Miguna Miguna to Uhuru Kenyatta: STOP Ethnic Scapegoating!

Miguna Miguna to Uhuru Kenyatta: STOP Ethnic Scapegoating!

Ab-Titchaz

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STOP Ethnic Scapegoating!

By American and Kenyan standards, Canadian elections are dull. Unlike our politicians who thrive on incendiary rhetoric, propaganda, verbal missiles, obscene spending, outrageous accusations and counter-accusations during electioneering; their Canadian counterparts are considered too careful and restrained.

There are no music, dance and sikuti dancers during elections. Political campaigns consist of telephone and personal canvassing by candidates and their campaign agents, town-hall meetings, fund-raising events, door-to-door greeting of voters and a few public meetings where if a few hundred people attend at once, the meetings are deemed "successful."

Very few Canadian politicians hurl epithets at their opponents. If that were to occur, like it did when former (interim) Prime Minister, Kim Campbell made fun of Jean Chretien's physical disability during a televised leadership debate, the press and voters often ruthlessly flog and crucify the offender. In Kim Campbell's case, her offence ruined both her and the Progressive Conservative party which she led in the 1994 election. It took the PCs about 20 years to fully recover.

More than 30 years ago, the mercurial Pierre Trudeau, then Prime Minister, unleashed the security forces on his own citizens during the FLQ sectarian rebellion. The FLQ had actually trained battalions of young men, armed themselves to the teeth, fortified their bases and declared Quebec independent of Canada.

(Comparing the FLQ with the Mombasa Republican Council is tempting but wouldn't be quite apt because when they were disrupted, the MRC hadn't reached the sophistication and reach of the FLQ. Also, while the FLQ was heavily armed, the MRC was largely an amorphous group of secessionist rhetoricians).

But not all Canadian politicians are cultured prudes. Few can match the spectacularly outrageous, pot-smoking and alcoholic Toronto mayor, Rob Ford. With the possible exception of former Russian President Boris Yeltsin, you can't get them worse than Ford. He is feisty, vulgar, racist and chauvinistic.

But the embarrassing Ford is clearly an exception. Moreover, Canadian municipal politics isn't clearly aligned with party politics. By law, mayors cannot be aligned to federal or provincial parties. (Maybe we should think of doing the same for County Governors. It might guarantee more national stability, less partisan political jockeying within parties and less external interference!)

Significantly, Canadian politicians would not dare publicly accuse his fellow leaders – even if a bitter rival – of treason, sabotage, or of being unpatriotic unless he or she had more than iron-clad evidence against the opponent. In which case, the Canadian politician would rarely comment, anyway.

Generally speaking, on-going police investigations, active prosecutions or sensitive intelligence briefs are considered no-go-zones for politicians because the independent law-enforcement agents routinely arrest, charge and prosecute the accused criminals without urging or pressure from politicians. In fact, politicians are frequently investigated and successful prosecuted, and if found guilty they are usually receive stiff sentences apart from public humiliation that follow such prosecutions.

Once charged, the accused is accorded due process of the law, including his or her right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond any reasonable doubt after a fair trial by an independent and impartial court of competent jurisdiction. It isn't, therefore, surprising that Canada is one of the safest countries in the world. Its systems tend to work. Its politicians tend to stay moderate, modest and tempered in their utterances and behaviour. Its citizens are considered socially conscious.

In 2001 when President Bush declared that you were either with America or with the terrorists, the then Canadian Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, refused to support the Iraqi invasion. Chretien demanded a resolution by the United Nations before he could expose Canadians a senseless war that had no purpose and little chance of success.

That's partly why the Ontario elections came and went barely a week ago without any media reports in Kenya. Apart from sharp policy differences and contests about their divergent visions, the Ontario leaders stayed within the realm of decorum. In the end, the Ontario Liberal Party leader, Kathleen Wynne trounced Tory leader Tim Hudak and NDP's Andrea Horwath after gruelling one-month campaigns.

