Following the
presidential election in late December 2007 and the Kenya Electoral Commission’s
hurried declaration of incumbent President Mwai Kibaki as the winner, supporters
of opposition presidential candidate Raila Odinga in the Orange Democratic
Movement alleged widespread electoral fraud and irregularities. For nearly two
months following that election, ethnic violence and strife in Kenya raged
resulting in more than 1200 deaths, 3,500 injuries, and the displacement of over
350,000 persons and destruction of over 100,000 properties. In March 2011, Uhuru
Kenyatta was indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on various
counts of crimes against humanity arising from the post-election violence.
The details of the ICC
charges against Kenyatta and other defendants are set forth in exhaustive detail
in a 10-count indictment. Kenyatta allegedly
conspired, planned, financed, and coordinated violence against the supporters of
Odinga’s Orange Democratic Movement. He allegedly “controlled the Mungiki
organization” and directed the commission of murders, deportations, rapes,
persecutions, and other inhumane acts against civilians in the towns of Kibera,
Kisumu, Naivasha, and Nakuru. Kenyatta’s trial is scheduled to start at The
Hague on July 9. Kenyatta's election
running mate and vice president-elect William Ruto as well as other top Kenyan
officials are part of different ICC cases. Ruto’s trial has been
postponed to May 28.
Kenyatta and Ruto are
presumed innocent until proven guilty. Kenyatta's
lawyer Steven Kay claimed the ICC charges were “determined on false evidence,
evidence that was concealed from the defense and the facts underlying the
charges have been put utterly and fully in doubt.”
U.S. efforts to ensure
free and fair elections in Kenya after 2008
The U.S. was among the
first nations to recognize the validity of Kenya’s 2007 presidential election.
At the time, U.S. State Department Spokesman Robert McInturff announced, “The
United States congratulates the winners and is calling for calm, and
for Kenyans to abide by the results declared by the election
commission. We support the commission’s decision.” But
U.S. validation of that election was completely unwarranted since there was
substantial credible evidence of rampant electoral fraud and vote rigging in
favor of Kibaki and considerable doubt about the neutrality and integrity of the
Kenya Electoral Commission.
Over the past two years,
the U.S. has made significant investments to promote free and fair elections in
Kenya and prevent a repetition of the 2007 violence. According to
the U.S. State Department, “since 2010, the U.S.
Government has contributed more than $35 million to support electoral reform,
civic education, and elections preparation in Kenya. In addition, since 2008, we
have provided more than $90 million to support constitutional reform, conflict
mitigation, civil society strengthening, and youth leadership and empowerment,
all of which contribute significantly to the goal of free, fair, and peaceful
elections in Kenya.”
Obama’s defining moment
in Africa?
The March 2013
presidential election in which Kenyatta won by a razor thin margin of 50.7
percent is not entirely free of controversy. Raila Odinga, who received about 43
percent of the votes, has rejected the outcome of the election and filed action
in court alleging collusion between the Kenyatta and the electoral commission,
not unlike what happened in 2007. This time around, U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry offered only half-hearted congratulations and assurances to the people of
Kenya and applauded the fortitude of those who counted the ballots. But his
congratulatory statement belied an apparent disappointment as manifested in his
omission of the names of the election victors. “On behalf of the United States
of America, I want to congratulate the people of Kenya for voting peacefully on
March 4 and all those elected to office… I am inspired by the
overwhelming desire of Kenyans to peacefully make their voices heard… We ...
will continue to be a strong friend and ally of the Kenyan people.”
Prior to the election, it
seemed President Obama and his top African policy man Assistant Secretary of
State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson were playing a bit of the old “good
cop, bad cop” routine. President Obama in a special
video message to the people of Kenya said that though he is
proud of his Kenyan heritage “the choice of who will lead Kenya is up to the
Kenyan people. The United States does not endorse any candidate for office…” He
assured Kenyans that they “will continue to have a strong friend and partner in
the United States of America.” But Johnnie Carson who was also a former U.S.
ambassador to Kenya, was more blunt in hinting to Kenyans that their “choices
have consequences”. Carson hectored Kenyans that they “should be thoughtful
about those they choose to be leaders, the impact their choices would have on
their country, region or global community.” Does that mean electing ICC suspects
in crimes against humanity could bring about crippling sanctions?
What is good for the
goose is good for the gander?
