UAH is secular, intellectual and non-aligned politically, culturally or religiously email discussion group.


{UAH} Register Now: Integrate Information management Systems Course


Rydnert and Associates AB Nicolovuisgatan 10. 215 57 Malmo Sweden together with Kampala School for Integrated Urban Planning is bringing you a course in Quality Control Management part of the Integrated Management Systems (IMS). This course has been conducted over a period of 20 years in Sweden in cooperation with SIS, The Swedish Standards Institute and KTH, The Royal Institute of Technology, CEN, and European Committee for Standardisation.

 

The course is intended for; small, medium and large scale business entrepreneurs, administrators, people from the engineering sector, processers and producers, second and third year university/college students. IMS constitutes the general management principles and practices being the framework for the successful and sustainable governing of any business to achieve its goals (financial and growth, quality, environment, information, safety, security etc) based on international requirements an standards.  

 

Duration of the course: three week

Course date: Third or Fourth June week

Award: Certificate of Attendance

Tuition Fees: 450'000 UG SHS

 

Further information call or write to

Emails: Info[at]siup.ac.ug

             Bo.rydnert[at]rla.se

Tel:     +46(0)708-207-560

           +256(0)752-972-960

 


--

_____________________________
Bwanika Nakyesawa Luwero

--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Owen Falls Dam: Bring back British engineers


Owen Falls Dam: Bring back British engineers
Posted by Kavuma-Kaggwa

on  Friday, January 6  2012 at  00:00
Our country is experiencing a terrible time of power shortages which have led to loss of business, low productivity in various business sectors, demonstrations on the streets of Kampala and in other areas of the country.

This situation has forced me to revisit the 1950s. I would like to suggest to the government to bring back British engineers from British Insulated Callenders Construction Company (BICCC) who are based in London.
They constructed the Owen Falls Dam from 1951-1954 and they installed 8-12 turbines which were supposed to generate electricity to the whole of East Africa without any problems. I do not know whether all the turbines are still operating.

Let me give a brief history of Owen Falls Dam. It was built by the British Government after the then Katikkiro of Buganda, Micheal E. Kawalya-Kaggwa, during his visit to the United Kingdom requested the Queen's Government to "give us water and electricity".

A British Governor, Sir Andrew Cohen, arrived here in January 1950 replacing Governor John Hall and immediately ordered the construction of the Hydro Electric Dam to start. It was completed and was opened by the Queen ElizabethII in 1954.

At the time of Independence in 1962, I was an information officer in the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. The British Government took us (news men) on a tour of two major projects which they had built for Uganda. The two are Mulago Hospital and the Owen Falls Dam besides Makerere University.

At the Owen Falls Dam, I recall very clearly the British engineers who were manning and maintaining the dam on a daily basis, telling us that "this dam with its 8-12 turbines can generate electricity to the whole of East Africa all the time without any problems if it is properly maintained by qualified electrical engineers even if the population of East Africa grows to over a billion people".

When the British engineers left, a Ugandan British trained electrical engineer, the late Abraham Waliggo, took over as the resident electrical engineer. After Waliggo, another British trained engineer, the late Nalikka, took over.

With the coming of the political turmoil and military rule in the 1970s, the whole system at the Owen Falls Dam became chaotic followed by what we now know as "African mismanagement".

I understand that by 1986, when the dictatorial regimes were swept out of power, only four of out the 8-12 turbines were operating.

We cannot go on like this. What should we do now? The government should contact BICCC in London through the Crown Agents or the Commonwealth Secretariat or through the British High Commission in London. We should bring in two highly qualified engineers from BICCC, who have all the data on this dam, to examine and overhaul the entire generating system at the Owen Falls Dam.

We should employ them first on a two-year contract, and their work will be to install new turbines, and to carry out their proper maintenance on a daily basis as resident engineers. Later, the Parliament of Uganda should authorise the government to employ the engineers on a permanent basis so that the question of "African mismanagement" is completely ruled out.

If my advice is acceptable to the government, then steps will have to be taken to ensure that during the process of buying the new turbines, there will be no question of people "eating the difference".

--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Allan Barigye: Space Observatory City in Muyumbu, Bugarama or Muhanga

Allan
There is a possibility of working with friend in architecture I know from the Polytechnic University in Madrid and Engineers
from Polytechnic University in Milano. But we must have a really good idea and plan before we present it to them.

Now look at that hill behind the Nursing school at Kabale University. Alternatively stand across the road in front of
Kabale stadium look at the hill, and imagine what is behind it. These are ideal locations for an observatory. We can also scan the map around Kigezi for a smaller town but focus on the hisget point on one hill, which we can acquire for the same purpose. This you should do. But we need people at Kabale University and we need to be close to the fiber optical line – that is close to the road from Mbarara.  There are also other towns I have considered – since Kabale Town council has a lot of land issues. The project can stall because such bureaucracy.  We can think of Muyumbu, Bugarama or Muhanga.
i.                Get the aerial images of these towns from Google
ii.              Study them specifically for space observatory city at the highest point. There is a lot of cloud so we must be higher 
iii.             In a small way but focused start contacting people at various USA universities on space science and studies using aerial images in a.
iv.             Also contact the urban planning school specifically students and research professors for possible designs    ( this I can do)
         V.         I also find Dr. Ruhemaraka Mayor of Kabale pleasant to talk too – he has a solid grasp of urban issues. He also should be in scheme of things 

How many hotels, shopping centers and residentials are these - we need to scout for land about one or three square mile.
You know Bakiga best, you better do that for me. I know some Bakiga once they hear my name Bwanika in it, it will be a dead project.
I therefore leave this to you for the time being, but consult with Bakiga in the diasporas to join us. What about Dr. Rugunda?
Once we have an ideal place and c and d are sufficiently collaborated, we have a small city. This is a specifically science city.  With water manufactured higher above in the hills, heated by 
the sun down to the small city. We will have to use the same method of getting capital investments from Europe and America which in case of Kigezi having western type of climate will be a walk in the park.
  Talk also to Professor Allan Bubagura - I think he is at Kabale University

Bwanika

--
_____________________________
Bwanika Nakyesawa Luwero

--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} P'se Stop Flogging The Dead...

