Can Kenya stop Bloody Elections?

By Canon Francis Omondi

We, the people, and our leaders are in terrible jeopardy. An ominous cloud hangs over us as the 2022 elections approach. The retiring Chief Justice David Maraga was perceptive when he warned of drumbeats of political war. His words gave me an eerie feeling, a Luo in an election year. How can we bring these bloody elections to an end? 

The Kenyan election cycle has become synonymous with bloodletting, which has disproportionately affected the Luo. The general election conjures up memories of 1969. The first parliament was ending in December and Kenya was to conduct the first post-independent general elections. Following the 1966 fall-out at the Limuru Convention, a frightened government  sought to hold on to power at all costs. This would not be easy. The opposition Kenya People’s Union (KPU) formed in 1966 presented them with a frightening threat. To make sure they kept power, Jomo Kenyatta sanctioned the now infamous oath-taking to forge the uthamaki ideology to keep the presidency within the Gikuyu oligarchy and mobilise the Gikuyu folk around this narrative, thus, binding the Gikuyu, Embu and Meru communities (GEMA) in a spiritual and political stronghold under KANU in an imaginary nation of Uthamakistan

On July 5th they gunned Tom Mboya down in broad daylight. Although Mboya was a KANU leader, according to David Goldsworthy in Tom Mboya: The man Kenya Wanted to Forget, he had to be eliminated because he posed a threat to the presidency. Killed by a bullet coated in the blood of the oath. Since we have been conditioned to understand politics through the prism of tribe,  Mboya’s assassination snapped the already loose cord that tied the Luo to the Kikuyu community after the fall-out of Jomo Kenyatta and Odinga Oginga in 1966 and the mass state-led propaganda Kenyatta and his cabal undertook to paint the Luo community to the Kikuyu as a backward and violent community. The resulting protests, against President Kenyatta at Mboya’s requiem mass marked the beginning of animosities that are still felt today.

Although Kenya has remained silent about Mboya’s murder, the effects endure to this day. As Yvonne Owuor, winner of the 2003 Caine Prize for African Writing, aptly observes, after Mboya’s death Kenya gained a third official language after English and Kiswahili: Silence. But I wonder what to expect when a train stops at a lakeside town in 2022. In 1969 — as in 2008 and 2017 the body bags from the lorries and the buses —  the train “offloaded men, women, and children. Displaced ghosts. In-between people. No one to blame. Most of the witnesses were dead. Others had vowed themselves to eternal silence. This was the same as death,” in the words of Yvonne.

After Mboya’s death, the events in Kisumu on 25 October 1969 exacerbated the despair among the Luo. Jomo Kenyatta had come to open Nyanza Provincial General Hospital which had been built with aid from Russia. Although Odinga was not invited, he arrived in force, for with Russia’s help he had started the project. In the ensuing commotion, the presidential escort and the paramilitary General Service Unit (GSU), shot their way through the crowd, killing many and not stopping the shooting for 25 kilometres outside the town.  

If Mboya died, then everything that could die in Kenya did. Including school children standing in front of a hospital the head of the nation had come to open, Yvonne lamented. The events emptied central province of a people they now called cockroaches, nyamu cia ruguru (beasts from the west). Who spoke of this exile, or of the souls evicted from our world? 

The provincial security apparatus had warned people to stay away from Kisumu because of the protests following the brazen assassination of Tom Mboya, but as political scientist Akoko Akech asks, “And why did the presidential security shoot children, children in Awasi, some 50km away from the hospital?

The killings were framed as animosity between the Luo and Kikuyu communities, but they were not. It was a group in power using government machinery to crush a perceived enemy. The Luo were not fighting Kikuyu people in the outright violence that broke out as a large crowd menaced Kenyatta’s security. The security forces killed indiscriminately, hence the « Kisumu massacre ». While the official body count was 11, historians close to the event such as B.A. Ogot put the numbers at 100 people dead. The school pupils along the road at Awasi had come out to sing praises to their president whose security sent them to their graves in silence.  

The people were silenced, the records expunged, and the photographic and film evidence of the event destroyed, and we would not have seen the devastation were it not for the often-reproduced single monochromatic photograph of the chaotic scene by taken Mohammed Amin, and Satwant Matharoo’s film footage that was shown to the British audience by the WTN. Even the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) removed the oral eyewitness accounts and memoranda from its last report on the colonial and post-independence massacres. The now official record is an extract from the unofficial Report of the Commission on Truth, Justice, and Reconciliation.

In his book Exclusion and Embrace, Prof. Miroslav Volf captures the experience of the Luo people best when he avers, “We demonise and bestialise not because we do not know better, but because we refuse to know what is manifest and choose to know what serves our interests.” Hence, the proscription of KPU made Kenya a de facto single party state and established a pan-ethnic nationalism. The government accused KPU of being subversive, stirring up inter-ethnic strife, and accepting foreign money to promote anti-national activities, which included the building of the aptly named Russia Hospital that the president had come to open. Having demonised Nyanza Province, it was easy to exclude her from « national » development plans.  

