Kenya is 50/50
“I thought that the children are the
future. Do Kenyan children really count in the development of this country? Are
they just there to be told wait for tomorrow? “You are the leaders of
tomorrow!” That is a very depressing statement from any adult leader whether a
parent or a politician to tell a kid to wait. Wait for what? What you can do
today do it now. Procrastination and change of goals are the cancer gnawing the
soul of this country.
Kenya celebrated
Golden Jubilee this Jamhuri day. It was
marked with pomp and colour. Opinion is divided on whether or not the KSh. 500
million spent to hold that historic event was justified.
I had decided to
carry an in-depth feature about the celebrations. The mainstream media went all
out to cover it on acres of newspapers, minutes of radio airspace and hours of
TV videos. I took to the internet to see what they were up to in their
celebrations of Kenya@50. I did not carry the story because it had no news
value given it came against the backdrop of the death of Mandela and I had to
make my judgment on what to publish.
The beauty with
the internet is there are millions of contributors and there is no such a thing
as monopoly of information. Everyone can and do contribute. For the most part,
internet content does not suffer the political correctness and compromise of
the regular mass channels. The blogosphere and social media sites are the new
frontiers of shaping public opinion and agenda. There are blunt, unapologetic
and fresh.
It is in the
social media where you will get creative comments such as: najihurumia kuwa
Mkenya, 50 years of making mistakes, there are only two tribes in Kenya; the
rich and the poor and Kenya ikona wenyewe.
Kenya is 50 years
young. It is not 50 years old. During those years it has achieved universal
education, expanded infrastructure such as roads, electricity and plans are
ready to acquire standard gauge railway as well as renovate Jomo Kenyatta International
Airport. It is fondly called the island of peace in a sea of coup d’états,
political violence and dictatorship. When tourists board airplanes to Africa
they want to be received by the warm land of hakuna matata. They return with
Maasai souvenirs to advertise Kenya to the world.
Sadly, Kenyans
themselves have seen little to be truly proud of their country. The standards
of living are unaffordable. Prices of basic commodities could not go higher.
The fuel cartels milk the taxpayer until she bleeds. There is rampant
corruption everywhere. The youth unemployment is a national scourge. This
exposes the young people to indecent activities such as crime and despair. What
is the future of a nation whose youths are hopeless and marginalized?
I thought that
the children are the future. Do Kenyan children really count in the development
of this country? Are they just there to be told wait for tomorrow? “You are the
leaders of tomorrow!” That is a very depressing statement from any adult leader
whether a parent or a politician to tell a kid to wait. Wait for what? What you
can do today do it now. Procrastination and change of goals are the cancer
gnawing the soul of this country.
At independence
Kenya was at par in terms of economic development with Asian tigers like
Malaysia and Korea. Successive leaderships ran down this republic. It is a
kiosk which operates on credit.
Will the next 50
years be more democratic? More free? More promising? Will Kenya realize the Vision
2030 dream of being a middle income economy?
In 2063, Kenya will celebrate a century. By then, I
hope the following will be realized: reduce the number of members of
parliament, senators and women representatives and county assembly members,
bridge the yawning divide between the haves and have nots, strengthen devolution and have a productive and healthy
population.
The
writer is a 3rd year student of Bachelors of Arts Degree in
Communication and Media at Chuka University. He blogs at
musyokangui.blogspot.com
Email
your thoughts to musyokangui02@gmail.com
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