kshaka
JF-Expert Member
- Nov 3, 2011
- 366
- 118
Anyone who's spent any time on this forum, including many fair minded Tanzanians, cannot fail to have noticed the anti-Kenyan xenophobia peddled by the likes of Geza Ulole, Askari Kanzu, Bantugbro and others.
It has to be pointed out that such hateful attitudes have got real world consequences. The demonisation of Kenyans that we see, not just on this forum but in Tanzanian national discourse (to the extent that they call us nyang'aus) is a precursor of worse to come. It is the same pattern that we saw in South Africa where they call Africans, including Tanzanians, makwerekwere.
Such verbal violence against human beings, such dehumanisation always allows the people doing it to treat the object of their hatred as something less than human and that is where we are headed with the hatred the Tanzanian intelligentsia are formenting against Kenyans. As the English say, "give a dog a bad name and hang him".
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/Bystan...rs+die+/-/1056/1477890/-/bqpu20z/-/index.html
It has to be pointed out that such hateful attitudes have got real world consequences. The demonisation of Kenyans that we see, not just on this forum but in Tanzanian national discourse (to the extent that they call us nyang'aus) is a precursor of worse to come. It is the same pattern that we saw in South Africa where they call Africans, including Tanzanians, makwerekwere.
Such verbal violence against human beings, such dehumanisation always allows the people doing it to treat the object of their hatred as something less than human and that is where we are headed with the hatred the Tanzanian intelligentsia are formenting against Kenyans. As the English say, "give a dog a bad name and hang him".
Survivors of an accident in Tanzania which claimed 12 members of a church group on Sunday said the death toll might have been lower had there been quick response from the authorities and bystanders.
"A group of locals gathered around us and just stared without doing anything as the victims were crying out for help while others were dying," said Ms Agnes Muthoni Muhoro, a member of the Presbyterian Church of East Africa Women's Guild.
Gospel mission
She was among 84 mothers from six PCEA churches in Thika Parish, who were travelling for a week-long gospel mission to Dar es Salaam when calamity struck.
Ms Muhoro, a teacher at St Patrick's Primary School, said some of the bystanders even stole valuables from the dead before Tanzanian police arrived at the scene.
Another survivor, Ms Mary Ndung'u, said some youths were demanding to be paid to help rescue the victims.
Ms Margaret Mukora concurred, saying one of them was heard shouting "nyinyi wa mama wa Kenya si mtoe hela tuwasaidie?<===would they have behaved this way kama ingekuwa wamama wa Tanzania...if they hadn't learned to regard Kenyans as nyang'aus? (Why don't you women from Kenya give us some money so that we may help you)."
However, the Women's Guild national coordinator Veronica Muchiri and Juja MP William Kabogo praised the Kenyan government's quick response to the tragedy by airlifting the injured to hospital.
Earlier, relatives of the victims were overcome by emotions during a joint service for family members held at the PCEA Happy Valley Church in Thika. Rev Festus K Gitonga, the PCEA secretary general, conducted the service.
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/Bystan...rs+die+/-/1056/1477890/-/bqpu20z/-/index.html
