Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Of Waiguru, NYS and Kibera Youth and Toilets


  An old common NGO story goes… A wealthy Missionary visited a pastoral community in arid area in the north where water and grazing land were scarce. He felt very sad and knew he had to do something to relieve himself of the bad feeling and get the poor community out of their misery. Upon return to Europe, he contacted an NGO that was operating in the country and donated couple of millions for the construction of a few boreholes.

Two years later, upon return to see how his donations improved the life of the poor community, he found the villages deserted and tall grass covering the boreholes.

The moral of the story can be illustrated in the Kibera drama when the youth decide to burn a newly constructed toilet and steal construction materials. How did ‘bad politics’ persuade Kibera residents to destroy the provision of these basic needs? Goodwill from ‘caring President’ and his cabinet? Surely, the kibera people must be ungrateful, just like the community in the north that ‘rejected’ the boreholes.

But wait a minute!  The residents of Kibera are not used to ‘these things’. This modern way of life they are being persuaded to adapt to. In the first place, they are not even aware they need proper toilets and clinics. Indeed, it did not take them time to opt back to their old lifestyle and misery.

Like the people in the north who must continue walking miles and miles for pastures and water and allow the grass continue coving the boreholes, so will Kibera people confine themselves to their old uncivilized flying toilets. Like the good hearted Missionary who knew very much what the poor people needed, Waiguru demonstrated her compassion, insight and commitment by giving Kibera, what it badly needed. In fact she even mobilized the highly professional and energetic NYS. Kibera needed to just sit back and wait to be served.

Meanwhile, the NYS and the youth who know better, rightfully filled the streets to remind opposition politicians that 800m shillings supposedly stolen was nothing compared to the work of charity the government has done for Kibera people.

Surely, it cannot cross anyone’s mind, that such great intention and heart can permit theft of that magnitude.  Like the very hard earned cash of the missionary, government funds must not face such scrutiny from the opposition and Kenyans who cannot even fathom where the hard working government has scraped through.

Let’s be honest, we should be ashamed that in stead of being grateful for the implementation of Article 43 (1) of the bill of rights, we criticise and scrutinize the commitment and intelligence of the leadership.

Wednesday, 3 June 2015

Obsession with Free Wi-FI is Dangerous and not sustainable


It may not be to the magnitude of David Ndii’s mega structures, but it is  equally difficult to comprehend the county governments in Kenya's obsession with offering free WI-FI in their counties. Is this a competition for worthless prestige or a genuine desire to economically transform the counties?
Whatever the answer, considering the level the country is in terms of development,  if the country is serious about being a middle income country with reduced poverty and economic gap,  the priority areas certainly should not include free internet access. Not at this time!

While Kenya is emerging as undisputed ICT for development frontier, quantification is badly needed on how much of the internet usage benefits the basic development and growth we currently need.

Why would counties that are largely (and indeed the majority are) rural economy, small scale farmers or herders find it a priority to spend huge funds of their budget on putting up free WI-FI? IFAD report states that nearly half of Kenya’s population is unable to meet its daily nutritional requirements. Now, that is an embarrassment to the nation! Why are we so obsessed with providing free luxury service to those who can actually afford it, in stead of spending the same shillings 200 million to improve or save the lives of the poor majority?

Our small scale-farmers, or are they called peasants, are highly in need of improving their farming techniques for improved productivity. Very few counties are spending funds training farmers, putting up irrigation projects, or building dams. 

Internet is an infrastructure. If we cannot improve productivity, the internet use will only be for the idle, sex trade, paedophiles and Al-Shabaab recruitment of the youth. First things first! Let us focus on training our youth to be productive and innovative by improving on what we already have. 
Why do our leaders hatch such ideas? To which extent do they involve the citizens in their planning?

Caspar Pedo