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Roots Of Kenya's
Crisis Lie In Its Colonial History
By Caroline Elkins - Sunday, January 6, 2008
Special to The Washington Post
As Big Ben struck midnight, Londoners welcomed in
2008 by cheering a blaze of fireworks above the
Thames skyline. But the new year has been marked by
far less happy conflagrations in several fledgling
democracies that had once been part of Britain's
empire. Days earlier, Pakistan had been rocked by
the assassination of opposition leader Benazir
Bhutto. Iraq seems trapped in a cycle of terror and
counterterror. Afghanistan looks much the same.
Zimbabwe squirms under Robert Mugabe's thumb.
Now Kenya, too, appears to be on the brink. The East
African country -- widely seen as a model of
economic and democratic progress since 2002, when
the 24-year dictatorship of Daniel arap Moi was
swept aside -- has been moving toward an ethnically
charged civil war since a disputed election on Dec.
27. President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner of
a second term after a vote that opposition candidate
Raila Odinga denounces as rigged and that European
Union observers agree was seriously flawed. As tens
of thousands of Kenyans flee their homes and
hundreds lie dead, part of the blame rests with
Britain and its imperial legacy.
The immediate cause of the crisis was Kenya's
delicate ethnic balance. The incumbent president,
Kibaki, is a member of Kenya's largest and probably
most powerful ethnic group, the Kikuyu, who total
about 22 percent of the population; his rival,
Odinga, is a member of the Luo, who comprise some 13
percent of the populace and live predominantly in
western Kenya. In their bitter contest, in which
Odinga promised to end ethnic favoritism and spread
the country's wealth more equitably, ethnicity was
the deciding factor, and a marred victory on either
side had always been likely to spark violence. Both
men are rich, elitist African politicians who have
far more in common with each other than they do with
their supporters; in their struggle over power, both
are using their followers as proxies in a smoldering
war.
Enter Britain, Kenya's former colonial ruler, which
now prides itself on being a purveyor of global
democracy. Foreign Secretary David Miliband and his
U.S. counterpart, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice, issued a joint statement calling for
compromise. Prime Minister Gordon Brown rushed to
the phone lines, offering Kibaki and Odinga a quick
lesson in democratic principles. In a Kiplingesque
touch redolent of the colonial "white man's burden,"
Brown reportedly told both men, "What I want to see
is ..." Miliband directed the Kenyan leaders to
"behave responsibly."
I doubt that the irony of Brown and Miliband's
message was lost on Kibaki or Odinga. Today's
Britain, between its botched war on terror and lack
of checks on executive power, falls far short of the
democratic ideals so paternalistically espoused by
Brown and other British leaders. If you're looking
for the origins of Kenya's ethnic tensions, look to
its colonial past.
Far from leaving behind democratic institutions and
cultures, Britain bequeathed to its former colonies
corrupted and corruptible governments. Colonial
officials hand-picked political successors as they
left in the wake of World War II, lavishing
political and economic favors on their proteges.
This process created elites whose power extended
into the post-colonial era.
Added to this was a distinctly colonial view of the
rule of law, which saw the British leave behind
legal systems that facilitated tyranny, oppression
and poverty rather than open, accountable
government. And compounding these legacies was
Britain's famous imperial policy of "divide and
rule," playing one side off another, which often
turned fluid groups of individuals into immutable
ethnic units, much like Kenya's Luo and Kikuyu
today. In many former colonies, the British picked
favorites from among these newly solidified ethnic
groups and left others out in the cold. We are often
told that age-old tribal hatreds drive today's
conflicts in Africa. In fact, both ethnic conflict
and its attendant grievances are colonial phenomena.
It's no wonder that newly independent countries such
as Kenya maintained and even deepened the old
imperial heritage of authoritarianism and ethnic
division. The British had spent decades trying to
keep the Luo and Kikuyu divided, quite rightly
fearing that if the two groups ever united, their
combined power could bring down the colonial order.
Indeed, a short-lived Luo-Kikuyu alliance in the
late 1950s hastened Britain's retreat from Kenya and
forced the release of Jomo Kenyatta, the nation's
first president, from a colonial detention camp. But
before their departure, the British schooled the
future Kenyans on the lessons of a very British
model of democratic elections. Britain was
determined to protect its economic and geopolitical
interests during the decolonization process. That
set dangerous precedents. Among other maneuvers, the
British drew electoral boundaries to cut the
representation of groups they thought might cause
trouble and empowered the provincial administration
to manipulate supposedly democratic outcomes.
Old habits die hard. Three years after Kenya became
independent in 1963, the Luo-Kikuyu alliance fell
apart. Kenyatta and his Kikuyu elite took over the
state; the Luo, led by Oginga Odinga (Raila Odinga's
father) formed an opposition party that was
eventually quashed. Kenyatta established a one-party
state in 1969 and tossed the opposition, including
Odinga, into detention, much as the British had done
to him and his cronies during colonial rule in the
1950s. The Kikuyu then enjoyed many of the country's
spoils throughout Kenyatta's reign.
The Kikuyu's fortunes took a turn for the worse when
Daniel arap Moi, a member of the Kalenjin ethnic
minority, assumed dictatorial power in 1978. Western
Kenya enjoyed the economic benefits of state largess
until Moi was voted out of office in 2002, at which
point the pendulum again swung back to the Kikuyu,
led by the incoming President Kibaki.
Fears of ethnic ascendancies, power-hungry political
elites, undemocratic processes and institutions --
all are hallmarks of today's Kenya, just as they
were during British colonial rule. Caroline Elkins
is an associate professor of African studies at
Harvard University and the author of "Imperial
Reckoning: The Untold Story of Britain's Gulag in
Kenya." |