A
crowd of elated young men danced outside the market in Kenya’s
southern Kisumu city, waving the crisp new 200 shilling ($2) notes
that a local politician was distributing from behind a dusty speaker
that pounded out music. Shoppers paid scant attention. Cash
handouts are common during African elections; in Kenya, the
devolution of power to 47 counties has made them ubiquitous in the
run up to polls for president, parliament and counties due on Aug 8.
The
counties, which manage local infrastructure, were introduced five
years ago after a government-appointed international commission
concluded power was too centralized in the country and partly to
blame for violence that killed 1,200 people and crippled the economy
following elections in 2007. The process has been backed by
international loans as a way to spread democracy and accountability
within a vital Western ally. But devolution has also fuelled local
corruption, officials and transparency campaigners say, and with it
the prospect of more localized violence come election time. The
prize of county budgets worth billions of shillings mean this month's
party primaries for the county elections are hard-fought. Candidates
often got into debt to try to buy votes, counting on future riches
once in office.
Clashes
have already broken out, and violent elections could threaten
stability in a country that borders two others in turmoil: Somalia
and South Sudan.
The
interior ministry said on Monday that politically instigated violence
had been recorded in 12 counties so far. "Politicians and their
supporters have engaged in acts of violence, destroying property and
creating disturbance in polling stations," it said. At least 14
civilians and four policemen have been killed in the drought-hit
northern Laikipia region. A local politician is charged with inciting
violence and arson after invasions of private land by cattle-herders
and a spate of attacks on farmers and owners of safari parks.
Kenya's
ruling coalition annulled 21 county primaries held on Friday amid
widespread anger over shortages of voting materials. It began
rerunning them on Monday. The opposition will also rerun some
primaries after allegations of rigging.
Rose
Onyango, who was selling dried fish in the market near the rally in
Kisumu last week, said three members of the county assembly and two
aspiring governors had given out cash in the market over the past few
days, hoping to win votes. “We
just had a woman aspirant an hour ago but she gave it to someone to
distribute," the 24-year-old said. "The crowd tore her
clothes and the money was splashed everywhere.”
Kenyans
are haunted by the disputed 2007 presidential poll. Dozens of men,
women and children were burned alive in a church. Others were hunted
down by machete-wielding gangs during the widespread ethnic violence
that followed. More than half a million people fled their homes. Some
never returned. Protests also broke out after elections in 2013,
but they were much smaller. A case at the International Criminal
Court against powerful politicians, including President Uhuru
Kenyatta, helped dampen violence.
That
case has now collapsed. Kenyatta is running for a second term and his
old nemesis Raila Odinga is building an opposition alliance. Odinga
has said mass protests are possible if elections are rigged. But
this time it is not winner-takes-all. Devolution is designed, in
part, to ensure there will be many winners. "Devolution can
defuse massive violence, although it can intensify it in individual
counties," said Titus Ogalo, head of the local anti-corruption
Transparency International chapter. "People feel, 'Even if we
lose the presidency, we have something to fight for at the local
level'." The counties get around 20 percent of national
revenues. They can also raise local taxes. In return, they must
provide most health facilities, preschools, and local infrastructure.
Halakhe Waqo, CEO of the government-run Ethics and Anti-Corruption
Commission, said mismanagement is rife. "Every procurement
process is a problem. Funds are given to relatives, contracts are
given to relatives and tribesmen,” he said.
Kisumu,
Kenya’s third-largest city perched on the green shores of Lake
Victoria, is Odinga’s stronghold, dominated by his Luo ethnic
group. Residents complain the central government has neglected them
for decades. The port is choked by water hyacinth, stranding
sun-bleached boats at the docks. The rusting railway has not seen a
train for years, and the new international airport has no
international flights. Football authorities have stopped holding
international matches at the city's stadium because of a rubbish dump
nearby.
Reuters
interviewed more than two dozen voters: all supported devolution as a
way of wresting power and resources from the central government. Many
also complained that Kenya's powerful Kikuyu tribe dominates that
central government. Devolution, some said, was already helping.
Kisumu boasts a few new street lights, freshly erected cement market
stalls, gravelled roads and newly painted clinics. Governor Jack
Ranguma said he had given 530 schoolchildren bursaries and started a
free ambulance service. "I have many top achievements," he
said. "The investment in medicine and the investment in physical
infrastructure is huge … but a lot of money still remains with
national government. That’s a serious challenge that we have."
Asked
about vote buying, Ochien'g Obiero Philip, the governor's director of
political affairs, said many voters would not show up unless they
received a cash payment. "It's something that the voters
expect," he said. "It is one of the challenges of democracy
in Kenya. People expect handouts to be motivated to vote. It is
widespread and the legal framework has never acted on it so it's a
loophole."
Some
Kisumu residents said construction was sometimes shoddy or projects
sat unused, like the padlocked new clinic at Dunga beach where goats
lounge on the porch. Ranguma said there was no money for staff.
Locals said the contractor locked the clinic because he was not paid.
"Devolution has failed here because we have had bad leaders.
Many just want the money," said a doctor in the county hospital.
He declined to be named for fear of repercussions. Hotel
receptionist Victoria Ochieng disagreed. "Do you think those
people in Nairobi will do better?" she asked. "We used to
have one president and now we have 47. The governor is our president
... At least we can see him and make a request." Each governor
makes around 14,000,000 shillings per year ($135,000), including
perks, according to the International Budget Partnership (IBP), a
global organization that works with civil society groups to analyse
budgets in developing countries. A
regular member of the county assembly makes about a third of that,
still a premium on the average annual salary in Kenya of 134,000
shillings ($1,300). Officials justify the salaries by saying
constituents often seek funds for events like funerals. Many local
legislators also take hefty travelling allowances; Kisumu's lawmakers
have travelled to Singapore and Dubai, among other places. Ranguma
said they were learning about agriculture and devolution.
Waqo
from the anti-corruption authority said it has charged more than 300
officials from various counties and is investigating more than 40 of
the 47 governors. Charges have been brought against six. After the
counties got power and money, many feared violence could follow. "The
governors are mini-presidents and those who have muscle or money have
the advantage over those with a reputation for integrity," said
Kisumu political activist George Ogada. "If the situation does
not favour them, then they would prefer to disrupt the election."
Contestants
in party primaries are already accusing rivals publicly of rigging.
"It starts as propaganda, then it takes on its own life. Each
camp prepares to counter the other," Ogada said. "There is
a lot of hatred between the candidates."
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
It is not my intention to make this blog into a political commentary blog, but I get news from Reuters and the Kenyan Daily Nation most days, which shows me that my feelings of unease before I left Kenya in March were correct. I really do fear for the future of this beautiful country that holds my heart; it seems to be on a path of self-destruction.
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