P'se Concerned Pipo

Stop Flogging The Dead,

Gheezus  - ThankYou,

- Peace To The Dead  or Dying

+ Peace To The World
/ Hon. Amb. Ikanos  aKa Doyen Alwasi Ata - Alواسعالهدية

--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Just Checking If U Are On Computer...

Just Checking ...

(as attached)

Health & Peace To U

+ Peace To The World
/ Hon. Amb. Ikanos  aKa Doyen Alwasi Ata - Alواسعالهدية




--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Fire in Museveni's pants over Kuteesa UN Job

--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Ssabalwanyi , what thou say?



--
*A positive mind is a courageous mind, without doubts and fears, using the experience and wisdom to give the best of him/herself.
 
 We must dare invent the future!
The only way of limiting the usurpation of power by
 individuals, the military or otherwise, is to put the people in charge  - Capt. Thomas. Sankara {RIP} ’1949-1987

 
*“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent
revolution inevitable**…  *J.F Kennedy


 


--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} Image of the week - Kabaka Mwanga



 He was certainly a handsome man.

Many royalists simply refuse to accept the facts surrounding Mwanga’s homosexuality but there is enough documented evidence that points to it. Religion is touted as the reason he killed the 21 Uganda Martyrs and that is part of the truth.

The other part, which is often omitted, is that Mwanga became irritated that the pretty boys he used to have his sexual ways with at will started rejecting his advances, after being fed on Bible stories, on the grounds that Jesus was now their only king and master.. He decided to kill them off, no doubt to show them that their so-called savior really couldn’t save them from his wrathful intentions. And Jesus actually didn’t.


*A positive mind is a courageous mind, without doubts and fears, using the experience and wisdom to give the best of him/herself.
 
 We must dare invent the future!
The only way of limiting the usurpation of power by
 individuals, the military or otherwise, is to put the people in charge  - Capt. Thomas. Sankara {RIP} ’1949-1987

 
*“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent
revolution inevitable**…  *J.F Kennedy


 


--
UAH forum is devoted to matters of interest to Ugandans. Individuals are responsible for whatever they post on this forum.To unsubscribe from this group, send email to: ugandans-at-heart+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com or Abbey Semuwemba at: abbeysemuwemba@gmail.com.

{UAH} CANADA'S REFUSAL OF A UGANDAN LGBT SPEAKS TO HYPOCRISY

CANADA’S REFUSAL TO ALLOW UGANDAN LGBT ACTIVISTS INTO THE COUNTRY
SPEAKS TO A WIDER HYPOCRISY

By Muna Mire May 29 2014

A contingent of Ugandan LGBT activists were recently denied visitor
visas to attend World Pride 2014, which will be held in Toronto this
summer. The move comes as a surprise given the Canadian government’s
strong, condemnatory stance on Uganda’s repressive regime
criminalizing homosexuality.

The contingent of activists comprised of ten men and women who are all
currently risking their lives in the fight for LGBT rights on the
ground in Uganda—were invited to a human rights conference at the
University of Toronto taking place June 25-27. Just one member of the
contingent, keynote speaker Dr. Frank Mugisha, a highly prominent
advocate and a 2014 nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, is able to come
to Canada on a multiple-entry visa he had been issued for previous
travels.

Brenda Cossman, conference co-chair, told the Toronto Star that it
remains critical to the global solidarity movement that the contingent
be able to attend the World Pride human rights conference. The
conference wants to hear from the delegation so that effective
allyship is possible from abroad.

“We are at risk of losing their voices,” said Cossman.

Dr. Mugisha is a lawyer and the executive director of Sexual
Minorities Uganda (SMUG), an umbrella NGO that describes itself as
aiming “to liberate LGBT in Uganda.” SMUG is a network of
organizations serving LGBT people across Uganda that came about in
2004, including smaller organizations like Icebreakers Uganda (serves
LGBT Ugandans who are in the process of coming out), Spectrum Uganda
(focuses on the health and well being of LGBT Ugandans), and the
Transgender Initiative Uganda.

Mugisha was close friends and colleagues with the former advocacy
officer at SMUG, David Kato. Kato, considered a father of the Ugandan
LGBT rights movement and “Uganda’s first openly gay man” was murdered
in January 2011 shortly after successfully suing a tabloid for
publishing the names, photos, and addresses of 100 suspected LGBT
Ugandans with the order to “hang them.” Several people on the list
were viciously attacked, and many went into hiding afterwards.

Mugisha is himself the plaintiff in a lawsuit brought by SMUG and
supported by the Centre for Constitutional Rights, against American
evangelical Scott Lively and Abiding Truth Ministries (considered a
hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center) for his work on the
Anti-Homosexuality Act and in cultivating a culture of homophobic
populism in Uganda. Lively has personally endorsed the death penalty
for LGBT individuals.

