BY John Githongo via the Star..
Currently, the Act ‘provides that political parties’
funding should be computed on the basis of election votes. The new
proposed formula is based on the number of elected representatives that
each party has.
“As a result, and unsurprisingly, political parties
have been pushing the IEBC to hurry up with its final release of results
‘so that they can work out how much state funding they are entitled
to”.
To date, however, the IEBC has not ‘finalised’ the
exact figures from the March 4 election and “there are allegedly still
substantial differences between the presidential and parliamentary
numbers.”
IEBC MUST MOVE QUICKLY TO RECONCILE DATA
The report carried what I, in hindsight, considered a
startling revelation. One of the IEBC’s commissioners was recorded as
having said, “We are having sleepless nights reconciling the
presidential results and those of the other positions. Over a million
votes must be reconciled with the others and if the requirement is not
changed, then it will cast the IEBC in a negative light…”
The IEBC was thus reported to have devised three options that would resolve the impasse. The concern ‘of casting the IEBC in a negative light’
was a little rich. That said, the commissioner’s admission itself was
deeply troubling about the overall integrity of the polls.
A million irregularly introduced ie rigged votes
would take the overall result of the presidential election closer to the
scientific pre-election opinion polls and the exit polls that have
emerged since, like that from Harvard University that called a close
race between Uhuru and Odinga.
Then, last weekend the Daily Nation carried a
long interview with Raila Odinga in which he discussed both the
elections and his future plans without a hint of bitterness. Here too my
attention was captured by the remarks he was reported to have made:
“But this idea that
there were some areas where there was 95 per cent or 100 per cent
turn-out is a myth. Because if you look at the records, the average
turn-out was 72 per cent for county reps, for women reps, for MPs, for
governors, for senators but only for the presidential 86 per cent. What
accounts for that difference?… They were stuffing ballot papers and that
was the evidence that we wanted to adduce in court that over one
million people turned up for the ballot and only voted for the
presidency and not for the others.”
Some of the top experts on
election matters – both Kenyan and foreign – have been pleading ever
more insistently for the IEBC to release the full results of elections
held almost three months ago.
To them, this admission that
essentially around one million more Kenyans voted for the presidential
candidates but did not vote for any of the other offices (Governor,
Senator, MP etc) was a bombshell. After all, none of the multiple teams
of election observers noted what surely would have been difficult to
miss: one million voters casting presidential ballots and deciding not
to vote for any other of the offices.
Nor has IEBC reported five million
spoilt votes spread out amongst the other five offices, which would
have been the expected result if all these voters had somehow managed to
cast only one of their allotted six ballots right – the other plausible
explanation. So the one million ghosts in the books are a problem.
SO WHAT NOW FOR KENYA?
It is ironically comforting to
many that the gut feeling that something slick, big and nasty was likely
pulled off at the last election is seemingly now proving to be more and
more likely correct.
This is notwithstanding the
sometimes garbled reassuring statements by both local and foreign
observers whose positions at the time were not backed up by what Kenyans
saw with their own eyes. It is always a relief to realise you did not
dream something up.
Little can be changed at this stage; we need to “move
on” as Kenyans are being constantly urged to do. I am among those who
believe national cohesion can only be achieved if a majority of Kenyans
don’t believe in the malevolent ‘tyranny of numbers’ narrative that
seems to have laid the ground for subsequent events.
To be blunt, it is important that the majority of
Kenyans from all races and tribes believe that there are enough Gikuyus
who don’t appear to ascribe to the conviction that one ethnic community
must lord it over all others in perpetuity.
That so many are not convinced that this is the case
is the source of the most furious resentments among non-Gikuyus – and
the source of a rapidly dwindling interest in the project of nationhood –
ironically at the very historical moment that the country celebrates a
significant milestone – 50 years since the end of colonial rule.
All this brings us to grips with
our present condition, for better or for worse. That we reached here
without the kind of violence we saw in 2008 is a good thing. Second, we
acknowledge the reality that Kenya has a legally sworn-in head of state;
cabinet secretaries and other functionaries are being appointed.
We have a government and matters
of everyday life can proceed. On the economic front, the government has
been making all the correct noises. It is now in an enviable position of
translating its pre-election promises to reality – ensuring that our
growth delivers jobs for the youth, for example.
Potentially exciting times indeed, what with the huge
economic potential promised by the combined coincidence of a critical
mass of energetic, young, educated and entrepreneurial African ‘human
capital’; massive external economic interest in Africa; the discovery of
a range of minerals etc – there is indeed great promise that Kenya
could be on the verge of a take-off to that dream envisioned at
independence.
However, there still remains
important cleaning up to do with regard to our election processes and
institutions. Indeed, I would argue, we need to rethink the
first-past-the-post system in its entirety.
It has brought us much grief: a
more volatile polity; tribal division compounded by festering anger and
generally less social cohesion, ironically, than when Moi was president
of Kenya.
No election is perfect, however,
this one was the worst ever in terms of the sheer scale of divergence
between public expectations and actual performance by the electoral
body.
We have now had two apparently
fraudulent elections in a row where the fraud was televised, SMSed,
tweeted and generally widely reported on, especially during and since
the court case that followed contestation of the presidential results.
That said, regardless of the
manipulations, the voting pattern – largely along tribal lines – told us
a great deal about ourselves. It also forces difficult questions upon
us.
THE FIRST KENYAN REPUBLIC HAS GIVEN UP THE GHOST
For starters, what is the point of
people participating in national elections if it is believed
by a
critical mass of the population that certain pivotal positions are
reserved for certain communities, based not on ability but on ancestry?
What does people believing this
mean for Kenya? First it explains the generally foul mood of many middle
class Kenyans who are neither Gikuyu nor Kalenjin.
A Nigerian friend made the
observation last week that the contradictions inherent in the current
ruling tribal alliance are so vast that it shall wobble too with time
forcing a ‘militarisation of consent’ both formally and informally; both
judicially and extra judicially.
I’m not so sure it is possible to
militarise consent in Kenya. It has been attempted in northern Kenya
since before independence and the project has never really been a total
success.
Trying the same in say, the Rift
Valley, would be an ambitious prospect. Instead, crime and ethnic
cleansing on a voluntary basis has swept across entire swathes of the
country.
Secondly, we are slowly coming to
terms with the fact that the First Kenyan Republic has given up the
ghost. The Second Republic under our 2010 constitution is the Tribal
Nation – before all things in the way we relate to one another outside
the realm of simple transactions.
Prof. Ogot was correct in April
2006 when he declared the Kenya Project as conceived by the African
nationalists who breathed life into the attempts at Nations that
colonialism left behind – dead. A more complex beast is emerging. More
on this next time…
Story by Kenya Today
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