Unless we confront this past murders like that of the election official, Chris Musando in 2017, will recur. Kenyan police have a long history of using excessive force against protesters, especially among the Luo in western Kenya. Of the over 1,100 people killed during the 2007 post-election violence, over 400 were shot by police in the Nyanza region. In 2013, according to Human Rights Watch, police killed at least five demonstrators in Kisumu who were protesting a Supreme Court decision that affirmed Uhuru Kenyatta’s election as president. And in June 2016 police killed at least five and wounded another 60 demonstrators in Kisumu, Homabay, and Siaya counties. The state acknowledging these crimes and making public apologies to the Luo will, in my view, end the continued violence against the community.

It is the duty of the current Kenyan state to reach out to the Luo community for the killings since 1969. If we can trace the records of  Nazi Germany atrocities during World War II, why can’t we do the same in Kenya? Why hasn’t any government felt the duty to at least apologise or acknowledge the trauma?

In December 1970, during a state visit to Poland which coincided with a commemoration of the Jewish victims of the Warsaw Ghetto, West German Chancellor Willy Brandt spontaneously dropped to his knees. Although he uttered no word during his Kneifall von Warschau, his Warsaw Genuflection, Brandt later wrote in his autobiography that upon “carrying the burden of the millions who were murdered, I did what people do when words fail them”. The Kenyan government should do to the Luo what Germany’s leaders did to the Jewish victims of the Nazis.

In 2011 German leaders again expressed deep remorse for the suffering their nation had inflicted on Poland and the rest of Europe during World War II. “I bow in mourning to the suffering of the victims,” German President, Frank-Walter Steinmeier said  at a ceremony in Warsaw. “I ask for forgiveness for Germany’s historical debt. I affirm our lasting responsibility,” the statesman said, calling the war a “painful legacy”. Where are the presidents of Kenya who have expressed such remorse?

Even if no one does, we remember. As long as it is remembered, the past is not just the past; it remains an aspect of the present. A remembered wound is an experienced wound. Toni Morrison was right when she says in Beloved that, “Deep wounds from the past can so much pain our present that, the future becomes a matter of keeping the past at bay”. Without apologies, the crimes are bound to recur and our wounds to remain uncovered.  

I am terrified by the state’s silence, the wishing away of the crimes and the failure to reach out to the Luo community. While President Steinmeier has called WW II a “German crime” that his nation will never forget, Kenya’s leaders are quiet and want Kisumu forgotten. How can the Luo people forgive crimes no one owns? How can the scar they bear be concealed ? I fear that without acknowledgment, ownership and apology, we cannot build any lasting bridges. 

Canon Francis Omondi, is a priest of All Saints Cathedral Diocese Nairobi, and an adjunct lecturer at St. Paul’s University Limuru. Views expressed here are his own.

The article was first published in The Elephant read it here: https://www.theelephant.info/features/2021/02/12/bloody-elections-confronting-kenya-elections-violence-in-2022/

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7 Comments

  1. Anonymous

    Quite an emotional apologetic piece for Jaduong community. History indeed is a good teacher, she reaches us many things, among them the joy we had to bask in and the pain we had to endure as part of living.

    However, the paper paint the luo community as the sole victims in all these PEV. This perceptions can be viewed as mere attempt to draw political sympathy and further some ethnic political agenda.

    Undeniably, blood was spwelt during these post election viollence which Luos among other communities fell victims.

    For example the 2007, 2013 RV PEV and Nyanza aimed not at any Luo but anyone deemed not belonging to Kalenjin community or in Nyanza with a strong biasness against Kikuyus or anyone from Central Kenya.

    In nyanza the aggitation may have been against the Election’s results but violence was aimed at Kikuyu and Kikuyu alone.

    So one may feels that if Luo died in Nyanza,
    Kisumu and Maseno, the blame should fall squarely on their face since they died on their street , not by any ethnic community but in the hands of the same government that was supposed to protect them.

    Therefore, one thing we agree together is, that the government owes Kenyans an apology, all those who have innocently died by the hands of the same government that should be their protector.

  2. anonymous

    Yes, you are right to write down the pain of the Luo community,as a Luo
    since Pain is never shared, you feel it alone. but with this emphasis on luos as main victims of Election violence while almost every Kenyan suffered these violence to which majority of Kenyans have come to see them as perpetrated by Luos hence been labled “Violent”

    Consequently, the Luos Community need to learn from this histories you’ve well penned down, for if they keep on repeating the same mistake, when will Kenyan stop labeling them “violent”

    If you get killed in a violence you yourself started, who do you blame. is it right to say you’ve been killed in the line of duty? 🤔. To protest is everyone right, its a constitutional rights, but if you so justify Protesting, then the one who is not protesting will justify “protection” of their lives and properties which you endangers.

    It is during protest, protestants goes along damaging properties worth millions of shillings belonging to innocent Kenyans not participating in the protest.

