Thursday, December 01, 2011

Bashir's Ransom Wins, Court's Warrant Rubbished

Update: Now that Fatou Bensouda of Gambia is destined to succeed the voluble Louis Moreno-Ocampo, Kenya has been left with her face plastered with eggs after the 'brotherly' support of Tanzania's CJ Mohamed Chande Othman flopped. The shuttle diplomacy can only save Bashir and no more (read Ocampo6).

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High court Judge's decision to issue a warrant of arrest to Sudan's sitting President Omar Al-Bashir is the ultimate test on judicial independence from executive meddling. The Government never saw it coming or if they did they must have dismissed it with a wave of the hand confident in the old ways of doing things. No wonder they wasted no time to trivialize the not only as insensitive but irresponsible and unpatriotic too.

With predictable impunity and bravado, Foreign Affairs Minister Moses Wetangula, a lawyer himself, has indicated Bashir is headed to our shores courtesy of Kenya Government's invitation. Hiding under so-called IGAD head of states meeting will not fool anybody from the masked brinkmanship. In plain language the executive is reminding the courts who is the boss, period.

Where others see judicial activism, Wetanguala reads destructive insensitivity to national and regional matters of peace. Omar Bashir wouldn't have been happier holding the whole region at ransom with regards to peace in Southern Sudan. And he has neighbouring allies who are more than ready to irk ICC for obvious reasons.

The script is so predictable seeing foreign hands lurking in every shadow. While Bashir sponsored the Janjaweed to butcher (ethnic/black) Africans, our ears will be assaulted with drums of war castigating the West for imperialism. In the process the butcher of Khartoum will have his bloody hands cleansed with sectarian and racial detergent in the name of IGAD and/or AU.

By inviting Bashir to Kenya again the Government is rubbing salt to the wound it inflected on our national body in August 2010 during the new constitution's promulgation. If we ever thought that act of obtuse impunity was unfortunate and regrettable, well the Government is reminding all and sundry KENYA IKO NA WENYEWE.
You see with no spine to remind Sudan that the ruling was an act from our independent courts, Wetangula is circumventing the core issue to serve political expediency by throwing the balderdash that expulsion of ambassadors is a normal thing.

Poor Prof Githu Muigai must be precariously dangling between the rock and the dark blue sea. Like Wentangula he knows the LAW is LAW but again he knows which side of his bread is buttered and by whom. Damned if he acts professionally and damned if he does an Amos Wako.

35 comments:

  1. While we try so hard to please murderers they (Arabs) look at us as monkeys swinging on trees, LOL.

    But on another note Africa for Africans. We must be left alone to sort our own problems even it means wiping villages clean of human beings. Who knows, maybe we need this phase to cleanse ourself before we stabilize and start that match to prosperity using GOLD money.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bashir is most welcome. Are we not just simply implementing katiba that he witnessed being promulgated? Wacheni wivu na ukoloni mamboleo.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm not a person who thinks s/he can have it all, but I certainly feel that with a bit of effort and guile I should be able to have more than my fair.

    Let Moses (Wetangula) and those concerned continue with their foreign affairs endeavors plus their so called short sighted diplomatic games when it comes to enticing the like of Bashir back to the one time promised land courtesy of Kenya Government's invitation.

    Some of these career politicians seem to have had a very good time (for all it was worth) with the late Muammar Gaddafi, a one time certified ATM machine for so many African head of states.

    Let them have it all and continue to have more than their fair share at the people's expense.

    However, no body lives forver, no politician remains a member of parliament forever, and no head of state rules ('leads') forever.

    Lest we forget the fact that Laurent Gbagbo just had his presidential suite upgraded, and there are many tainted African heads of state who will soon have their future dinghy quarters upgraded at the ICC as well.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Does the country, ordinary Kenyans for that matter, stand to benefit or gain tremendously in terms of cheap crude oil importations (Bashir's Ransom) from Sudan?