What’s worse, The Fellowship Foundation or “The Family”—the same US
religious group that organizes the National Prayer Breakfast at the
White House—also provided “a base of inspiration and technical
support” for the Anti-Homosexuality legislation in Uganda.

Since the bill was signed into law in February 2014, SMUG reports that
anti-gay attacks have increased ten-fold, including lynchings, mob
violence, evictions, arson, blackmail, firings, and arrests. Within
days of the legislation going into effect, another list of 200 alleged
homosexuals was printed in a newspaper. Dr. Mugisha’s name was on it.

Uganda has made life hell for LGBT people.

John Baird, Canada’s foreign minister, took a strong stance against
the legislation in February, antagonizing Ugandan politicians who
frame their virulent legislation as anti-colonial. “This act is a
serious setback for human rights, dignity and fundamental freedoms,
and deserves to be widely condemned,” he said at the time, “Canada
will speak out.”

Baird went on to invoke the legacy of David Kato, who was bludgeoned
to death with a hammer in his own Ugandan home.

Why, then, has Canada denied 9/10 visas to a contingent that includes
Kato’s friends and colleagues, who are currently fighting for LGBT
rights on the ground in Uganda? The hypocrisy is stunning. The
applications were rejected due to a combination of reasons. It appears
the government is concerned the ten would seek asylum in Canada, a
worry that is deeply disappointing, especially in light of Baird’s
comments. Other official reasons for their refusal into Canada
include: lack of previous travel history, lack of family ties in
Canada (really?), andinsufficient funds for the trip. Read: too poor.

Hardcore evangelical Americans are not alone in providing material
support for the Anti-Homosexuality Act on the ground. Previously,
Ottawa provided nearly half a million dollars in funding to an
anti-gay religious group to do development work in Uganda. When taken
with the backstory of Canada quietly bankrolling groups that support
homophobic legislation and denying visas to LGBT Ugandans, Minister
Baird’s condemnations of Uganda carry little weight. For that matter,
so do President Obama’s. Until Western governments admit their
complicity in both colonialism and in fueling supposedly anti-colonial
homophobic populism, indictments of Uganda ring hollow.

In a piece recently written for the Guardian, Mugisha explains the
paradox succinctly, “I want my fellow Ugandans to understand that
homosexuality is not a western import and our friends in the developed
world to recognise that the current trend of homophobia is.”

VICE reached out to Baird’s office for comment and was referred
instead to Minister Chris Alexander’s office at Citizenship and
Immigration which is currently working with MP Craig Scott to try to
expedite the reapplication process and reverse the decision:

"Our Conservative government was among the first to speak out against
state-sponsored homophobia in Russia. We welcome resettled gay
refugees from Iran and around the world. We have led the international
response to repression of the LGBT community in Uganda and elsewhere
in Africa. Citizenship and Immigration Canada will continue to do
everything it can, under our immigration laws, to make this conference
a success. Under Canadian law, decisions on individual visa
applications are made by highly-trained public servants," a
spokesperson said.

MP Craig Scott has said he expects “the right thing” to be done in the
end. With the conference set for the end of June, the clock is ticking
to process the applications which will be resubmitted this week,
according to Cossman. It seems, however, that the story of Canada’s
role in supporting (or undermining) LGBT rights in Uganda goes beyond
issuing ten temporary visas—and that’s a larger conversation we
haven’t had yet.

@muna_mire

            Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
           
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni na Dk. Kiiza Besigye Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

{UAH} Kigali, Dar face off again over DRC conflict - News - www.theeastafrican.co.ke

http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/Kigali--Dar-face-off-again-over-DRC-conflict-/-/2558/2333010/-/qr5ogf/-/index.html




Kigali, Dar face off again over DRC conflict - News

Diplomatic tensions between Tanzania and Rwanda appeared set to escalate as the two countries once again traded accusation over the latter's alleged backing of rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. TEA Graphic 

Diplomatic tensions between Tanzania and Rwanda appeared set to escalate as the two countries once again traded accusation over the latter's alleged backing of rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Rwanda's Foreign Affairs Minister Louis Mushikiwabo on Friday responded to the claims by her Tanzanian counterpart Bernard Membe that the defunct M23 rebel forces that fought the DRC government until recently was a creation of the Rwandan government, saying, "That M23 business is a tired story that has no place in the region right now.

"As for Tanzania's foreign minister whose anti-Rwanda rant in parliament I heard, he would benefit from a lesson in the history of the region."

Mr Membe, while appearing before the country's parliament, is reported to have said: "When I told the BBC that Rwandans were causing instability in eastern Congo, I meant what I said... it's the UN's Group of Experts that originally accused Rwanda, not me."

"Rwanda and other reasonable actors in the region and afar are engaged in finding lasting peace, so we can dedicate more time to improving the lives of our citizens," Ms Mushikiwabo said in an e-mail to The EastAfrican.

This is not the first time the countries are trading barbs. Tension was initially sparked off by President Jakaya Kikwete's suggestion in May 2013 during an African Union meeting in Ethiopia that the Rwandan government should hold peace talks with the FDLR rebel group to end violence in the eastern DRC.

Rwanda, which regards the Hutu group as genocidaires who played the leading role in the 1994 genocide, termed President Kikwete as a "sympathiser" of the FDLR.