But despite the sharp differences and the fierce competition between the three Ontario leaders, none of them hurled abuse or threats against each other. Which is why I am extremely concerned with President Uhuru Kenyatta's televised address to Kenyans on Tuesday, June 17, 2014 when he dismissed Al-Shabaab's claim of responsibility for the twin terrorist attacks in Lamu that killed more than 60 innocent Kenyans and injured dozens more a few days earlier.

Not only has the President publicly exonerated the Al-Shabaab, he has gone further and alleged that "the attack in Lamu was well planned, orchestrated and politically motivated ethnic violence against a Kenyan community." That's dangerous slippery slope for the President. Politicizing terrorist attacks, stoking ethnic divisions and rivalries in an ethnically diverse country like Kenya isn't healthy. It emboldens terrorists and further endangers the innocent.

Accusing Mr. Odinga of engaging in terrorist activities and implying that his fellow Luos have attacked members of the Kikuyu community excites and incites dangerous passions. Some of the President's ‘advisers' have even irresponsibly claimed that Cord and Mr. Odinga have ‘rented' the MRC and are using them to carry out terrorist attacks in order to precipitate a regime change. You can't get loonier than that!

The President certainly has access to intelligence briefs that most of us don't. It's also conceded that Cord and Mr. Odinga have acted irresponsibly by constantly and needlessly attacking and antagonising the President and his Jubilee alliance. But that's the price we must pay for living in a democracy. If anyone has broken any law, they should be charged and prosecuted; not accused vaguely with members of his ethnic group. There is no guilt by association.

Mr. Kenyatta is the President of all Kenyans – Luos, Kikuyus, Mr. Odinga and his supporters included. More significantly, Mr. Kenyatta has a duty to protect and preserve the security of all citizens of Kenya – not just that of his community or supporters. Unfortunately, his statement implied otherwise.

The President's speech wasn't inadvertent. It was planned for, deliberately crafted and read live on TV. It was clearly intended to reach millions of people and send a chilling message to Mr. Odinga and Cord. But it was also irresponsibly targeted at Luos merely on account of being Luos. The unmistakable message was that Mr. Kenyatta will not sit by and watch members of his community butchered by Mr. Odinga's bandits, which is what Luos are now being called by cyber terrorists.

And that is how the message was largely understood by both Kikuyus and Luos. That's reprehensible. A message like that shouldn't cross the minds of those writing the President's speech. It certainly shouldn't have been read by the President. It cannot be good for the stability and security of this country.

It is not wise for a president – any president – to publicly or privately utter such threats. The message was divisive. A president's mandate and responsibility is to unite the country; not inflame jingoistic tendencies.

Regrettably, some of the President's supporters might take the law into their own hands and attack innocent civilians perceived to be Mr. Odinga's supporters. Similarly, some of Mr. Odinga's supporters may attack members of the President's community under the pretext of self-defence. It happened in 2008. It can happen again. Either way, the violence would be unjustified.

The President should know that because of his senseless and provocative speech, many Luos are now openly wondering whether the increase in terrorism in the country isn't staged to portray the country as fragile and teetering on the brink of civil war so that those charged at the ICC can use the resulting conflagration as a defence ploy there.

Many are equally asking why the President hasn't constituted a judicial inquiry as he had promised on the Westgate attack. Could that also have been staged; many wonder. Others believe – wrongly or rightly - that the President is desperately concocting diversionary excuses to ban Raila's Saba Saba rallies. Is it political insecurity?

The senseless beating of war drums by both sides, the knee-jerk dismissal of terrorist attacks which Al Shabaab has openly claimed responsibility for, the antagonising of one ethnic group against the other, and the unacceptable scapegoating of Luos shouldn't be tolerated by peace-loving Kenyans.

I supported Mr. Kenyatta during the 2013 elections. I believed that he would be better than Raila in managing the affairs of this country. However, when the President I have fully supported turns his guns against me for no justified reason other than on account of my ethnicity, I, like a self-respecting person, will stand up and oppose him. I will oppose him when he is wrong and misguided. I will only support him when he is right and performing his duties in good faith, constitutionally and for the wellbeing of all Kenyans.

We cannot allow anybody no matter how powerful he may be, to try and manipulate our emotions, our ethnic fears and perceived rivalries. Kenyan communities have lived with each other and accepted their cultural differences for decades.

