Monday, 25 March 2013

Africa's Madman of the Year 2013: Raila Amollo Odinga

(PHOTO 1: March 18, 2013, Changamwe constituency, Kenya. "Residents

[...] acknowledged greetings from Prime Minister Raila Odinga (atop

his car) before he addressed them" and proclaim himself winner of

March 4 presidential poll.)



***

(PHOTO 2: Kenya Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission

Chairman Issack Hassan, left, "presents the certificate of

presidential results to Chief Justice Dr. Willy Mutunga at the Supreme

Court in Nairobi, March 11, 2014.")



***



There are two age-old African presidential-election-cycle shibboleths.



The first one--now rare--is the Ivorian kind of shibboleth where, as

it happened in 2010 in Côte d'Ivoire, the electoral commission, whose

majority of members were the incumbent's political clients and tribal

allies, aided and abetted electoral fraud.



The most common shibboleth nowadays, however, is this second one,

where a losing (opposition) candidate--with the bloated ego of a

madman--defying statistical and sociological logic, claims to be the

rightful winner of the poll.



(In this crazy post-apocalyptic world, there's no such thing as the

swift concession defeat like the one made by then Senegalese President

Abdoulaye Wade made in April 2012 to rival Macky Sall. Here, people

have to die for the narrow ambitions of a sociopath.)



This latter shibboleth is often accompanied by another minor

shibboleth--a sub-shibboleth, as it were--which consists in

systematically denigrating the country's so-called independent

electoral commission.



This happened in the DRC where opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi so

successfully demonized the Independent National Electoral Commission

(CENI) and its chairman before, during, and after the November 2011

general elections that many citizens ended up losing confidence in an

institution created by their own representatives in Parliament and

whose members were rigorously vetted and chosen by the National

Assembly.



Rejecting the results of the presidential election, Tshisekedi refused

nevertheless to petition the Supreme Court, the constitutional

arbiter, charging that the entire judiciary of the DRC was populated

by creatures entirely beholden to President Joseph Kabila.



Upping the ante not only on the ruling majority but on his own party

as well, Tshisekedi barred his party members freshly elected as MPs

from taking their seats in Parliament.



All MPs belonging to his party--with the exception of his own son and

sister--chose to disobey this directive.



Tshisekedi retaliated by excluding all of them from his party--though

some pro-Kabila MPs are now expressing misgivings about Tshisekedi's

son and sister continuing to be paid huge salaries as MPs, in blatant

violation of stringent and clear-cut attendance rules of the National

Assembly.



In some cases, the madman would even come out and proclaim himself

president-elect, and hope, against all odds, that somehow, the

"imperium" would be conferred upon him, his family, his entourage and

his tribe.



This is what happened in the DRC where, to this day, Tshisekedi still

deludes himself of being the president of the republic.



The delusions of these presidential election madmen and fraudsters are

often heightened by election monitoring organizations, like the Carter

Center, which would point to apparent poll irregularities.



In Kenya, the situation was slightly different at first, then it

somewhat rejoined the DRC narrative.



Both running presidential tickets--Uhuru Kenyatta and running mate

William Ruto on the one hand; and Raila Amollo Odinga aka RAO and

Deputy President candidate Stephen Kalonzo Musyoka--were all

incumbents, as they all belonged to the grand coalition government

brokered after the debacle of the 2007 presidential election.



Odinga, who lost to Kenyatta in the March 4, 2013 presidential

election, came out at first as a reasonable fellow, backing, prior to

the poll, Chairman Issack Hassan and the other 8 members of the

Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC).



Then, as the results of the election started trickling in--after a

massive glitch of the IEBC electronic system--and as Kenyatta took an

early lead, Odinga and Kalonzo denounced a flawed electoral process

and demanded that the count be halted.



On March 11, the IEBC announced the winner of the presidential

election as Kenyatta. Its chairman, Issack Hassan, then went to

present both president-elect Kenyatta and Chief Justice Dr. Willy

Mutunga a so-called "certificate of presidential results."



Refusing to concede defeat, Odinga, alongside a civil society group

whose leadership is uncannily mostly made of the Luo--Odinga's ethnic

group--filed a petition in the Supreme.Court to declare Kenyatta win

"null and void" as the poll was a "sham" and a "travesty" as RAO kept

repeating at rallies and press briefings.



Odinga even clamored that "dark forces" were working deep inside the IEBC!



Whereas in the DRC Tshisekedi had dismissed justices of the Supreme

Court as Kabila's henchmen, in Kenya, Odinga was training the big guns

of his coalition on the IEBC while heaping praise on the Supreme

Court.



Odinga was even quoted as saying:



"The one institution in which all Kenyans still have faith is our new

Judiciary. It is faith-based on their achievements in the last two

years."



He then urged his "brother" Kenyatta to join him in pledging to accept

the Supreme Court ruling--whatever the outcome.



One could sense that Odinga was clearly emboldened by the pending

trial of president-elect Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy president-elect

William Ruto at the International Criminal Court (ICC).

He might have wrongly calculated that the time was ripe for him to

seize power from his weakened rival.



While his petition was still pending in the Supreme Court, however,

Odinga cranked up several notches his assault on (and contempt of) the

electoral commission when, at a rally on March 18, Odinga claimed he'd

won the election with 5.7 million votes against Kenyatta's 4.5 million

votes--though it is still a mystery as tow how Odinga got those

numbers.



This prompted the Kenyan Supreme Court to slap gag orders on the

petitioners and the presumptive winner and their lawyers, while--thank

God!--Inspector-General of Police David Kimaiyo banned all "illegal

groupings" around the Supreme Court in Nairobi and political rallies

countrywide.



Police boss Kimaio explained the "move [as] aimed at ensuring that we

do not elicit unnecessary emotions, or generate apprehension or even

tension."



Odinga is indeed aiming at stirring tension, violence, and mayhem.

This is a calculated strategy that could, he hopes, lead to another

coalition government.



In initiating this dangerous maneuver, Odinga emerges as Africa's

scumbag of the year 2013.



***

PHOTO CREDITS: PHOTO 1: Gideon Maundu/ nation.co.ke; PHOTO 2: Via nation.co.ke

No comments:

Post a Comment