While addressing senior military graduates in north Rwanda, President Paul Kagame noted in reference to President Kikwete's advice, "I kept quiet about this because of the contempt I have for it. I thought it was utter nonsense. Maybe it was due to ignorance but if this is an ideological problem for anyone to be thinking this way, then it better stay with those who have it."

Sources say the two leaders have tried to avoid each other by dodging meetings and scenarios that could bring them together. At regional level, they say, the Heads of State Summit is needed to sign off on key protocols, but the soured relations between the two vitiates the atmosphere required to promote the integration process.

Mr Membe was reacting to concerns expressed by Ezekiah Wenje, the shadow foreign minister, while presenting alternative budget proposals in parliament, that the allegations Membe made against Rwanda on BBC's Focus on Africaprogramme last September would worsen the diplomatic tensions between the two countries.

But Mr Wenje said Mr Membe's comment, together with the government's silence on claims by former Rwandan prime minister Faustine Twagiramungu that he had visited Tanzania to seek advice on how FDRL could take over in Rwanda, would only serve to deepen tensions between the countries.

"The statement by Mr Membe will worsen the relationship with our neighbour Rwanda. It is important that national leaders be careful about making such statements," said Mr Wenje.



Kigali, Dar face off again over DRC conflict - News

Diplomatic tensions between Tanzania and Rwanda appeared set to escalate as the two countries once again traded accusation over the latter's alleged backing of rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. TEA Graphic 

Diplomatic tensions between Tanzania and Rwanda appeared set to escalate as the two countries once again traded accusation over the latter's alleged backing of rebels in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Rwanda's Foreign Affairs Minister Louis Mushikiwabo on Friday responded to the claims by her Tanzanian counterpart Bernard Membe that the defunct M23 rebel forces that fought the DRC government until recently was a creation of the Rwandan government, saying, "That M23 business is a tired story that has no place in the region right now.

"As for Tanzania's foreign minister whose anti-Rwanda rant in parliament I heard, he would benefit from a lesson in the history of the region."

Mr Membe, while appearing before the country's parliament, is reported to have said: "When I told the BBC that Rwandans were causing instability in eastern Congo, I meant what I said... it's the UN's Group of Experts that originally accused Rwanda, not me."

"Rwanda and other reasonable actors in the region and afar are engaged in finding lasting peace, so we can dedicate more time to improving the lives of our citizens," Ms Mushikiwabo said in an e-mail to The EastAfrican.

This is not the first time the countries are trading barbs. Tension was initially sparked off by President Jakaya Kikwete's suggestion in May 2013 during an African Union meeting in Ethiopia that the Rwandan government should hold peace talks with the FDLR rebel group to end violence in the eastern DRC.

Rwanda, which regards the Hutu group as genocidaires who played the leading role in the 1994 genocide, termed President Kikwete as a "sympathiser" of the FDLR.

While addressing senior military graduates in north Rwanda, President Paul Kagame noted in reference to President Kikwete's advice, "I kept quiet about this because of the contempt I have for it. I thought it was utter nonsense. Maybe it was due to ignorance but if this is an ideological problem for anyone to be thinking this way, then it better stay with those who have it."

Sources say the two leaders have tried to avoid each other by dodging meetings and scenarios that could bring them together. At regional level, they say, the Heads of State Summit is needed to sign off on key protocols, but the soured relations between the two vitiates the atmosphere required to promote the integration process.

Mr Membe was reacting to concerns expressed by Ezekiah Wenje, the shadow foreign minister, while presenting alternative budget proposals in parliament, that the allegations Membe made against Rwanda on BBC's Focus on Africaprogramme last September would worsen the diplomatic tensions between the two countries.

But Mr Wenje said Mr Membe's comment, together with the government's silence on claims by former Rwandan prime minister Faustine Twagiramungu that he had visited Tanzania to seek advice on how FDRL could take over in Rwanda, would only serve to deepen tensions between the countries.

"The statement by Mr Membe will worsen the relationship with our neighbour Rwanda. It is important that national leaders be careful about making such statements," said Mr Wenje.

Kigali, Dar face off again over DRC conflict - News - www.theeastafrican.co.ke
http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/Kigali--Dar-face-off-again-over-DRC-conflict-/-/2558/2333010/-/qr5ogf/-/index.html
Kigali, Dar face off again over DRC conflict - News - www.theeastafrican.co.ke
http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/Kigali--Dar-face-off-again-over-DRC-conflict-/-/2558/2333010/-/qr5ogf/-/index.html

Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.

{UAH} Why Jaramogi should have become Kenya's second president - Opinion - nation.co.ke

http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/Why-Jaramogi-should-have-become-Kenya-second-president-/-/440808/2333474/-/gx62co/-/index.html


SATURDAY, MAY 31, 2014

Why Jaramogi should have become Kenya's second president

The late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga. Commonly known as the doyen of Kenyan opposition politics, his death sparked off a fierce leadership wrangle in his Ford-Kenya party. PHOTO/FILE

The late Jaramogi Oginga Odinga. Commonly known as the doyen of Kenyan opposition politics, his death sparked off a fierce leadership wrangle in his Ford-Kenya party. PHOTO/FILE  NATION

By KOIGI WA WAMWERE
More by this Author

For a long time I have agonised over who should have been the second president of Kenya.

I have hesitated to debate who should have been the first president of Kenya because Kenyatta had almost unanimous local and international support for national leadership.  

Though Kenyatta was hardly perfect and was a dictator, before he assumed power, he was such an icon of freedom and symbol of African struggle for independence along with other African freedom fighters like Kwame Nkrumah and Julius Nyerere that the position of first president in their country was theirs automatically.  