Yes, Mr. Odinga's current activities are irresponsible, provocative and counter-productive; however, he hasn't done anything so far that is illegal. If the President is privy to information implicating him to acts of terrorism, then he should let the country's relevant authorities deal with Mr. Odinga in accordance with the law.

I advise the President to emulate the Canadian leaders and govern. He must not fall into Mr. Odinga's traps. The President must refrain from issuing irresponsible threats. It's neither presidential nor statesmanlike. We aren't able any more to distinguish from the rubble-rousing Mr. Odinga and the President.

But if Mr. Kenyatta continues on the route he has chosen, he will soon have to confront the reality that there are tens of millions of Kenyans like me ready to tell him off – publicly.
 
democracy means politicians must act immaturely not forgetting Mr kenyatta is providing resources to guard odinga with state security.

incitement of the public is illegal
disruption of peace is illegeal
calling for mass action is illeagal
calling for pple to carry arms and revolt is treason
being a law unto thyself is treason the fool is driving kenya to the warpath of iraq, syria to nessecitate western military intervention
 
STOP Ethnic Scapegoating!

By American and Kenyan standards, Canadian elections are dull. Unlike our politicians who thrive on incendiary rhetoric, propaganda, verbal missiles, obscene spending, outrageous accusations and counter-accusations during electioneering; their Canadian counterparts are considered too careful and restrained.

There are no music, dance and sikuti dancers during elections. Political campaigns consist of telephone and personal canvassing by candidates and their campaign agents, town-hall meetings, fund-raising events, door-to-door greeting of voters and a few public meetings where if a few hundred people attend at once, the meetings are deemed "successful."

Very few Canadian politicians hurl epithets at their opponents. If that were to occur, like it did when former (interim) Prime Minister, Kim Campbell made fun of Jean Chretien's physical disability during a televised leadership debate, the press and voters often ruthlessly flog and crucify the offender. In Kim Campbell's case, her offence ruined both her and the Progressive Conservative party which she led in the 1994 election. It took the PCs about 20 years to fully recover.

More than 30 years ago, the mercurial Pierre Trudeau, then Prime Minister, unleashed the security forces on his own citizens during the FLQ sectarian rebellion. The FLQ had actually trained battalions of young men, armed themselves to the teeth, fortified their bases and declared Quebec independent of Canada.

(Comparing the FLQ with the Mombasa Republican Council is tempting but wouldn't be quite apt because when they were disrupted, the MRC hadn't reached the sophistication and reach of the FLQ. Also, while the FLQ was heavily armed, the MRC was largely an amorphous group of secessionist rhetoricians).

But not all Canadian politicians are cultured prudes. Few can match the spectacularly outrageous, pot-smoking and alcoholic Toronto mayor, Rob Ford. With the possible exception of former Russian President Boris Yeltsin, you can't get them worse than Ford. He is feisty, vulgar, racist and chauvinistic.

But the embarrassing Ford is clearly an exception. Moreover, Canadian municipal politics isn't clearly aligned with party politics. By law, mayors cannot be aligned to federal or provincial parties. (Maybe we should think of doing the same for County Governors. It might guarantee more national stability, less partisan political jockeying within parties and less external interference!)

Significantly, Canadian politicians would not dare publicly accuse his fellow leaders – even if a bitter rival – of treason, sabotage, or of being unpatriotic unless he or she had more than iron-clad evidence against the opponent. In which case, the Canadian politician would rarely comment, anyway.

Generally speaking, on-going police investigations, active prosecutions or sensitive intelligence briefs are considered no-go-zones for politicians because the independent law-enforcement agents routinely arrest, charge and prosecute the accused criminals without urging or pressure from politicians. In fact, politicians are frequently investigated and successful prosecuted, and if found guilty they are usually receive stiff sentences apart from public humiliation that follow such prosecutions.

Once charged, the accused is accorded due process of the law, including his or her right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond any reasonable doubt after a fair trial by an independent and impartial court of competent jurisdiction. It isn't, therefore, surprising that Canada is one of the safest countries in the world. Its systems tend to work. Its politicians tend to stay moderate, modest and tempered in their utterances and behaviour. Its citizens are considered socially conscious.