Now that Kenyatta and
Ruto are elected, will the U.S. do what it did with Omar al-Bashir of the Sudan,
another notorious suspect indicted by the ICC? Or will Kenyatta and his
government receive special dispensation from sanctions and other penalties?
Carson argued that Kenya
and the Sudan are two different situations.
“I don't want to make a comparison with Sudan in its totality because Sudan is a special case in many ways.” What makes Bashir and Sudan different, according to Carson, is the fact that Sudan is on the list of countries that support terrorism and Bashir and his co-defendants are under indictment for the genocide in Darfur. Since “none of that applies to Kenya,” according to Carson, it appears the U.S. will follow a different policy.
“I don't want to make a comparison with Sudan in its totality because Sudan is a special case in many ways.” What makes Bashir and Sudan different, according to Carson, is the fact that Sudan is on the list of countries that support terrorism and Bashir and his co-defendants are under indictment for the genocide in Darfur. Since “none of that applies to Kenya,” according to Carson, it appears the U.S. will follow a different policy.
U.S. Secretary of State
Kerry seemed to provide a more direct response in his “congratulatory” statement
in
explaining why Kenya will get special treatment. “Kenya has been one of
America's strongest and most enduring partners in Africa… and [the U.S] will
continue to be a strong friend and ally of the Kenyan people.” That is
diplomatese for “we will continue with business as usual in Kenya” come hell or
high water at the ICC. Carson's predecessor, Jendayi Frazer, cut to the chase:
“Kenyatta knows that he needs the United States, and the United States knows it
needs Kenya… And so I suspect that while it might be awkward, there won't be a
significant change in our policy stances toward Kenya or theirs toward
us.”
A double standard of U.S.
human rights policy in Africa?
It seems the U.S. has a
double standard of human rights policy in Africa. One for those the U.S. does
not like such as Bashir and Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, and another for those it
likes like the late Meles Zenawi, Paul Kagame, Yuweri Museveni and now Uhuru
Kenyatta.
Following Bashir’s ICC
indictment in 2009, Ambassador Susan E. Rice, U.S. Permanent Representative to
the United Nations, demanded his arrest and prosecution: “The people of Sudan
have suffered too much for too long, and an end to their anguish will not come
easily. Those who committed atrocities in Sudan, including genocide, should be
brought to justice.” Just before her resignation last month, U.S. Secretary of
State Hilary Clinton urged: “Governments and individuals who either conduct or
condone atrocities of any kind, as we have seen year after year in Sudan, have
to be held accountable.” The U.S. has frozen the assets of individuals and
businesses allegedly controlled by Mugabe's henchmen because the “Mugabe regime
rules through politically motivated violence and intimidation and has triggered
the collapse of the rule of law in Zimbabwe.”
Legend has it that
President Franklin D. Roosevelt once said of Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio
Somoza that “Somoza may be a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch.”
Despite lofty rhetoric in support of the advancement of democracy and protection
of human rights in Africa, the United States continues to subsidize and coddle
African dictatorships that are as bad as or even worse than Mugabe's. The U.S.
currently provides substantial economic aid, loans, technical and security
assistance to the repressive regimes in Ethiopia, Congo (DRC), Uganda, Rwanda
and others. None of these countries hold free elections, allow the operation of
an independent press or free expression or abide by the rule of law. All of them
are corrupt to the core, keep thousands of political prisoners, use torture and
ruthlessly persecute their opposition.
No case of double
standard in U.S. human rights policy in Africa is more instructive than
Equatorial Guinea where Teodoro Obiang Nguema
Mbasogo has been in power since 1979.
Teodoro Obiang is said to make Robert Mugabe “seem stable and benign”. The U.S. maintains excellent relations with Teodoro Obiang because of vast oil reserves in Equatorial Guinea. But all of the oil revenues are looted by Obiang and his cronies. In 2011, the U.S. brought legal action in federal court against Teodoro Obiang’s son Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue to seize corruptly obtained assets including a $40 million estate in Malibu, California overlooking the Pacific Ocean, a luxury plane and super-sports cars worth millions of dollars. In describing the seizure action, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer crowed, “We are sending the message loud and clear: the United States will not be a hiding place for the ill-gotten riches of the world's corrupt leaders.” (Ironically, U.S. law requires the U.S. to return any assets or proceeds from an asset forfeiture court action to the government from which it was stolen. In other words, the assets or proceeds from the forfeiture action against son Teodoro Nguema Obiang will eventually be returned to father Teodoro Obiang Nguema!!!)