In Kenya, Oginga Odinga already led the African campaign for the release of Jomo Kenyatta from prison and his assumption of Kenya's first president.

Of all Kenyan politicians, Odinga was the most committed to the notion that Kenyatta should be the first president and there is no evidence that he ever contemplated challenging him for presidency. 

When it comes to the second president, however, I believe Oginga Odinga should have succeeded Kenyatta, not Daniel Arap Moi. And despite his age, I believe he was also more qualified to be third president of Kenya.  

But one might wonder why raise this matter, which many will consider mute now, when Odinga is dead and nothing can change the fact.

But if we accept that by appointing the less qualified Moi and not the more qualified Odinga to be second president we determined whether the country moved forward or backwards in the next 24 years we can no longer consider the matter mute. If Kenya became a dictatorship and a collapsed economy because of Moi's presidency, it was because we made a wrong choice of Moi over Odinga. 

ENDURING LEGACY

We also know the fate of Kenya for many years after Kenyatta was not just determined by his presidency, but also by the enduring legacy of his rule.

Today, most likely, Moi's political disciples President Uhuru Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto are in power because of Moi's legacy and its support of them into presidency.  

Logically, it follows that, had Kenya picked Oginga Odinga for second president, we may have hard a more democratic regime than we had under Moi, a more developed economy than the collapsed economy we inherited from Moi and certainly, China and Kenya would have become co-operating partners sooner than today.  

While it is probable that Odinga could not have become Kenya's second president without Kenyatta's blessings, there are many reasons why he should have succeeded him and Kenya a better and more cohesive society than it is today. 

Oginga Odinga qualified for second presidency of Kenya, not because he was a Luo, but because he was one of the best nationalists that Kenya ever had – together with others like Bildad Kaggia and JM Kariuki, JD Kali, Pio Gama Pinto and others. 

Because Oginga Odinga was nationalist, he was not a tribalist. Instead he fought against negative ethnicity by championing the fight against poverty and liberation of all its victims across the land. And if Odinga had not fallen out with Kenyatta and had become second president of Kenya, like President Nyerere of Tanzania, he would have transformed Kenya into a country and society not consumed by negative ethnicity as it is today.

Odinga best demonstrated his nationalism by fighting hardest for the release of Jomo Kenyatta, who was not a Luo like him but a Kikuyu and also for his becoming the first president of Kenya. 

And while Odinga fought for the release of Kenyatta when neither Tom Mboya nor any Kikuyu leader could stand up for Kenyatta without provoking the ire of European settlers, Odinga continued to regard Kenyatta as his freedom hero even after they had fallen out and Kenyatta had detained him without charge or trial for two years.

To the disbelief of many, Odinga hung Kenyatta's portrait on the wall of his Kisumu home, together with portraits of great freedom fighters like Nyerere, Nkrumah and Abdi Nasser of Egypt. When asked why he would give Kenyatta this honour, he said he had no power to revise history and deny that Kenyatta fought and suffered for the freedom of Kenya.

While he disagreed with President Kenyatta, Jomo the freedom fighter would always be his hero. Only a man with as big a heart as Oginga Odinga deserved to be the second president. 

Odinga also qualified for second presidency because he was one of the few politicians whose politics was driven by ideology rather than personal whims and by a vision that would have been a compass by which he would have led the ship of State. 

While capitalism ravaged and impoverished Kenya, Odinga's socialism would have raised Kenya to the levels of Chinese or Scandinavian development. And while some will deny this possibility, the extent of Kenya's poverty can never compare with the wealth of our tiny elite.   

If Jaramogi never became the second president of Kenya, it is not because he did not qualify but because Kenyatta did not reciprocate the loyalty that Odinga had demonstrated for him. Had Kenyatta supported Odinga the way Odinga had supported him, Odinga would easily succeeded him.  

Odinga should have become second president of Kenya because he was more qualified than Moi. Despite the hell I suffered at the hands of President Moi, I have no personal grudge against him. It is, therefore, for no personal grudge that I say that between Odinga and Moi, Odinga qualified for the job many times more.

In fact, on account of his unparalleled courage and admission of Kenyan leaders' failure to take Kenya to the Promised Land, at the time of Kenyatta's death, no other Kenyan leader qualified more for second.  

All other qualifications apart, Odinga also qualified because he was also a Pan-Africanist along with Nyerere and Nkrumah that would have united Kenya with the rest of Africa.  

Finally, to use the words of Johnny Carson that choices have consequences, our choices of Kenyatta, Moi, Kibaki and Uhuru all have consequences that explain what Kenya is today – a land of unending calamities of terrorism, hunger, road carnage, corruption, negative ethnicity and death of the national soul.






Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.

{UAH} Joe Wanjui: Family man, industry captain and shrewd king-maker - Lifestyle - nation.co.ke

http://www.nation.co.ke/lifestyle/lifestyle/Joe-Wanjui-Family-man-industry-captain-and-shrewd-kingmaker/-/1214/2332900/-/jpxpn8/-/index.html

SATURDAY, MAY 31, 2014

Joe Wanjui: Family man, industry captain and shrewd king-maker

Joseph Barrage Wanjui - or simply Joe Wanjui-one of Kenya's most influential businessmen and political advisors. PHOTO/WILLIAM OERI

Joseph Barrage Wanjui - or simply Joe Wanjui-one of Kenya's most influential businessmen and political advisors. PHOTO/WILLIAM OERI 

By TOM ODHIAMBO
More by this Author

Kenya's political scene would have been more stable today had Raila Odinga been appointed prime minister in 2003, one of former President Mwai Kibaki's confidantes has claimed in a book to be launched next month.   

