.
I
would thus take it that what we have seen and heard on President
Kenyatta’s declared war on drugs are just the opening salvos of what
must be a sustained and merciless war to completely smash the narcotics
cartels and their support networks ensconced in the very heart of his
government.
DISREPUTABLE CHARACTERS
As
he drives that war, President Kenyatta would do his image a world of
good by ridding his travelling entourage, party, and government of all
the disreputable characters who carry around them even the mere whiff of
involvement in the dirty trade.
Is if often said that
you are the company you keep. President Kenyatta must be aware, more
than most, that close association with characters reputed to have made
their fortunes from trading in drugs, and consequently destroying so
many promising lives, reflects badly on him and makes nonsense of his
declared war on the vice.
There are two important and
related statements that have come from the President during his coastal
sojourn. One is his restatement of the government’s resolve in the fight
against terrorism.
The other is his reference to poaching and the illicit trade in game trophies, and its links to terrorism.
It would seem that for the first time, he is publicly acknowledging the unholy trinity of poaching, narcotics, and terrorist financing.
It would seem that for the first time, he is publicly acknowledging the unholy trinity of poaching, narcotics, and terrorist financing.
For
a long time, the government has preferred to play deaf to warnings that
the three, together with arms smuggling and money laundering, form a
nexus of inter-related transnational crimes that are a threat to both
national security and global peace.
The Kenya Police
and the Kenya Wildlife Service have buried their heads in the sand.
Instead of taking firm action, they have resorted to demonising those
who point out the dangers posed by rampant poaching in our national
parks, game reserves, private conservancies, and wildlife dispersal
areas.
Now that the link and the threats to national
security have been confirmed from the very top, we expect a renewed
vigour in these separate but inter-linked wars.
mgaitho@ke.nationmedia.com. Twitter: @MachariaGaitho
No comments:
Post a Comment