Those whosurroundedPresident Kenyatta were determined that the
presidency of Kenya would forever remain only amongst them. Something like the
royal family in the United Kingdom. There were confident enough that they were
smart enough to pull this off. They saw that wisdom and experience to run the
country could only be found amongst their midst and could hardly be found
anywhere else in the country.
At one point they even went as far as administering oaths to
the effect that the presidency would never cross the River Chania to other
Kikuyus in neighbouring Nyeri or even Muranga. The presidency was firmly in the
hands of Kiambu Kikuyus and that is why the president’s inner circle were often
referred to as the Kiambu mafia.
Admittedly the Kiambu mafia deserved that tag much more than
the Mount Kenya mafia that was to emerge much later during the Kibaki
presidency. Thesecharacterswere absolutely ruthless and many times acted in
ways that suggested that apart from being power hungry, they were also very
blood thirsty. It seemed that they were always itching for an opportunity to
kill somebody. It was soon clear than anybody who dared to oppose Kenyatta
would almost certainly end up dead. And it seemed that Kenyatta had ears
everywhere so that people were terrified of even saying anything against him
even in the privacy of their bedrooms.
Many times folks would have a private conversation in
whispers in some corner of a seedy bar that was well out of the way and the
next week they would be detained without trial or even worse go missing without
trace. In those days families of persons who went missing had very zero
options. It was unthinkable to go to court and prevail on the government to
produce anybody. That was just plain suicide.
To further spread fear amongst the people, murders by the
inner Kenyatta circle were executed in a manner that was straight out of some
horror movie. It was not enough for the person to be killed but on many
occasions theirprivate partswould be cut off and stuffed into their mouths. This
is exactly what happened with the JMassassinationand a few others. If a person did not get shot, this
was the “signature” that would confirm to the observant exactly who had carried
out the execution.
In the early days there were plenty of people brave and
stupid enough to satisfy the blood thirstiness of the Kiambu mafia but as the
years wore on fewer people were willing to take the chance of even speaking
evil against the Kenyatta administration in private or even daring to question
anything that his government did.
A Kenyan well known to this writer took a trip to the UK in
the mid 70s and whilewatchingBritish TV discovered that the Observer newspaper
had that morning published an article about one of the members of thefirst family. They quietly slipped out of their hotel
carefully looking over their shoulders several times and purchased a copy of
the newspaper from an outlet that was some distance from the hotel. They
returned to theirhotel roomand carefully locked the door to read the article
that described in great detail abusinessthat first lady Mama Ngina was involved in of mining
and then exporting precious stones mainly from the Taita Taveta area. The
article revealed that the first lady was already one of the wealthiest people
in the country. Hardly a seditious article on thefirst family, but on finishing reading the piece with his
heart thumping violently against his chest, the man burnt the newspaper and
flushed the ashes down the toilet. That was the fear that Kenyans felt in those
days and it did not matter that one was thousands of miles away from home inLondon.
In this kind of scenario the attitude of Kenyatta’s inner
circle was hardly surprising. They behaved as if they were gods. It seemed they
could even hear what Kenyans were whispering in the privacy of their bedrooms.
One interesting incident occurred in the early 70s that illustrates this point.
Jomo Kenyatta’s speeches were boringly predictable. He would
always warn people from playing around with the valuable Uhuru which had been
won by bloodshed. And he then he would often congratulate the ordinary Kenyans
on their continued hard work and love for their country. He would often pepper
his Kiswahili speeches by suddenly breaking into Kikuyu vernacular.
So Kenyans were shocked one day when in his speech the
president said that it had come to his attention that some people were saying
that he was incapable of fathering children. These people claimed that when the
colonialists had detained him they had tortured him to such an extent that he
had lost his manhood and ability tosirechildren. There was shocked silence at first with
many conservative Kenyans embarrassed that the president would even talk about
such things in public.
Kenyatta went on to castigate the people spreading such lies
about him and said that any Kenyan who doubted his manhood should go ahead and
ask Mama Ngina (the president’s fourth and last wife who was seated right there
at the dais a few short paces from where Kenyatta was making his speech. She
was visibly shaken and very embarrassed (wouldn’t you be?). Were the rumours
true? Was Kenyatta bluffing? Or was it all untrue? It is difficult to tell and
we will probably never know.
And so those close to the president started plotting on how
they would inherit the presidency from a man who was still very much alive.
Admittedly by this time it was clear to those close to him that the president
would not last for much longer. He regularly slipped in and out of commas and
it was clear that his health was rapidly failing. Of course nobody would dare
discuss the president’s health in public. But those close to Kenyatta knew what
was happening. And so a curious power struggle which would in the end hand over
the presidency to Daniel arap Moi on a silver platter started. At the height of
this power struggle a group of Kiambu politician including Njenga Karume,
Kihika Kimani and others started a campaign to have the constitution changed so
that in the event of the president dying or being incapacitated; power would
not automatically go to the Vice President pending elections. The idea was to
ensure that when Kenyatta died (and it was now obvious that it would happen
very soon) it would be easier for one of them to take over power
constitutionally.
The power struggle was intense and pitted mainly those very
close and some of them related to the president against another group led by
powerful Attorney general (who was literally running the country then) Charles
Mugane Njonjo. Mwai Kibaki was one of the chiefcharactersin Njonjo’s camp on this one. This in itself was
curious because the two individuals hardly agreed on anything else and their
personal squabbles have even been visible during the Kibaki presidency.
Interestingly a few days after Kenyatta died in August 1978,
Time magazine listed one of the front runners to take over the presidency as
being Njoroge Mungai (the president’s nephew and personal physician who was
also a legislator for a long time until he lost his Dagoretti seat to one Dr Johnstone
Muthiora. Muthiora was promptly assassinated by the Kiambu mafia, his main
crime being deposing Mungai from the Dagoretti seat. It is widely believed that
while he was in admitted at Nairobi hospital a lethal injection was
administered on him). The other person mentionedin the Timearticle was Mbiyu Koinange.
In his last days Kenyatta would slip in and out of
consciousness for days on end and many times would look like he had lost it and
was not even aware of his surroundings. But on a few occasions he would make
statements to those surrounding him that would display his sharp crisp mind was
still very much alert and around. On one such occasion he dismissed those
fighting for a change of the constitution to block Moi from ascending to power
with one simple Kikuyu proverb. The proverb says that somebody who wants to
rope a cow does NOT show the cow the rope. The Kikuyu proverb simply meant that
the change-the-constitution group was going about their mission in a very
unwise way because they were making their intentions rather obvious to their
target Daniel arap Moi.
To be continued. In the next
post: Dramatic behind the scenes events that brought Moi to power.
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