Teodoro Obiang is said to make Robert Mugabe “seem stable and benign”. The U.S. maintains excellent relations with Teodoro Obiang because of vast oil reserves in Equatorial Guinea. But all of the oil revenues are looted by Obiang and his cronies. In 2011, the U.S. brought legal action in federal court against Teodoro Obiang’s son Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue to seize corruptly obtained assets including a $40 million estate in Malibu, California overlooking the Pacific Ocean, a luxury plane and super-sports cars worth millions of dollars. In describing the seizure action, U.S. Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer crowed, “We are sending the message loud and clear: the United States will not be a hiding place for the ill-gotten riches of the world's corrupt leaders.” (Ironically, U.S. law requires the U.S. to return any assets or proceeds from an asset forfeiture court action to the government from which it was stolen. In other words, the assets or proceeds from the forfeiture action against son Teodoro Nguema Obiang will eventually be returned to father Teodoro Obiang Nguema!!!)
But the U.S. has not
touched any of the other African Ali Babas and their forty dozen thieving
cronies who have stolen billions and stashed their cash in U.S. and other banks.
For instance, Global
Financial Integrity reported in 2011 reported that
“Ethiopia, which has a per-capita GDP of just US$365, lost US$11.7 billion to
illicit financial outflows between 2000 and 2009. In 2009, illicit money leaving
the economy totaled US$3.26 billion, which is double the amount in each of the
two previous years…” Is there really any one wonder who in Ethiopia has the
ability to amass such wealth or "illicitly" ship it out of the country and where
much of that cash is stashed? Suffice it to say that the dictators in Ethiopia,
Rwanda, Uganda... may be kleptocrats, criminals against humanity, genociders,
election thieves, torturers, abusers of power… , but they are OUR kleptocrats,
criminals against humanity…”
Does the Obama
Administration have a (African) human rights policy?
If anyone is searching
for the Obama Administration’s global or African human rights policy, s/he may
(or may not) find it in the recent
statements of Michael Posner, the Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy,
Human Rights, and Labor of the United States. Posner said American
human rights policy is based on “principled engagement”: “We are going to go to
the United Nations and join the Human Rights Council and we’re going to be part
of it even though we recognize it doesn’t work… We’re going to engage
with governments that are allies but we are also going to engage with
governments with tough relationships and human rights are going to be part of
those discussions.” Second, the U.S. will follow “a single standard for human
rights, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and it applies to all
including ourselves…” Third, consistent with President “Obama’s personality”,
the Administration believes “change occurs from within and so a lot of
the emphasis… [will be] on how we can help local actors, change agents, civil
society, labor activists, religious leaders trying to change their societies
from within and amplify their own voices and give them the support they need...”
But does “engagement” of African dictators mean sharing a cozy bed with them so
that they can suck at the teats of American taxpayers to satisfy their
insatiable aid addiction?
Since 2008, the U.S.
Government has spent $125 million to support electoral reform, civic education,
constitutional reform, conflict mitigation, civil society strengthening, and
youth leadership and empowerment for free democratic elections in Kenya. But
just north of the Kenyan border in Ethiopia, how much has the U.S. invested to
support electoral reform, civic education, civil society strengthening, etc.,
has the U.S. invested? (That is actually a trick question. Civil society
institutions are illegal in Ethiopia and no electoral reform is needed where the
ruling party wins elections by 99.6 percent.)
In May 2010 after Meles
Zenawi’s party won 99.6 percent of the seats in parliament, the White
House issued a Statement expressing “concern that
international observers found that the elections fell short of international
commitments”; but the statement unambiguously affirmed that “we will work
diligently with Ethiopia to ensure that strengthened democratic institutions and
open political dialogue become a reality for the Ethiopian people.” To
paraphrase William Buckley, “I won't insult the intelligence of the White House
by suggesting that they really do believe the statement they had
issued.”
“There’s serious evil in
the world, and hardship and pain…”
There is a great moral
irony in the Obama Administration’s human rights policy in Africa. The President
seems to believe that he is moving the African human rights agenda forward while
appearing to be backsliding metaphorically similar to Michael Jackson’s
“Moonwalk” dance. My humble personal view, (with all due respect to President
Obama and his office and mindful of my own full support for his election in 2008
and re-election in 2012), is that President Obama needs to straight walk his
human rights talk, not "moonwalk" it. I feel he does not have the confidence in
the power of American ideals that I have as a naïve academician and lawyer. He
is in an extraordinary historical position in world history as a person of color
to advance American ideals in convincing and creative ways. But it seems to me
that he has chosen to stand his ground on expediency with little demonstrated
faith in American ideals. He now finds himself on a tightrope of moral
ambiguity, which impels his hand to choose expediency over consistency of ideals
and principles every time he deals with African dictators. He has chosen the
creed of realpolitik at a time in global history when the common man and woman
stand their ground on principle and ideals of human dignity.
