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Saturday, February 09, 2008

Don't give in to fear

says L. Muthoni Wanyeki, Executive Director of the Kenya Human Rights Commission, in her latest column in The East African.

That statement has particular power coming from her. In the past weeks, she has received death threats, along with other Kenyan human rights defenders. Please sign the Amnesty Petition for their safety.

Wanyeki continues:

Lives have been lost and continue to be lost. Women have been raped — and now find themselves forced into transactional sex to obtain basic goods and services within the internally displaced camps all over the country. Livelihoods have been destroyed. And fear is growing. Day by day.

We held our breath as the mediation process was launched. We are still holding it. A new form of violence has emerged. We whisper the question: were the murders of two Orange Democratic Movement parliamentarians political assassinations? The propaganda war intensifies.

Part of the propaganda war has to do with naming the violence. The term “genocide” is invoked — ignoring the fact that genocide includes elements of state complicity. The term “ethnic cleansing” is thrown around loosely. Both terms heighten the fear.

Yes, there are historical grievances that need to be addressed. Yes, there are contemporary experiences of exclusion, and persistent inequalities that also need to be addressed. And, most importantly, yes, the victims — and survivors — of the current violence have experienced and understand that violence to be the result of their ethnicity. But the violence is politically-instigated. It finds ethnic expression or manifests itself ethnically because our politics are organised ethnically.

There are now four forms of violence in the country. First, the violence resulting from disorganised and spontaneous protests at the announcement of the disputed presidential result. This form of violence has largely died down (or been suppressed).

Second, and most critically, violence resulting from organised militia activity — beginning most horrendously in the Rift Valley, but now spreading out from Nairobi and Central.

Third, violence by the police force and the General Service Unit’s extraordinary use of force, including extrajudicial killings, primarily in Nyanza.

And fourth, the violence of communal vigilantism — catalysed by the perceived need for self-defence and security, but also by the receipt of IDPs by families and communities in Nairobi and Central.

All forms of violence are completely, utterly unacceptable. All forms of violence must be condemned. And, importantly, accountability must be sought for all forms of violence. There can be no impunity.

But seeking accountability requires the painstaking work of investigation, documentation and evidence collection — particularly with respect to the organised militia activity. We all have initial findings and preliminary information. But that is not enough. Which is why the propaganda war must stop.

Calling for peace is not enough.
We will only slide into civil war if we cannot see through this. We must resist the fear, name the problem accurately and desist from the build up to the declaration of a state of emergency, the deployment of the military or, worse, the usurpation of civilian governance by military governance.

We must demand that the organised militia activity stop.

We must demand that the police and the General Service Unit focus on ensuring that it does, as well as protecting the IDPs.

The mediation process has too much at stake for us all to be compromised now. We have lost too much as it is.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Grandmaster Masese said...

i think we must protect our country,more so protecting our rights and identity and we must not in any case relent.Fear is for the cowards and for those who shamelessly gag our expression.the power of mankind lies in expression and rights,no matter what they do,the truth is going to avail as Kenyans are no longer cowards who cant tell what is right/wrong.

2/10/2008 4:09 AM  

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