In his new book, The Native Son: Experiences of a Kenyan Entrepreneur, Joseph Barrage Wanjui — or simply Joe Wanjui — one of Kenya's most influential businessmen and political advisors, also suggests anti-corruption czar John Githongo may have been working as a spy for a foreign government when he recorded and leaked conversations with senior Cabinet ministers in 2006.

The Native Son is largely framed as "a celebration of the spirit of free enterprise; an insight into the policies and philosophies that drive business, trade and industry", but it also inevitably captures some of the country's most critical political moments. 

Wanjui, whose most recent role has been as Chancellor of the University of Nairobi from where he holds an honorary doctorate, has seen four Kenyan presidents since Independence, but his perceived influence during Mwai Kibaki's two terms from 2003 to 2013 is the most storied.

In the book, he admits he prefers an advisory role, mostly to ensure a conducive business environment. His disinterest in political office seems to derive from what he thinks is the dishonesty and chaotic nature of "the dirty game" in Kenya. "Matatu politics", he calls it, comparing the survival-of-the-fittest tactics to the notoriously messy public transport system.

That he was in the engine room of the National Rainbow Coalition (Narc) campaigns in 2002 is not in doubt — even serving as chairman of the presidential election board that helped remove Kanu from power. 

"It was like the doors of a pitch-dark bunker had suddenly been flung open to let in the daylight. Liberties that had long been unimaginable were now there for the taking," he writes.

Wanjui admits the key role of Mr Odinga in delivering the victory — starting from the "Kibaki Tosha" endorsement to leading the campaigns.

"I personally can vouch for the fact that Raila Odinga was the most energetic campaigner for Kibaki in the 2002 election campaign," he writes.

However, the author regrets that the Narc honeymoon did not last long with disagreements between the Kibaki and Odinga factions.

A contentious Memorandum of Understanding between the two sides, which Kibaki's National Alliance Party of Kenya was alleged to have dishonoured, particularly caused much tumult with Odinga's Liberal Democratic Party turning into the opposition within government.

"It all boiled down to trust — or rather lack of it," he notes.

MESSY DEMOCRACY

Wanjui strongly believes that had Odinga been made Prime Minister — even without executive powers — Narc would have remained stable and so would the political scene today. 

"I am not a politician, but the ethos of the private sector in which I have worked provides for rewards — or compensation, if you like — commensurate with the work done," he writes.

He believes that even though the then Constitution did not expressly have the PM's position, it would neither have been unconstitutional nor eroded the President's powers.

The author, however, reveals he was part of a team that unsuccessfully attempted reconciliation. 

"Long before the breach became final, there were many meetings held in an apartment in Nairobi's Lower Hill area (in Nairobi) when serious efforts were made to patch up the differences and restore the relationship ... Everything from the alleged MoU to the prime ministerial position was put on the table," writes Wanjui.

But the fallout continued into the defeat of the government side in the 2005 referendum, a Cabinet reshuffle that ejected the Odinga faction, the subsequent formation of the Orange Democratic Movement and eventually the contentious 2007 elections.

President Kibaki was to later form the Grand Coalition Government in 2008 with Odinga as PM in the wake of the post-election violence. 

Nonetheless, Wanjui believes that Kenyans had become so used to Moi's dictatorship for more than two decades that when President Kibaki took over in 2003, they had trouble adjusting to the new reality and kept asking, "Why isn't the President speaking out? Why isn't he reading the riot act to errant ministers? Why doesn't he respond to his opponents? Why is he so quiet?"

This, he suggests, was like the biblical story of the children of Israel who started asking for the chicken they ate during bondage in Egypt instead of God's free manna.

"With time, Kenyans will fully begin to realise that oppression does not equate to order, or liberty to chaos. The give and take of democracy is always messy. Yet in the end, it is the most liberating factor of all," he writes.

Comparing the Kanu rule to Narc, Wanjui believes a "fundamental difference" between Kibaki and his immediate predecessor (Moi) is that Kibaki is an educated man. He finds it ironical that Moi seemed to have dedicated his time fundraising to build schools and promoting education, but at the same time "showed strange aversion to educated people".

"He was more comfortable surrounding himself with cronies who had barely gone to school like Ezekiel Barng'etuny, Kariuki Chotara and Mulu Mutisya," writes Wanjui.

This may have reflected on Kenya's policies for decades, even though he admits Moi is a pleasant man at a "personal level".

"Moi may not have been like (Uganda's Iddi) Amin, but his obsession with political survival and his lack of economic imagination drove Kenya to her lowest post-Independence level, just as Amin did with Uganda," he writes, criticising the killing of investment during the Nyayo era.

Wanjui acknowledges the transformative power of Kibaki's 10 years in office. The new Constitution, economic progress, big infrastructure projects, freedoms, regional integration, free primary education, and improved tax collection are among the highlights.

But he does not shy away from tackling head-on one of the most high-profile corruption controversies in Kenya's history. Wanjui is scathing in his description of John Githongo, the Narc anti-corruption czar who would later metamorphosise into a whistle-blower — or traitor to some.

By way of background, Wanjui also reveals a "little-known secret" about the origins of Transparency International, the respected global anti-corruption watchdog: it was conceived in Kenya before Europe adopted it.