In the “Arab Spring”,
ordinary Tunisians, Egyptians, Syrians, Yemeni’s and others who have always
faced privation, oppression, corruption and destitution rose up and stood their
ground on the principle of human dignity and the rights of Man and Woman. They
wanted basic human dignity more than loaves of bread. It is true that one cannot
eat dignity like bread nor drink it like milk. But dignity is like oxygen. It is
the essence of human existence. If one cannot breathe, one can neither eat nor
drink. Human beings without dignity merely exist like the beasts of the
wilderness -- aimless, purposeless, meaningless, desultory, fearful and
permanently insecure.
It seems to me President
Obama has crossed over from the strength of American ideals to the weakness of
political expediency. He has chosen to overlook and thereby excuse the cruelty
and inhumanity of Africa’s ruthless dictators, their bottomless corruption and
their endless crimes against humanity. He says he will “engage” African
dictators on human rights. Some “engagement” it is to wine, dine and lionize
them as America’s trade partners and “partners on the war on terror”! But the
real terror is committed by these dictators on their own people every day as
they smash and trash religious liberties, steal elections, jail journalists,
shutter newspapers, fill their jails with political prisoners and so on.
“Engagement” of African dictators for the sake of the war on terror and oil has
created a monstrous moral complacency which tolerates and justifies the ends of
evil for the illusion of good.
In his first inaugural
speech, President Obama served notice to the world’s dictators: “To those who
cling to power through corruption and deceit and the silencing of dissent, know
that you are on the wrong side of history, but that we will extend a hand if you
are willing to unclench your fist.” In July 2009, in Ghana, President Obama told
Africa’s “strongmen” they are on the wrong side of history: “History offers a
clear verdict: governments that respect the will of their own people are
more prosperous, more stable, and more successful than governments that do
not…. No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to
the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny, and
now is the time for it to end… Make no mistake: history is on the side of
these brave Africans [citizens and their communities driving change], and
not with those who use coups or change Constitutions to stay in power.
Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong
institutions.”
Senator Obama before
becoming president said: “[Reinhold Niebuhr] is one of my favorite philosophers.
I take away [from his works] the compelling idea that there’s serious evil
in the world, and hardship and pain. And we should be humble and modest in
our belief we can eliminate those things. But we shouldn’t use that as an
excuse for cynicism and inaction. I take away … the sense we have to
make these efforts knowing they are hard.”
Perhaps President Obama
has forgotten his philosophical roots. But Niebuhr’s philosophy has special
relevance in dealing with not only the evils of communist totalitarianism but
also the evils of dictatorships, criminals against humanity, kleptocrats,
abusers of power and genociders in Africa today. I wish to remind President
Obama of his words in his first inauguration speech: “Our Founding Fathers,
faced with perils we can scarcely imagine, drafted a charter to assure the rule
of law and the rights of man, a charter expanded by the blood of generations.
Those ideals still light the world, and we will not give them up for
expedience’s sake.”
If I had a chance to have
a word or two with President Obama, I would ask him eight naïve
questions:
1) On which "side of
history" are you?
2) If "Africa does not
need strongmen", why does America need them?
3) Why does America
support governments that “do not respect the will of their own people” and as a
direct result have made their countries failed states (not “prosperous,
successful and stable ones")?
4) Why can’t you help
ordinary Africans "end tyranny" in the continent?
5) When will you stop
"moonwalking" your human rights talk and actually straight walk your eloquent
talk in Africa?
6) What are you prepared
to do in the next four years about the “serious evil” of dictatorship,
corruption and abuse of power in Africa and stop using the war on terror and oil
as an excuse for “cynicism and inaction” ?
7) Do you think the
people of Africa will render a “verdict” in your favor (assuming you
care)?
8) When will you start
living up to the “ideals that light up the world” and give up
“expedience”?
Professor Alemayehu G.
Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino
and is a practicing defense lawyer.
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