LET US EMBRACE CHAPTER SIX OF OUR CONSTITUTION!!!
Are you suffering from corruption
stress disorder?
Kenyans are not apathetic, but we
may just be suffering from Corruption Stress Disorder (CSD). CSD is a mental
condition triggered by a series of terrifying events over the last five years.
Many of us have experienced it. All of us have witnessed it. In case you are
wondering whether you are affected, there are three symptoms. They include:
- Vivid flashbacks of scandals,
-Recurrent moments of anxiety about
the quality of aspirants that will be on your ballot paper and
-The feeling that nothing will come
out of the #RedCard20 national conversation.
If you have any one of these three
key symptoms, you probably need to see a psychiatrist or mentor. Alternatively,
you could tap into some inner courage and face the fact that unless we do
something to interrupt the quality of leaders now, the past is about to consume
our future. Over the last seven years, Kenyans have crafted a new Constitution
and several laws. We have generated and reformed the Senate, Ethics and
Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) and Independent Electoral and Boundaries
Commission (IEBC) as well as County Assemblies. These new institutions join
older bodies like the Office of the Auditor General, Parliament and the Judiciary.
An impressive array of laws and architecture of institutions now exist.
Incredibly, despite these laws and organizations,
the national sport of looting the public has become even more popular than
betting. Aspirants under investigation or before our courts for corruption,
hate crimes and unethical behavior seek public office. Parents seem incapable
of leading families with ethical values. Priests and Imams reach out to God to
change the hearts of the corrupt yet every Sunday or Friday, the corrupt pray
in front of them. We seem collectively powerless or conflicted to stop the
deterioration of our ethical standards.
The integrity or uadhilifu
conversation goes to the shadows of our society. It raises the conversation
whether applying a criminal standard to our leaders is enough. Consider this.
Of the 1,500 men and women adversely mentioned in the reports of statutory
agencies, only 180 have been convicted. Most of the 180 are small
business-people, constables, clerical and labour officers, ward administrators
and other junior public servants. None, not one, sio mmoja of the architects or
managers of the mega-million dollar scandals are on this list of convictions.
Despite new energies from within the
Judiciary, our courts still take too long to release or convict corruption
suspects. At least sixty tactics are used to frustrate the administration of
justice. Courts obstruct EACC investigations. Lawyers, witnesses and even
judges fall sick or travel at critical points. Files and evidence gets
misplaced or lost. The courts will face their biggest test in this season.
Should we lose faith in our Chapter Six, law enforcement and other public
oversight institutions therefore? No, not unless you have an acute case of CSD.
The rest of us must continue to speak truth to power. We must expect public
institutions to follow their legal and professional mandates. We can request
all our leaders to be accountable.
This week, a long national
discussion on leadership integrity gripped our homes, work spaces, matatus,
bars, Senate and places of worship. It is just the beginning. It’s time the
party whips, councils of elders, religious leaders, professional associations,
unions and voters raised their voices. Chapter Six is not just a paragraph in
our Constitution. It is not just a choice we made in 2010. It is the choice we
must make every day by everyone.
Those who know about body-building
know that building new muscle is all about damaging your existing muscle
fibers. Building a nation based on ethical values is no different. Instead of
pretending we accept corruption, let us have the grace to say, “No, no yet.
Until you accept responsibility for past errors, I have no use for you in this
role.” It’s time to set aside inertia and collectively raise the ethical bar.
The bigger question remains. How can
leaders and citizens restore our integrity?
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