"The concept had germinated during informal discussions held in the 1980s in the Spring Valley suburb of Nairobi where I live. One of my neighbours Peter Eigen was the then World Bank representative in Nairobi," he says.

SPECTACULAR FALLOUT

Wanjui writes that it was during these chat-and-drink sessions, mostly at Eigen's house, that the TI idea was developed out of concern about the high level of corruption in developing countries, which Western governments then seemed to tolerate for the benefit of their companies.

Upon leaving the World Bank, Eigen led the formation of TI in 1993 with its headquarters in Berlin, Germany.

Among the small Spring Valley group was Harris Mule and Joe Githongo — John Githongo's father.

Githongo senior would later become a founding member of the TI board while Wanjui would be appointed to the advisory council. But the author says forming the local TI chapter was a struggle with the "application gathering dust in the attorney-general's chambers" for five years until 1998.

Wanjui admits he was later influential in the appointment of Githongo Jnr as TI director, and treated him more as a son than an employee. 
"I knew he was not married and I would always urge him to take the plunge. I would also advise him to stop living in rented premises and invest in buying his own apartment since he was being paid a good salary," writes Wanjui. 

But this father-son relationship started unravelling in 2003 after Githongo Jnr was appointed the Governance and Ethics PS under Narc. As Githongo Jnr got to work at State House, Wanjui says they often spoke but did not get into the details of the job.

"What I remember him doing most of the time he came along was to mutter something in Kikuyu to the effect that ni kuhiu (things are hot) which I took to mean he was encountering resistance in the course of his work," he writes. 

Githongo Jnr was to later spectacularly fall out with the Narc administration in 2006 over the Anglo Leasing scandal, which he alleged some senior State officials were involved in.

He resigned and fled to London fearing for his life. He later leaked to the BBC recorded conversations with then Justice Minister Kiraitu Murungi and released a dossier suggesting high-level corruption.

In The Native Son, Wanjui does not hide his disdain for Githongo Jnr for being unethical by secretly recording conversations with people who trusted him in their "unguarded moments".

"I can imagine the raw, personal feelings of betrayal of those who found out they had been surreptitiously taped by John. The authority who gave John the State House job (President Kibaki) must have felt equally betrayed," he writes.  

Wanjui contends that from the experience of his long career as a CEO, he believed that even "whistle-blowing is done with some decorum", blaming his erstwhile "son" for approaching the government job with an "activist's mind".

He further suggests Githongo Jnr was not the hero some lionised him to be and could at best be unpatriotic or at worst a spy. "In this day and age, it is not far-fetched to speculate on agencies and powers who would be intensely interested in knowing what happens daily in State House from a high office stationed there," writes Wanjui.

The author says his worst feeling of betrayal came after he read Michella Wrong's It's Our Turn to Eat. He is particularly unhappy with the narrative that the TI board, which he was part of,  "delivered" Githongo Jnr to the "lion's den" of State House as a "sacrificial lamb".

Wanjui takes issue with claims that he and his friends — supposedly part of a group variously referred to in Wrong's book as the "Mount Kenya Mafia", "Democratic Party founder members", "Muthaiga Golf Club members" or "Gema" —   "quaffed Champagne" after supposedly fixing Githongo Jnr. 

The chapter on corruption and Githongo is particularly relevant at a time when the Anglo Leasing scandal that almost brought down the Kibaki administration is back in the limelight. President Uhuru Kenyatta recently allowed the payment of Sh1.4 billion to two companies with links to the controversial contracts. There are reports of further demands amounting to Sh3 billion.

And in the end Wanjui makes it clear there is no love lost between him and Githongo Jnr. He did not attend the younger man's wedding and they have never spoken since Githongo returned to Kenya from self-exile.

"In retrospect, I cannot honestly say my role in recommending John's appointment to government was one of my proudest moments," he notes.

Unlike many of his generation and status who are coy about committing pen to paper to tell their stories, Wanjui has written three books. The Native Son, set to be launched on July 28, being the latest.

FAMILY STORY

Mr Joe Wanjui's extended family in a group photo taken in December 2009. Below: Mr Wanjui with his wife, Njambi, in 2009. PHOTO/COURTESY

Mr Joe Wanjui's extended family in a group photo taken in December 2009. Below: Mr Wanjui with his wife, Njambi, in 2009. PHOTO/COURTESY


He has previously published My Native Roots: A Family Story (University of Nairobi Press, 2009) and From Where I Sit (East African Publishing House, 1986). 

It is in the lush surroundings of a sparsely populated Central Kenya village on the grip of British colonial rule that the story of this man whose influence would decades later straddle corporate and political life begins.  

In My Native Roots, Wanjui is refreshingly candid that while he is certain his birthplace is Cura village near Kahuho in Kikuyu division, he does not know exactly when he was born. 

"The exact date of my birth is something I cannot record with certainty. I have no official birth certificate. But my passport and all my other official documents indicate I was born on May 24, 1937," writes the sixth child of Wanjui Munana and Elizabeth Wanjiru.

He had previously been told he was born between 1936 and 1937, but upon completing high school in 1957 he was required to provide an exact date while applying for a passport.

He settled for May 24, which he reckoned would be easy to recall as it was also the designated British Empire Day. Such pragmatism is to be found in almost all major decisions he made in his life.

Wanjui's life stories stress the importance of one's heritage. My Native Roots, for instance, goes into detail about his family and the Agikuyu way of life, providing a rich vein of anthropological information.