    The type that will translate into affordable petrol prices at the pumps across the country as well as many other petroluem based products at our nearest shopping centers through out the whole of 2012 and 2013?

    If that's the real case, then let the devil we have known for years be allowed to return and walk freely on our soil, but knowing very well that the blood that flowed for many years in South Sudan as well as more blood that continues to flow in Eastern Sudan (Darfur) will always be upon us due to our current greedy modus operandi and that of future generations to come.

    ReplyDelete
  5. "High court Judge's decision to issue a warrant of arrest to Sudan's sitting President Omar Al-Bashir is the ultimate test on judicial independence from executive meddling."

    Ati judicial independence? Wapi?

    In Underhill v Hernandez (1897), the USA's Chief Justice Fuller, speaking for a UNANIMOUS court held that:

    "Every sovereign state is bound to respect the independence of every other sovereign state, and the courts of one country will not sit in judgment on the acts of the government of another, done within its own territory.

    Redress of grievances by reason of such acts must be obtained through the means open to be availed of by sovereign powers as between themselves."

    As such, in Common Law jurisdictions, courts ARE BARRED from adjudicating cases that will interfere with foreign relations.

    This is the practice in the USA, UK, Australia etc.

    As a matter of fact, when cases touching on other states appear in the USA, UK etc, the Courts REQUESTS the Foreign Ministries to issues a certificate on whether the determination of such a case would interfere with foreign relation issues. If they say yes, the courts just refuses to hear the matter.

    So, when Taabu tells us about independence of Courts, can he educate us where he saw those courts?

    Anyway, since Africans believe anything they hear without verifying, we leave to enjoy: The Boss:

    http://is.gd/sgSUQK

    ReplyDelete
  6. Why not even go further by quoting similar cases from the Late Antiquity period of A.D. 300 to 650 which is so ofen called _________.

    A time period that covered the decline and fall of the of ______ western empire.

    Then elaborate by educating us some more on how famous Greeks like Homer, Herodotus, Thucydides and Plutarch dealt or rather viewed the issuance of arrest warrants or death warrants against their enemies, sitting heads of state from neighbouring city states.

    While still at it, don't forget to include the commonly quoted legal opinions of famous Romans like Livy, Polybius, Suetonius, Tacticus, Plutarch, and above all, Marcus Aurelius, among others.

    Then leave us sons and daughters of Africanus to believe what we have always heard and are still so used to hearing from A.D. 650 to 1000, through 2011, without bothering to verify.

    Ignorance is bliss, why not leave us alone so that we can enjoy as we have done since A.D. 650?

    ReplyDelete
  7. "Why not even go further by quoting similar cases from the Late Antiquity period of A.D. 300 to 650 which is so ofen called _________."

    xxxx

    We have no idea about such ages.

    However, we are aware of the USA's Supreme Court, recent ruling (Sabbatino case) on these matters that:

    ‘The act of state doctrine does have “constitutional” [this is a LIE AGREED BY LAWYERS] underpinnings.

    It arises out of the basic relationships between branches of government in a system of SEPARATION of powers.

    It concerns the COMPETENCY of dissimilar institutions to make and implement particular kinds of decisions in the area of international relations.

    The doctrine as formulated in past decisions expresses the strong sense of the Judicial Branch that its engagement in the task of passing on the validity of foreign acts of state MAY HINDER rather than further this country’s pursuit of goals both for itself and for the community of nations as a whole in the international sphere."

    NB: If you want to have an idea the purpose of this LAW for LAW is LAW to quote Taabu, and which we encourage Professor Githu to use, see our article:

    There is a Mzungu in Wako's Office, for some hints.

    Anyway, since all you can do is mention names so as to appear knowledgeable when all we can see is stupidity, ILLUSIONS, DELUSIONS and CHILDISH IGNORANCE on matters of the LAW, we leave to enjoy:

    If you know your history,
    then, you would know where you are coming from

    http://is.gd/4G0PEH

    ReplyDelete
  8. @Mwara,

    All those you quote are products of IVY LEAGUE OF FOOLS are you?

