Election violence in Kenya
Anyone who cares about what happens in Africa will be concerned at the unrest that has swept Kenya since the announcement of the hotly disputed results of the presidential election last weekend. Kenya should by rights be one of the most stable and prosperous nations in sub-Saharan Africa 鈥 that it isn鈥檛 is testament to decades of inadequate government.
Corruption under former president Daniel arap Moi ran rampant, and under President Kibaki little effective seems to have been done to deal with it. And the capital, Nairobi, has had a reputation for years now as one of the most violent and crime-ridden on the continent.
But amid all the expressions of concern over allegations of widespread vote-rigging by supporters of President Mwai Kibaki, there are a couple of points worth recalling.
First, Kenya has in the past been hailed as one of the still relatively few nations in Africa where an opposition has won power peacefully in an election. President Kibaki himself was the beneficiary, when in 2002 he won a convincing 62 per cent of the vote to defeat the candidate of the governing party, Uhuru Kenyatta. And there have been other African nations where opposition parties have won similar successes 鈥 Ghana, Mali, Senegal and Zambia, among others.
But as elsewhere (the Bhuttos in Pakistan, the Nehru-Gandhis in India, for example), dynastic and clan or tribal politics continue to play an important role. The Mr Kenyatta whom President Kibaki beat five years ago was the son of the revered independence leader Jomo Kenyatta. Mr Kibaki鈥檚 main opponent this time round was Raila Odinga, son of another famed independence fighter, and the country鈥檚 first vice-president, Oginga Odinga.
And here鈥檚 the key to what remains a serious issue in African democratic politics. The Kenyattas and Mr Kibaki are members of Kenya鈥檚 long dominant Kikuyu tribe. The Odingas are Luo (as, incidentally, was Barack Obama鈥檚 father), and have long felt discriminated against at the hands of the Kikuyu.
The problem with democracy is that, at least at election time, it emphasises and formalises divisions and differences. In a non-ideological age, those differences are more likely to be ethnic than policy-based 鈥 which is why in neighbouring Uganda, President Yoweri Museveni was reluctant for so long to allow multi-party politics.
So Kenya is now entering stormy waters. There is no doubt that voters are in the mood for change 鈥 the results of the parliamentary elections, which saw many government candidates, and several ministers, roundly defeated, showed that beyond doubt 鈥 and there is enough evidence from international election monitors to cause real concern about the accuracy of the official result of the presidential poll.
The violence that has claimed more than 100 lives looks dangerously sectarian as well as political. It won鈥檛 be easy to calm tempers with President Kibaki already sworn in for a second term as President.
UPDATE: Lots of angry Kenyan blogs from the Global Voices website .