After a humble childhood that was split growing up between what is now Kiambu County and Njoro — where he lived with his mother and siblings after his parents separated — Wanjui started his basic education in Kahuho in 1946 and ended it in Nairobi where he had gone to live with his brother James Mbatia. He later attended Kabaa Mission School and Mang'u High School between 1951-1957.

LAND OF OPPORTUNITY

But it is a decision he took after completing high school that some would have considered irrational: he declined a chance to join the prestigious Makerere University in Uganda, the only such institution in the region then, much to the dismay of the British colonialists.

Instead, he saw better prospects abroad and applied to Ohio Wesleyan University in America where he was offered a place plus full tuition fee.

Even then he did not have air fare and money for upkeep. It took the intervention of Robert Stephens, the cultural attaché at the American foreign affairs office in Nairobi, for Wanjui to travel.

He later got Fulbright and African-American Institute scholarships for his studies. But life abroad was not easy, especially for a black man in a country where racial discrimination was rife.

Wanjui says: "America can be an intimidating place, especially for a rural African going there for the first time. One can picture how infinitely intimidating it was for such an African going there in the 1950s."

Strangely, he felt there was more racial discrimination back home in colonial Kenya than in America.

After completing his BA at Ohio Wesleyan, Wanjui applied to Ohio University to study electrical engineering before joining the prestigious Columbia University for a masters of science degree, which he completed in 1964.

While the sole aim of his American sojourn was education, he also ended up finding love in this quintessential land of opportunity.

It was during a party in the apartment of a Kenyan student in New York City in 1961, just after Wanjui had finished his undergraduate studies, that he met his future wife. He had earlier briefly met Elizabeth Mukami Githii when she was a student at Loreto, Limuru, and he was at Mang'u.

"Anyway, I was the school head prefect and was supposed to hold my head high in a girls' school, not get all mushy and romantic," he says.

But things were different in the second meeting miles away. The relationship blossomed and the two got married on December 22, 1962, in New York.

Wanjui and Elizabeth got their first children, twin girls — Wanjiru and Nyathira — on December 10, 1963, two days short of Kenya's Independence Day.

The young couple had travelled to America as British citizens — subjects of the colonialists –  but returned home on Kenyan passports. And it was a time of socio-economic, cultural and political transition. "Back in Kenya, Elizabeth and I were what could be regarded as the sixties version of the 'Yuppie' couple: young, upwardly mobile, well-educated, ambitious," he writes.

While Elizabeth got a teaching job at Ngara Secondary School and later at State House Road Girls, Wanjui continued to work for multinational Esso (later known as Exxon Mobil).

"Indeed, we found ourselves propelled straight into Kenya's upper middle-class lifestyle – sophisticated, doing well, getting ahead. We were earning good money and had an increasing circle of important friends: ministers, top civil servants, company executives and more," he says.

Wanjui would later leave Esso to head state-owned Industrial and Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) as "a national duty".

"It was at ICDC that we launched the first post-independence wave of African-owned enterprises, and a network of indigenous retailers and wholesalers, who changed the face of African commerce in Kenya," he notes.

Dr Joseph  Barrage Wanjui with his daughters Chamie  (right) and Ciiru. PHOTO/WILLIAM OERI

Dr Joseph Barrage Wanjui with his daughters Chamie (right) and Ciiru. PHOTO/WILLIAM OERI

But in 1968 he joined East African Industries (EAI) as Technical Director. The multinational, now known as Unilever, had popular flagship brands like Kimbo, Cowboy, Omo, Lux, Blue Band, Treetop and Mama Safi. He rose to become the managing director and eventually executive chairman of EAI, serving the company for 19 years before retiring in April 1996.

But it was no easy task as he details his battles with government, mostly over price controls, as he sought a conducive business environment.

Wanjui, who ranks as one of the biggest local investors, has been a board member of many organisations, using this to share his expertise and mentor future corporate leaders.

He now chairs the UAP board, a company he partly owns. He believes his role in forming the Kenya Association of Manufacturers and the Kenya Institute of Management has helped shape the economy. His involvement in capital venture investment also provides useful lessons.

As his career grew from the 1960s, so did his family. The couple had two more daughters — Jo-Ann Wairimu, born in 1966, and Joyce-Ann Muthoni, born a year later. But the marriage that the young couple thought was "made in heaven" did not last and they divorced in 1972.

"At some point, the relationship began to get frayed. Neither Elizabeth nor I found it easy to put a finger on what exactly went wrong. Was it the pressure of our careers, combined with that of the new life we had suddenly been thrust into? Or was it our own ambitions and fear of failure? I do not know," he writes.

After bringing up the children as a single parent, he later remarried Anne Njambi Kiarie, with whom he has a son, Joseph Wanjui, and a daughter, Jean-Anne Wanjiru. He, however, remained close to Elizabeth until her death in 1998.

Wanjui represents the pioneer African Kenyan capitalist class with a global connection. But at the same time his story tells more of what Kenya could have been – or still could be – with the establishment of institutions to guarantee home-grown entrepreneurship and a friendly business environment. 

My Native Roots and The Native Sonare not just important because they detail the life of a public figure and inspire the spirit of entrepreneurship, but also because of the anthropology of the Agikuyu and the opening of a window to Kenya's history. 
***
The book is available at the University of Nairobi bookshop and other outlets at Sh2,000.



Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.

Popular Posts

Blog Archive

Followers