    ReplyDelete
  9. We can't just wish away the crimes against humanity - genocide, summary executions, murder, torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence, persecution and other "inhuman acts", allegedly committed not only under al-Bashir's watch, but were officially sanctioned by the head of state in Khartoum.

    Talking about knowing our history, who we are, where we came from, and our very our origins.

    Well, how can we know our real written history when it only starts at time when the first Europeans ventured into our East African region.

    And went on to discover for the first time such natural wonders like River Tana, Mt. Kilimanjaro, Mt. Kenya, Aberdare Mountains, Great Rift Valley, Lake Elenmtaita, Lake Naivasha, Menengai Crater, River Nile and its fresh water source, Lake Victoria, and Lake Rudolph [apologies it's Lake Turkana]?

    Before the glorious arrival of the Europeans, Africa was nothing but a dark continent, so we have always been told at every stage of our lives.

    Whoever said that history never fails to repeat itself could not have been more correct than we, the defenders, supporters, friends and former neighbours of al Bashir will ever imagine.

    Case in point - I will continue to work with all countries of the world, but I will never give up 'our' sovereignty - Laurent Koudou Gbagbo.

    While at the same time the former self-proclaimed president for life of Ivory Coast failed and even refused to address the obvious presence of the elephant in the room, which was the constitutional restriction of on Presidents serving more ten years.

    The rest is history as we know it, and so will the fate of al Bashir come to pass in due time.

    He may never be extradited to the ICC but will get his just desserts in due time.

    ReplyDelete
  10. githu will do an 'amos wako stunt' and life goes on....

    ReplyDelete
  11. We can't just wish away the crimes against humanity - genocide, summary executions, murder, torture, rape and other forms of sexual violence, persecution and other "inhuman acts", allegedly committed not only under al-Bashir's watch, but were officially sanctioned by the head of state in Khartoum.

    xxx

    You imagine that, those who oppose the KANGAROO ICC are pro - Bashir.

    Nothing of the sort. We oppose it because, we know more about these regions.

    We may start by asking, who is Bashir?

    An answer to that you can find in the works of Churchill, for, in very eloquent language, he taught us this:

    "Although the negroes are the more numerous, the Arabs exceed in power. The bravery of the aboriginals is outweighed by the intelligence of the INVADERS and their superior force of character.

    During the second century of the Mohammedan era, when the inhabitants of Arabia went forth to conquer the world, one adventurous
    army struck south.

    The aboriginals absorbed the invaders they could not repel. The stronger race IMPOSED its customs and language on the negroes. The vigour of their blood sensibly altered the facial appearance of the Soudanese.

    Hear this carefully now:

    In the districts of the
    NORTH, where the original INVADERS settled, the evolution is complete, and the Arabs of the Soudan are a race formed by the interbreeding of negro and Arab, and yet distinct from both.

    The qualities of MONGRELS [LIKE BASHIR] are rarely admirable, and the mixture of the Arab and negro types has produced a DEBASED and CRUEL BREED, more shocking because they are more intelligent than the primitive savages.

    The stronger race soon began to prey upon the simple aboriginals; some of the Arab tribes were CAMEL BREEDERS; some were goat-herds; some were Baggaras or cow-herds. But all, WITHOUT EXCEPTION, WERE HUNTERS OF MEN.

    To the great slave-market at JEDDA (ADD the TRANS ATLANTIC TRAFFIC] a continual stream of negro captives has flowed for hundreds of years.

    Thus the situation in the Soudan for SEVERAL CENTURIES may be
    summed up as follows:

    The dominant race of ARAB INVADERS was unceasingly spreading its blood [RAPES], religion, customs, and language among the black aboriginal population, and at the same time it harried and enslaved
    them."

