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Hypocritical UNEP campaign

The UN(EP) recently launched a campaign to encourage people to “Kick the CO2 habit.” That’s all well and good except for the fact that while, the UN is busy encouraging us to reduce carbon emissions, as Dipesh points out, they don’t seem to have a problem with staff members driving around Kenya (and I’m sure other countries) gas guzzling cars. This is not to say that we should not all do our part to save the environment, however, the originators of the campaign should be setting an example for everyone else.

Dipesh has asked readers to help send a message to the UN(EP) about the hypocrisy of their campaign by uploading more pictures of UN-plated gas guzzlers on this Flickr page, or sending a message to the UN directly. Will be interesting to see if someone responds.

Would be great if someone could do this with the Kenyan goverment (GK) cars – lets see where the mwananchi’s hard earned money is going?

Kenyan MPs asleep on the job

Read more here.

(Was) In Nairobi

EDIT: This post should have gone up last week but it got “eaten.”

Apologies for the lack of posts, I have been traveling for the last week and a half and more travel is coming up. This doesn’t seem to be a good year for me to travel, however, if my bags aren’t missing I’m dealing with the most ignorant immigration officials who make you thank God that you have a country to come home to. Travel has become such a pain in the ass (especially for African folk) and that’s when you’re documented from here to Mars…at this rate, I will be walking around with a binder of documents starting with my birth certificate to prove that I’m actually a person.

Anyway, enough whining.

I’m happy to be back in Nairobi. Wish I could stay longer. Here to do some background work for Ushahidi and Mzalendo.

Already checked off my list of to-dos including great braids courtesy of Kenyatta market, and sausages galore. The clincher was a lunch of matumbo, kunde, ugali, and a cold Coke from a glass bottle all for the princely sum of Kshs 200.

The mood in Nairobi is generally subdued. There’s been zero talk of politics from the usual suspects (OK from my cabbie friends who normally have a steady stream of stories). Instead, people are focused on what they feel is the Safaricom IPO rip-off (especially those who took loans), price of fuel (did I have a good day or are the roads less cong

BarCamp Nairobi ’08

Should be a great event, I will be attending and possibly speaking and registering for the event gets you an Ushahidi t-shirt and lots of other “schwag”…and you get to hear about possible opportunities to help with the next version of Ushahidi (we are trying to put African developers on the map, no pun intended..heheh). All the details are available here. Please spread the word to the techies in Nairobi!

What’s Google East Africa’s strategy?

So I came across this post by Kenyan Entrepreneur and I was just as perturbed as he was.

Why would Google East Africa sign a deal with Wunderman (and who are they…can’t even locate a website?) rather than promote adwords accounts in East Africa? Is it difficult to do online transactions in East Africa (but then surely how are Mama Mikes et. al. surviving)? Are Kenyan companies difficult to sell to when Google approaches them directly? This deal doesn’t make sense.

Another point made by KE a while back…is Google being a little cheap with their gadget competition for East Africa where you stand to win $600 as a first prize. How about maybe a $1,000 or a contribution towards the student’s tuition? The top prize for high schoolers who participate in the Summer of Code jam in the U.S. is $4,500… The attention being paid to young developers in Africa is appreciated but I’m wondering whether the nature of the prize is sending a subliminal message about the quality expectations that Google have of East Africa vis-a-vis other parts of the world. Or maybe I’m just being touchy.

And then the deal with Safaricom. Why would anyone sign up for a “free” Safaricom address if you already have a free gmail account? No wonder the uptake been slow. Has anyone tried this?

It’s not all bad though, I hear the local mapping is going well and they are making Google Apps available for free to local universities.

Bunge la mwananchi protestors arrested

Statement from George Nyongesa of Bunge La Mwananchi:

Two nights and three days after wananchi led by Bunge La Mwananchi demonstrated on the streets of Nairobi to protest against high food prices and the escalating cost of living, ten Kenyans are still being held at the Central Police Station in Nairobi because “the matter is now being viewed from a political angle and not being treated lightly”. So serious is it that we have been informed that consideration is being given by the “powers that be” to closing Jeevanjee Gardens, where Bunge La Mwananchi is headquartered in Nairobi.

Samson Ojiayo, Jacob Odipo, Gitau Gacheke, Frederick Odhiambo, Helen and five others are being held under tight surveillance. In fact, security has been beefed up at the Central Police Station. We have been informed by the DCIO that the ten must be taken to court on Tuesday morning. In the meantime, we are not being allowed contact with them despite spirited attempts.

We are demanding the production in court on Tuesday 3rd June, 2008 of all those arrested for speaking and demonstrating on behalf of the rights of the under privileged of our society.

We urge you to keep vigilance with us by spotlighting this issue and thereby protecting the freedom of expression and the rights of all Kenyans!

Kivuitu Responds

Full details of the chronology of events can be found on Shailja’s blog.

Kudos to her for her persistence and showing fellow Kenyans why it is important to keep up the fight to hold leaders accountable in whatever way we can…it should not just be business as normal!

