By KWENDO OPANGA
Saturday, June 8
2013
In Summary
- It is my humble submission that the Coalition for Reforms and Democracy (Cord) must set itself specific objectives to be attained before the next General Election. Their aim will be to wrest power from Jubilee at the earliest opportunity.
I know my place. I wait in the queue for my
turn. I know where to find the VIP Lounge at our airports but, if I
strayed in there, I would immediately look for the exit. I do not belong
there.
The only reason I would hang in there is if some
VIP – Very Important Person – summoned me over to accuse me of being a
VAP – Very Annoying Person.
But when I have a junket, I know where economy
class ticket holders wait to check in and for advice to proceed to the
designated boarding gate. Certainly, I step aside to let wakubwa, ladies
and mothers with children pass. I let muscular, ipad-scanning, digital
generation youngsters swagger and slouch ahead of me.
Of course, politically I am a VIK – Verified
Insignificant Kaperson. But then, I am nobody from nowhere only that by
virtue of my vote and station, I make others VIPs.
As I say, some things I know and some things I do
not know. But this I know for certain: Mr Raila Odinga is an unrivalled
paragon and veritable champion of Kenya’s rights struggle.
He has sacrificed massively in the unending fight
to expand Kenya’s democratic space. But, I also know, he is no longer
Kenya’s Prime Minister, having lost the March 4 presidential poll.
Therefore, when some folks began a campaign to get him into Parliament
or Senate, I humbly voiced my total disagreement and submitted my
considered alternative.
When President Kibaki began to fight Ms Mary
Wambui’s bid to succeed him as MP for Othaya, I argued that he had
picked the wrong battle on the eve of his exit from the political arena.
I said his preferred candidate would lose.
Now, Mr Kibaki is certainly in retirement, but Mr
Odinga appears to be in transition or retrospection or, worse, caught up
in no-man’s land.
When the story broke last week, many were incensed
that Mr Odinga had been denied access to the VIP Lounge at the Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport. That would be incredible and
unacceptable.
Mr Odinga is entitled to use VIP Lounge II. The
Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) explained that Mr Odinga was not denied
access to the VIP Lounge but that he could not be allowed to drive to
the airside.
As PM, Mr Odinga would be driven to the airside from where he would leap onto the gangway and onto his plane.
But now Mr Odinga is not PM and that restricts him
to certain amenities. If, for example, Mr Odinga walked into VIP Lounge
III, he would be firmly reminded that the facility is reserved for the
Deputy President, visiting deputy presidents and retired presidents.
Of course the State Pavilion is reserved for the
President and any visiting head of state or government and the UN
Secretary General. As PM, Mr Odinga was a co-principal in the coalition
government and would have used the pavilion. But there are many who
argued fervently that the PM was not head of state and was not,
therefore, qualified to use the facility.
If such opposition raged when Mr Odinga was in power, will it stop now that he is out of it? No.
First, because Mr Odinga is still a potent
political force and second because those in government believe he is
determined to make life difficult for them.
For example, it is widely believed in government
that it was Mr Odinga’s allies who leaked the scandalous information
about Mr William Ruto’s hire of a private jet.
Again, in government it is believed that Mr Odinga
is looking for every opportunity to court public sympathy for himself
and, by the same token, elicit public disfavour for the government by
his actions.
This is, of course, legitimate political business,
but how far does it ground, enhance and advance the cause of the
political opposition in Kenya?
In my view, Mr Odinga must ground opposition politics in forming
and fronting a credible and formidable alternative to the Jubilee
government.
It is my humble submission that the Coalition for
Reforms and Democracy (Cord) must set itself specific objectives to be
attained before the next General Election. Their aim will be to wrest
power from Jubilee at the earliest opportunity.
Does Cord or the member parties sit down and study
audits of their performance at the last General Election with a view to
setting or reviewing agenda for addressing and redressing the
challenges they faced and charting and focusing the strategies for the
next General Election? This will focus Mr Odinga.
Kwendo Opanga is a media consultant opanga@diplomateastafrica.com
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