    So, if this is the history of Sudan since A.D. 870's, how the hell do you think the ICC can solve it by indicting Bashir?

    You must have a firm grasp of history of these regions before you jump and down like a SICK dog with simplistic and ignorant solutions.

    What does Ocampo know about these things?

    Or, you think his legalistic nonsense is the magic solution to problems that span over a thousand years? Grow up!

    Anyway, as usual, since Africans do not understand THEY ARE SURROUNDED by enemies who pretend to be their friends, we leave to enjoy:

    Lord, we are still here after Centuries of enslavement in JEDDA and the NEW WORLD:

    http://is.gd/wTrRQV

    ReplyDelete
  12. @Mwara,

    You have ducked my swali on why you quote IVY LEAGUE OF FOOLS scholars. Instead you go on a tangent with your favourite Sumarian folklore. Please swallow the bait (hypocrisy), will you?

    ReplyDelete
  13. @Mwara,

    You have ducked my swali on why you quote IVY LEAGUE OF FOOLS scholars. Instead you go on a tangent with your favourite Sumarian folklore. Please swallow the bait (hypocrisy), will you?

    12/1/11 6:34 AM

    xxx

    Listen!

    There are three ways ahead for you and others of your kind:

    (a) You can attend the IVY LEAGUE of FOOLS.

    Here, you will get laid and come out FOOLISH, DELUSIONAL and full of CHILDISH FANTASIES.

    Armed with a CERTIFICATE of foolishness, delusions and childish fantasies, you will believe everything your enemies from JEDDA (EAST) and NEW WORLD (WEST) will tell you.

    (b) you can get into a serious library and get EDUCATED, or,

    (c) if you cannot get a good library, sit under a MUGUMO tree and let the AFRICAN TEACH you.

    With that, we leave to enjoy African Teacher teaching us Africans Stand Alone:

    http://is.gd/HOWv30

    ReplyDelete
  14. Charity begins at home and so does real justice.

    The high court judges should not be wasting valuable resources, manpower and time in getting embroiled in international wars of judicial illusions and prosecutorial fantasies.

    While knowing very well that so many former top Nazi henchmen went scot free and were even allowed to resettle themselves as free men in Central America, South America, North America, South Africa, Australia, and in the Pacific islands.

    Where many of them ended reinventing themselves and later dying in relative peace and unimagined prosperity during the late years of their lives, 70s, 80s and 90s.

    The so-called Kenya's high court judges should be busying themselves with the issuance of over due arrest warrants with regard to hundreds, if not thousands of cases that have conveniently been allowed to go under the radar for all intents and purpose during the course of the last ten years or more.

    They should leave the international arrest warrant of al Bashir of Khartoum to be taken be implemented or care by the ICC and other relevant jurisdictions.

    And intsead concentrate on dealing with the institutional cultural failure that has enabled systemic rot, corruption, murder, theft and the ongoing conduct unbecoming members of the Law Society of Kenya and one of the most civil services in Africa (second to Nigeria's civilservice) to go unchecked, contained and eradicted for four decades.

    Further, the corruption, pillaging and seizing that goes on in the civil service needs to be stopped immediately by the high court judges, if they have the the real mandate (judicial balls) to do so.

    While they are still at it, there are some top dogs at the DoD and MoD who have had very easy rides with regard to high level corruption and theft of very expensive government property in the last four decades and half.

    The above mentioned are the type of dangerous individuals and criminals that the high court judges should be pursuing by all legal means necessary.

    Case in point; One senior person at the DoD saw it fit to reverse the whole tendering process, just to accomodate the company (N.K. Brothers) in the bidding process.

    A company (N.K. Brothers) which has had difficulty in meeting its monthly targets in one of the projects at at the Kenya Military Academy.

    Lest we forget the ongoing saga that involves Mlolongo Brothers, former property owners in Soykimau and the Kenya Airport Authority.