    Therefore, when you get hurt during protest, it will then be considered injured in defense, The government will defend itself by saying you were injured while the government was protecting innocent life of the Kenyans and their properties which you endangered by your violent protesting..

    After all, first in security we say “public safety precede over individuals or group rights ” and again, the constitution guarantees protection of a “peaceful protest” but, has it been the case with Luos?

    Secondly, are the Luos the only participants in every election? Why not exercise sobriety like other communities who share same frustrations.

    I speak as a Kenyan, I share same frustrations, pain and anguish caused by our government, but for once Luos need to stop arrogating themselves the Kenya’s Savior’s role🤔🤔🤔…… the way we see it as Kenyans….

    However, it has been said that the Dukes of NYANZASHIRES are the real problem not the entire Luo community per se.

    For example, the current rejection of the BBI and Handshakes from Central Kenya and RV, and instead forced to align behind the “lesser evil” in the name of wheelbarrow and hustlers narrative, is because as they say, that “the BBI may be good” but the salesmen can never be trusted. And that, if BBI today was sold by Tuju or anyone else from Luo community, then Kisumu would be the counter for everyone to purchase from, but with Baba, Orengo and the likes of Dukes…. Central and RV says, Hell no😜😜😜.

    True to the fact, Luos are left behind suffering because everyone else have moved from politics of dynasties, Kikuyu have already been forced to disowned their own, RV the same, Kamba are about to follow suite, Murembe Nation is confused over who to chose from the existing dynasties, almost every community have new blood, but Luo since time memorial, the same Dukes of Nyanzashires, Kisumushires or Kondeleshires.

    So, yes, Kenya can stop these bloodshed if violence is is controlled without justifying the government acts of killing its innocent Kenyans.

  3. anonymous

    Yes, you are right to write down the pain of the Luo community,as a Luo
    since Pain is never shared, you feel it alone. but with this emphasis on luos as main victims of Election violence while almost every Kenyan suffered these violence to which majority of Kenyans have come to see them as perpetrated by Luos hence been labled “Violent”

    Consequently, the Luos Community need to learn from this histories you’ve well penned down, for if they keep on repeating the same mistake, when will Kenyan stop labeling them “violent”

    If you get killed in a violence you yourself started, who do you blame. is it right to say you’ve been killed in the line of duty? 🤔. To protest is everyone right, its a constitutional rights, but if you so justify Protesting, then the one who is not protesting will justify “protection” of their lives and properties which you endangers.

    It is during protest, protestants goes along damaging properties worth millions of shillings belonging to innocent Kenyans not participating in the protest.

    Therefore, when you get hurt during protest, it will then be considered injured in defense, The government will defend itself by saying you were injured while the government was protecting innocent life of the Kenyans and their properties which you endangered by your violent protesting..

    After all, first in security we say “public safety precede over individuals or group rights ” and again, the constitution guarantees protection of a “peaceful protest” but, has it been the case with Luos?

    Secondly, are the Luos the only participants in every election? Why not exercise sobriety like other communities who share same frustrations.

    I speak as a Kenyan, I share same frustrations, pain and anguish caused by our government, but for once Luos need to stop arrogating themselves the Kenya’s Savior’s role🤔🤔🤔…… the way we see it as Kenyans….

    However, it has been said that the Dukes of NYANZASHIRES are the real problem not the entire Luo community per se.

    For example, the current rejection of the BBI and Handshakes from Central Kenya and RV, and instead forced to align behind the “lesser evil” in the name of wheelbarrow and hustlers narrative, is because as they say, that “the BBI may be good” but the salesmen can never be trusted. And that, if BBI today was sold by Tuju or anyone else from Luo community, then Kisumu would be the counter for everyone to purchase from, but with Baba, Orengo and the likes of Dukes…. Central and RV says, Hell no😜😜😜.

    True to the fact, Luos are left behind suffering because everyone else have moved from politics of dynasties, Kikuyu have already been forced to disowned their own, RV the same, Kamba are about to follow suite, Murembe Nation is confused over who to chose from the existing dynasties, almost every community have new blood, but Luo since time memorial, the same Dukes of Nyanzashires, Kisumushires or Kondeleshires.

    So, yes, Kenya can stop these bloodshed if violence is is controlled without justifying the government acts of killing its innocent Kenyans.

  4. Very informative besides being an emotional piece..the underlying currents are the most dangerous if left unattended..

  5. Very informative besides being an emotional piece..the underlying currents are the most dangerous if left unattended..

  6. Edwin Asura

    The truth about keeping this matter will one day result in a Rwanda like genocide. When the Hutu and Tutsi decided to settle scores once and for all it was bloody but the result has made that country a haven where there is respect, fairness, humility, maturity and love.

    The more we brush our issues under the carpet the longer we delay our healing as a people.

  7. Edwin Asura

    The truth about keeping this matter will one day result in a Rwanda like genocide. When the Hutu and Tutsi decided to settle scores once and for all it was bloody but the result has made that country a haven where there is respect, fairness, humility, maturity and love.

    The more we brush our issues under the carpet the longer we delay our healing as a people.

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