In 2001 when President Bush declared that you were either with America or with the terrorists, the then Canadian Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, refused to support the Iraqi invasion. Chretien demanded a resolution by the United Nations before he could expose Canadians a senseless war that had no purpose and little chance of success.

That's partly why the Ontario elections came and went barely a week ago without any media reports in Kenya. Apart from sharp policy differences and contests about their divergent visions, the Ontario leaders stayed within the realm of decorum. In the end, the Ontario Liberal Party leader, Kathleen Wynne trounced Tory leader Tim Hudak and NDP's Andrea Horwath after gruelling one-month campaigns.

But despite the sharp differences and the fierce competition between the three Ontario leaders, none of them hurled abuse or threats against each other. Which is why I am extremely concerned with President Uhuru Kenyatta's televised address to Kenyans on Tuesday, June 17, 2014 when he dismissed Al-Shabaab's claim of responsibility for the twin terrorist attacks in Lamu that killed more than 60 innocent Kenyans and injured dozens more a few days earlier.

Not only has the President publicly exonerated the Al-Shabaab, he has gone further and alleged that "the attack in Lamu was well planned, orchestrated and politically motivated ethnic violence against a Kenyan community." That's dangerous slippery slope for the President. Politicizing terrorist attacks, stoking ethnic divisions and rivalries in an ethnically diverse country like Kenya isn't healthy. It emboldens terrorists and further endangers the innocent.

Accusing Mr. Odinga of engaging in terrorist activities and implying that his fellow Luos have attacked members of the Kikuyu community excites and incites dangerous passions. Some of the President's ‘advisers' have even irresponsibly claimed that Cord and Mr. Odinga have ‘rented' the MRC and are using them to carry out terrorist attacks in order to precipitate a regime change. You can't get loonier than that!

The President certainly has access to intelligence briefs that most of us don't. It's also conceded that Cord and Mr. Odinga have acted irresponsibly by constantly and needlessly attacking and antagonising the President and his Jubilee alliance. But that's the price we must pay for living in a democracy. If anyone has broken any law, they should be charged and prosecuted; not accused vaguely with members of his ethnic group. There is no guilt by association.

Mr. Kenyatta is the President of all Kenyans – Luos, Kikuyus, Mr. Odinga and his supporters included. More significantly, Mr. Kenyatta has a duty to protect and preserve the security of all citizens of Kenya – not just that of his community or supporters. Unfortunately, his statement implied otherwise.

The President's speech wasn't inadvertent. It was planned for, deliberately crafted and read live on TV. It was clearly intended to reach millions of people and send a chilling message to Mr. Odinga and Cord. But it was also irresponsibly targeted at Luos merely on account of being Luos. The unmistakable message was that Mr. Kenyatta will not sit by and watch members of his community butchered by Mr. Odinga's bandits, which is what Luos are now being called by cyber terrorists.

And that is how the message was largely understood by both Kikuyus and Luos. That's reprehensible. A message like that shouldn't cross the minds of those writing the President's speech. It certainly shouldn't have been read by the President. It cannot be good for the stability and security of this country.

It is not wise for a president – any president – to publicly or privately utter such threats. The message was divisive. A president's mandate and responsibility is to unite the country; not inflame jingoistic tendencies.

Regrettably, some of the President's supporters might take the law into their own hands and attack innocent civilians perceived to be Mr. Odinga's supporters. Similarly, some of Mr. Odinga's supporters may attack members of the President's community under the pretext of self-defence. It happened in 2008. It can happen again. Either way, the violence would be unjustified.

The President should know that because of his senseless and provocative speech, many Luos are now openly wondering whether the increase in terrorism in the country isn't staged to portray the country as fragile and teetering on the brink of civil war so that those charged at the ICC can use the resulting conflagration as a defence ploy there.

Many are equally asking why the President hasn't constituted a judicial inquiry as he had promised on the Westgate attack. Could that also have been staged; many wonder. Others believe – wrongly or rightly - that the President is desperately concocting diversionary excuses to ban Raila's Saba Saba rallies. Is it political insecurity?