After reading Kivuitu’s response, let me know your thoughts…

In Shailja’s words (reposted with permission).

“At the beginning of this year, I wrote an Open Letter to Samuel Kivuitu, Chair of the Electoral Commission of Kenya. It was picked up by a number of sources, online and off, within and outside Kenya, and widely distributed, forwarded, and republished. The letter can be found here.

On May 14th, Samuel Kivuitu spoke, for the first time since “The Crisis”, at a forum on Post-Election Violence in Nairobi. I arrived early at the venue, and slipped a paper copy of her Open Letter under the blotter where he was going to sit. I’d abridged and updated the letter to reflect our current Kenyan reality. It ends with a plea:

It’s not too late, Mr. Kivuitu. To recover your own humanity. To open your eyes to the suffering and longing of this nation. To admit that something went terribly wrong. If you could only rise to the desperate need of this turning point in Kenya’s history, you could redeem yourself with the simplest of words:

“I’m sorry.”

Those words might be the most revolutionary ever spoken on this continent. They might open the floodgates for every leader, every public servant, to open themselves to their own deep fear, grief, and remorse. To admit fallibility. To take responsibility.

We are still waiting, Mr. Kivuitu, for you to speak.

During the forum, I watched Mr. Kivuitu bluster, blame, deny all culpability for the stolen election that took Kenya to the brink of civil war. In the plenary, I stood up, heart pounding, and said:

Mr Kivuitu, the whole country, from IDPs (internally displaced persons) in camps to affluent residents of Karen and Mountain View, are waiting for the tiniest expression of remorse, regret, from the Electoral Commission of Kenya. As a human being, a Kenyan, can you find it in your heart to offer just three words: “We are sorry,” to the people of Kenya?

He couldn’t.

Five days later, this arrived in my inbox. It is posted here, and for public distribution, with Mr. Kivuitu’s permission.

To: Shailja Patel shailja@shailja.com

From: S. M. Kivuitu skivuitu@nbnet.co.ke

Date: 19 May 2008

Dear Madam,

I thank you for your letter dated 14 May 2008 and the concerns you expressed therein.

The Holy Bible has taught me to leave judgment of others to God the Almighty. I do not know if you are the Almighty God or not but you did not seem to be Him when I saw you on 14 May 2008.

You are all the same entitled to your views. I however humbly deny any wrong doing. The laws require that I declare the winner of the presidential elections once the Commission determines the candidate who scored highest, and led 25% of votes cast in his/her favour in 5 provinces. That is all I did. And there was no other candidate or his/her agent seeking me to hold on and re tally – no. After announcing the results a fellow appeared before me and requested me to hand over to him the president’s certificate. I told him that that is only done to the winner personally and directly.

The fellow then informed me that Hon. Kibaki was awaiting to be sworn as the President and the Chief Justice was present, duly robed, for the assignment. He requested me to take the certificate there. I had no business retaining the certificate. It was not mine. The law says it be given at the place the President is to be sworn. I obeyed the law and took it there. Commissioners do not count votes.

Commissioners do not tally counted results. They simply verify these. They do this through the Commissioners’ senior officers whose competence and integrity you seem to recognize. Commissioners announce the results as presented to them by these officers. Or what else do you suggest they should have done?

My conscience is absolutely clear. I know how dangerous it is to delay announcing the results. There are several interests in the results and all are equally important. I was hurt in 2002 for not announcing results which I had not yet received. I am not a seer, like you seem to be, to be sure that there would have not been deaths if I postponed the announcement of the results.

With my humblest view I do not share the view that people killed others, or destroyed the properties belonging to others, on account of my announcement of the winner. I believe that irrespective of whoever of the two top candidates won, there was going to be violence. That environment was created by the politicians themselves. You seem however to worship them as deities. Secondly, I respectfully believe the killers, who had been already charged with rhetoric, reasoned thus – why did Kibaki or Kalonzo get these votes in our areas? They looked round and saw Kikuyus, Kambas and other “madoadoas” (1)(as they had been told to call them). They reasoned these where the ones who voted thus and they must eliminate them.

Even in poor Coast, suspected “wrong” voters were ordered to pronounce certain words. Once they did not do so like the locals, they were violently evicted and robbed of their properties and raped. Thus the genesis of the tragedy is in our dirty politics and negative ethnicity. It is bad luck we have kind people like you who are too naïve to realize the depth of our malaise. No wonder facile and dishonest assignments that Hassan Omar (2)advanced thrilled some of you. This confirms Kenya is in for hard time for a long while to come.

Have a nice day Ms. Patel.

S. M. Kivuitu

(2) Hassan Omar Hassan, Commissioner of the Kenya National Commission for Human Rights, condemned Kivuitu and the Electoral Commission of Kenya as delinquent in their duties, at the May 14th forum on Post-Election Violence.

We Won the Netsquared Challenge!

All the details here.

Thank you everyone for the support and cheerleading!