In their analysis, they predict that just like his father was jailed by the colonial government only to be released a decade later to become the first president; Uhuru will go through trial in The Hague and later return a hero to lead Kenyans once more. This analogy may be fair only that the reasons why Jomo was jailed are drastically different from the charges Uhuru is facing at ICC.
To begin with, Uhuru Kenyatta is the only child of Jomo to be charged with crime of murder and genocide that is not related to an ideological struggle for the freedom of Kenya. Unlike his father, he is not in court because of his nationalistic revolutionary struggle but rather; he is alleged to have engineered ethnic retribution against tribes suspected to have killed his Kikuyu tribe in the Rift Valley and other parts of Kenya during the 2007-08 post election violence.
The Synovate opinion polls released on the eve of the suspects appearance are quite telling. They revealed that 61% of Kenyans preferred trials at The Hague contrary to the resolutions of the crowds that attended the Ruto- Uhuru rallies. They revealed a bitter truth — you cannot rely on crowds to make a good judgment. They say one thing in public but behind closed doors, they do the opposite!
The level of noise we have heard from a section of the political class when Prime Minister Raila Odinga suggested the use of Scotland Yard, the FBI and Commonwealth judges to be invited to manage the investigation and trial of post election suspects is ignorant of our recent history.
Raila has been roundly condemned in public rallies that he is trying to outsource the entire judiciary and the police force; has been labeled unpatriotic and a man who wants to be Kenya’s president yet he has no faith in our local institutions.
Yet, a look at Kenya’s history between January 2008 and now reveals that we have had an influx of foreign experts trying to fix a broken Kenya in every way without us raising a finger.
Soon after the violence broke out in 2008, we had no less than 10 international dignitaries who trooped in to help quell the violence that was already taking dangerous dimensions. They included Desmond Tutu of South Africa, Joachim Chissano of Mozambique, Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, John Kufuor of Ghana, Ben Mkapa of Tanzania, Graca Machel of Mozambique, Jendayi Frazer of the USA, Condoleezza Rice of the USA, Ban ki Moon of the United Nations and retired UN secretary general Kofi Annan of Ghana.
During that period, we never raised our voices about our sovereignty or chased them away because we were not a failed State. We saw no need to fix the problem we had created. We were happy to see Kofi Annan camp at Serena Hotel for months until our broken nation was fixed.
Soon after the national accord was in place, we invited Justice Johan Kriegler of South Africa to chair the commission that investigated our electoral flaws. Again we saw no need to raise the issue of sovereignty or outsourcing our judicial responsibilities. When he finished his work, we happily voted to implement his recommendations and actually heeded his advice to disband the Electoral Commission of Kenya.
Ironically, the same people who have been opposed to the invitation of the FBI, Scotland Yard and judges from the Commonwealth have themselves rushed to hire some of the most expensive lawyers from Britain and Canada to represent them in the ICC. But even before the Ocampo Six shopped for QCs from Britain, the Police Commissioner had invited the FBI to help him unravel the drugs trade without any objection from any of us.
When Amos Wako finally decided to file the admissibility case in The Hague, he quickly hired Sir Geoffrey Nice and Rodney Dixon of the UK to fight Kenya’s referral case in The Hague. We never raised a finger.
The Ocampo Six were not left behind either. William Ruto hired David Hopper of the UK as Henry Kosgey hired Ben Emerson also of the UK. Uhuru Kenyatta went the whole hog and outdid every one. He hired Steve Kay, Gillian Kay Higgins and Benjamin Joyes, all of the UK as Ambassador Francis Muthaura settled for Karim Ahmad Khan also of the UK. Former Police Commissioner General Ali Hussein was the only one who settled for John Philpot of Canada.
With over ten foreign lawyers representing the Ocampo Six at The Hague, one wonders whether there are no competent and qualified lawyers in Kenya. Yes, this trial will cost Kenyans millions of pounds in a country that depends on Britain for its annual budgets.
Now that the opponents of foreign experts have been the first to rush to foreign lands for defense attorneys; we should not waste any time but invite the Scotland Yard, KGB, Mossad and FBI to investigate post election violence without bothering about our tattered sovereignty.
jerryokungu@gmail.com



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