The senseless beating of war drums by both sides, the knee-jerk dismissal of terrorist attacks which Al Shabaab has openly claimed responsibility for, the antagonising of one ethnic group against the other, and the unacceptable scapegoating of Luos shouldn't be tolerated by peace-loving Kenyans.

I supported Mr. Kenyatta during the 2013 elections. I believed that he would be better than Raila in managing the affairs of this country. However, when the President I have fully supported turns his guns against me for no justified reason other than on account of my ethnicity, I, like a self-respecting person, will stand up and oppose him. I will oppose him when he is wrong and misguided. I will only support him when he is right and performing his duties in good faith, constitutionally and for the wellbeing of all Kenyans.

We cannot allow anybody no matter how powerful he may be, to try and manipulate our emotions, our ethnic fears and perceived rivalries. Kenyan communities have lived with each other and accepted their cultural differences for decades.

Yes, Mr. Odinga's current activities are irresponsible, provocative and counter-productive; however, he hasn't done anything so far that is illegal. If the President is privy to information implicating him to acts of terrorism, then he should let the country's relevant authorities deal with Mr. Odinga in accordance with the law.

I advise the President to emulate the Canadian leaders and govern. He must not fall into Mr. Odinga's traps. The President must refrain from issuing irresponsible threats. It's neither presidential nor statesmanlike. We aren't able any more to distinguish from the rubble-rousing Mr. Odinga and the President.

But if Mr. Kenyatta continues on the route he has chosen, he will soon have to confront the reality that there are tens of millions of Kenyans like me ready to tell him off – publicly.

Miguna Miguna recieved a check that bounced and he is back to his old self!
 
democracy means politicians must act immaturely not forgetting Mr kenyatta is providing resources to guard odinga with state security.

incitement of the public is illegal
disruption of peace is illegeal
calling for mass action is illeagal
calling for pple to carry arms and revolt is treason
being a law unto thyself is treason the fool is driving kenya to the warpath of iraq, syria to nessecitate western military intervention

You are selling snake oil and we aint buying!
 
democracy means politicians must act immaturely not forgetting Mr kenyatta is providing resources to guard odinga with state security.

incitement of the public is illegal
disruption of peace is illegeal
calling for mass action is illeagal
calling for pple to carry arms and revolt is treason
being a law unto thyself is treason the fool is driving kenya to the warpath of iraq, syria to nessecitate western military intervention


PATHETIC!!!....Kenya's constitution allows freedoms of......SPEECH,ASSEMBLY, and so on....Between calling for national dialogue and a whole president talking about"a certain COMMUNITY being targeted"...and his supporters blatantly spreading HATE LEAFLETS.....who is more on the wrong side? and who again would be a probable ICC candidate between the same scenarios I gave earlier?...I bet the latter is jumping directly from the frying pan into the fire...he is playing again into the hands of the opposition.....inexperience and incompetence....the excessive deaths from terrorists needs a sober-headed individual who will reach out and unite the nation by realizing that half of that country who don't support his presidency are vital in the war against terror....why?....because elections are a long way off and the best solution is to stop deaths for now.
Unfortunately such a tribal divided country is woefully weak on almost all parameters that would need a nation to stand against an external threat........its such a pity.
 
the statement tht am about to make will shock the world, what is saving kenya from being thrown to the dogs is actually tribalism, and am glad that kenya is a tribal outfit not a religious outfit. since voting in the new leaders kenyans have great expectations ffrom their leaders, but they must not come at the expense of other kenyans loosing their lives. what is killing devolution we have is supremacy wars....the big tribes (big-five) fighting for political and economic superiority, governors against national govt, senators against governors.

you are following someone who has the abilty of triggering a genocide like rwanda and walking scott free

governors are embezzeling money with their cronies and power brokers within their mcas to retain their positions.

the expectations of the small tribes are usually overtaken superiority complex. miguna who is heading cord??, it is the luo luyha kamba members of the big five communities.
 
PATHETIC!!!....Kenya's constitution allows freedoms of......SPEECH,ASSEMBLY, and so on....Between calling for national dialogue and a whole president talking about"a certain COMMUNITY being targeted"...and his supporters blatantly spreading HATE LEAFLETS.....who is more on the wrong side? and who again would be a probable ICC candidate between the same scenarios I gave earlier?...I bet the latter is jumping directly from the frying pan into the fire...he is playing again into the hands of the opposition.....inexperience and incompetence....the excessive deaths from terrorists needs a sober-headed individual who will reach out and unite the nation by realizing that half of that country who don't support his presidency are vital in the war against terror....why?....because elections are a long way off and the best solution is to stop deaths for now.
Unfortunately such a tribal divided country is woefully weak on almost all parameters that would need a nation to stand against an external threat........its such a pity.

your post is self explanatory, it is opposition that wants to dialogue with the presidency. kenyans in need have no hand in the call for talks. i analyse what you are saying there are over-exaggerated expressions of fear from your posts.
 
PATHETIC!!!....Kenya's constitution allows freedoms of......SPEECH,ASSEMBLY, and so on....Between calling for national dialogue and a whole president talking about"a certain COMMUNITY being targeted"...and his supporters blatantly spreading HATE LEAFLETS.....who is more on the wrong side? and who again would be a probable ICC candidate between the same scenarios I gave earlier?...I bet the latter is jumping directly from the frying pan into the fire...he is playing again into the hands of the opposition.....inexperience and incompetence....the excessive deaths from terrorists needs a sober-headed individual who will reach out and unite the nation by realizing that half of that country who don't support his presidency are vital in the war against terror....why?....because elections are a long way off and the best solution is to stop deaths for now.
Unfortunately such a tribal divided country is woefully weak on almost all parameters that would need a nation to stand against an external threat........its such a pity.

Couldn't have said it better my fellow East African!

This President of Kenya has a bunch of idealogues who are institutional remnants of the Kibaki era and they prevail upon him to fan the flames of tribal hate by going about these sensationalist claims that Raila Odinga and the larger Luo community are going after his people. Everybody in Kenya knows Luos have no beef with Kikuyus...but its the other way around where Kikuyus hate Luos simply because of a cultural difference. Kenyatta Senior fanned these sentiments and engraved them on the minds of their people to this day.

Amongst this ilk is a people who are filled with an adolescent greed and propensity to monopolise power within a narrow social base which is personified by the arrogance of these same individuals. Listening to an irrational Mr. Kenyatta on Mpeketoni, I straightaway recognise my over optimism. Uhuru Kenyatta is obviously captive to a dread fear. And this primordial fear has corroded his senses, such that he has, by a mental reflex, incapacitated his intellect and relapsed into the
Great defender of the Abagikuyu against the ready-made bogeyman or usual suspect.

After President Muigai Kenyatta went live on TV to deliberately misinform the nation; to manipulate his grassroots emotions by claiming they were ethnically profiled for targeted liquidation; to breath fire and brimstone while laying the blame squarely at the feet of RAO and his CORDED gang, methinks he has continued to play a dangerous game, more so when his powerful sidekick
Anne Waiguru announced the NYS would be mobilised to re-build Mpeketoni. –the striking coincidence Rugut was famously if fancifully fired/promoted from there the other day not withstanding.

Mpeketoni, as this litany of displacements and strife will show, are not the only victims of
''local networks of terroristic ethnic profilers''! We will need a NATIONAL structural program for reconstruction after ethnic mayhem, natural disasters, or military rampages. Selectively putting supposed members of the president's group will only further alienate the suffering outsiders, and even the suffering supposed insiders (these Baringo groups are in the Jubilee umbrella).

In fact, in rejecting all rational analysis of the situation, denying facts, insisting on roping in the opposition for major blame, Uhuru Kenyatta is deliberately or instinctively mobilising an ethnocentric and radical Gikuyu nationalism. The move has backfired and is counterproductive.

I rest my case.

Dr. Job.
 
Couldn't have said it better my fellow East African!

This President of Kenya has a bunch of idealogues who are institutional remnants of the Kibaki era and they prevail upon him to fan the flames of tribal hate by going about these sensationalist claims that Raila Odinga and the larger Luo community are going after his people. Everybody in Kenya knows Luos have no beef with Kikuyus...but its the other way around where Kikuyus hate Luos simply because of a cultural difference. Kenyatta Senior fanned these sentiments and engraved them on the minds of their people to this day.

Amongst this ilk is a people who are filled with an adolescent greed and propensity to monopolise power within a narrow social base which is personified by the arrogance of these same individuals. Listening to an irrational Mr. Kenyatta on Mpeketoni, I straightaway recognise my over optimism. Uhuru Kenyatta is obviously captive to a dread fear. And this primordial fear has corroded his senses, such that he has, by a mental reflex, incapacitated his intellect and relapsed into the
Great defender of the Abagikuyu against the ready-made bogeyman or usual suspect.

After President Muigai Kenyatta went live on TV to deliberately misinform the nation; to manipulate his grassroots emotions by claiming they were ethnically profiled for targeted liquidation; to breath fire and brimstone while laying the blame squarely at the feet of RAO and his CORDED gang, methinks he has continued to play a dangerous game, more so when his powerful sidekick
Anne Waiguru announced the NYS would be mobilised to re-build Mpeketoni. –the striking coincidence Rugut was famously if fancifully fired/promoted from there the other day not withstanding.

Mpeketoni, as this litany of displacements and strife will show, are not the only victims of
''local networks of terroristic ethnic profilers''! We will need a NATIONAL structural program for reconstruction after ethnic mayhem, natural disasters, or military rampages. Selectively putting supposed members of the president's group will only further alienate the suffering outsiders, and even the suffering supposed insiders (these Baringo groups are in the Jubilee umbrella).

In fact, in rejecting all rational analysis of the situation, denying facts, insisting on roping in the opposition for major blame, Uhuru Kenyatta is deliberately or instinctively mobilising an ethnocentric and radical Gikuyu nationalism. The move has backfired and is counterproductive.

I rest my case.

Dr. Job.

terrorists mentality require targets where they can inflict maximum damage. alshabaab days are numbered making them prefer more isolated areas with defenceless people. there is an emerging narrative of ethnic profiling as far and wide from areas like likoni to lamu. You recall the USaid is downscaling its staff to concetrate on funding activities of the opposition
 
I really enjoy listening to Miguna miguna speaches, can anyone share the youtube link of this speech? come baby come
 
terrorists mentality require targets where they can inflict maximum damage. alshabaab days are numbered making them prefer more isolated areas with defenceless people. there is an emerging narrative of ethnic profiling as far and wide from areas like likoni to lamu. You recall the USaid is downscaling its staff to concetrate on funding activities of the opposition

Dude,

take a step back from the cool aid you have been drinking...what is this mess you are talking about USaid? Is there not a government in power with all the trappings to boot? Why are they not arresting this 'opposition' that is hell bent on causing instability in the country? How are we supposed to believe such unqualified statements? Come on!...give us a break. Any Kenyan aiming to cause chaos is a not a friend of the Republic and should be arrested ASAP! Otherwise is all propaganda being bandied around.
 
Dude,

take a step back from the cool aid you have been drinking...what is this mess you are talking about USaid? Is there not a government in power with all the trappings to boot? Why are they not arresting this 'opposition' that is hell bent on causing instability in the country? How are we supposed to believe such unqualified statements? Come on!...give us a break. Any Kenyan aiming to cause chaos is a not a friend of the Republic and should be arrested ASAP! Otherwise is all propaganda being bandied around.

this debate is always interesting but those hell bent on creating a chaotic scene, find such rallies as convenient tool, opposition is not always giving kenyans a choice. A good propaganda machine driven by women, has also been key to opposition campaigns, the so called democracy should let anyone choose not force Kenyans to do anything, they can have always a choice, peace or chaos, which kenyans have always been peaceful. The mind of a woman can be a useful tool to the devil if not checked the propaganda campaigns must stop!. this dialogue is meant to give Agwambo influence in matters kenyan politics since he cannot face parliament directly or senate,.kenyans will embrace change when they need real change.
 
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