    Well, where are our so-called concerned high court judges when they are needed most to address a myriad of pressing domestic criminal cases and other judicial issues in Kenya?

    ReplyDelete
  15. @12/1/11 7:37 AM
    What about the rank and file enemies in our midst? After all, it will take us a lifetime to get to the door of enlightenment and later to the crucial widow of realization that we have always been our own worst enemy, in other words, kiwakulacho ki nguoni (ngozini) mwao daima na milele.

    ReplyDelete
  16. "While knowing very well that so many former top Nazi henchmen went scot free and were even allowed to resettle themselves as free men in Central America, South America, North America, South Africa, Australia, and in the Pacific islands."

    xxx

    We add, even BETTER, some of the NAZI'S best BRAINS were RECRUITED to TRAIN and WORK for the CIA.

    Others went to TRAIN and WORK for KGB.

    With that, we leave to enjoy:

    Go away you and your CIA
    Go away you and your CIA
    Go away you and your CIA
    Go away you and your CIA

    We don't wanna see
    you and your KGB
    We don't wanna see

    http://is.gd/PeeYkB

    xxx

    And,

    Don't involve Rasta in your say say;

    Rasta don't work for no C.I.A.

    http://is.gd/Coq72z

    ReplyDelete
  17. @Mwara,

    A fool is not what you read as defined in the dictionary. Instead a true fool is one who sits and sips from his vomit and continues to shamelessly repeat the same stuff he is baited to avoid, e.g. claiming to be an authentic AFRICAN TEACHER serially quoting the net and Wikipedia as your authority. Or worse seeing the West's shadow in every Africa's undoing (including butchers).

    As a student (forget that teacher tag) you would fail miserably for plagiarism given love to expand your ego besides living in the confines of your head as KNOW-IT-ALL. The truth is you don't have what it takes to see a bait. Enjoy.

    ReplyDelete
  18. @Mwara,

    A fool is not what you read as defined in the dictionary.

    xxx

    Bwa ha ha ha ha he he he wi wi

    In our 2011 Edition of the WISE African Dictionary, the word fool is defined as follows:

    "A fool is an African who believes that dragging Africans to the NEO - COLONIAL ICC which is a REPEAT of the PRE - COLONIAL EXILE of the African leaders like Lobengula and cutting the head of the Orkoiyot Koitatel arap Samoei in total breach of LAWS OF WARS and GOOD FAITH etc can be the solution to the African mess."

    With that definition, we leave to enjoy: ROOTS:

    http://is.gd/L8pegk

    ReplyDelete
  19. @Mwara,

    Please you don't get it, you are so delusional and you accuse people of the same. Please know that your rants are not revolutionary neither academic. If you want to read real thought-provoking ideas against and for capitalism read Samir Amin's

    'Ending the Crisis of Capitalism or Ending Capitalism'

    And while at it don't dismiss what you don't understand or agree with as authored by IVY LEAGUE OF FOOLS scholars. Open both your mind and eyes, will you please for a change?

    ReplyDelete
  20. @Mwara,

    Please you don't get it, you are so delusional and you accuse people of the same. Please know that your rants are not revolutionary neither academic. If you want to read real thought-provoking ideas against and for capitalism read Samir Amin's

    'Ending the Crisis of Capitalism or Ending Capitalism

    xxxx

    Thanks for the reference.

    Now, Samir argues for end of capitalism so that, we end up with socialism.

    The problem is this. First, he ought to define what capitalism really means.

    Capitalism comes from the word capital. And, what is capital?

    Capital is nothing, but, crystallized past human labour.

    In other words, when you cut a tree and make a table, you can use that table as capital by renting out to someone else.

    As such, capitalism really means, an economic system whereby, the PRESENT LABOUR is combined with PAST LABOUR so as to produce MORE WEALTH.

    Simplified further, you use your present labour to plant seeds gotten from the previous season.

    What is wrong with that? And, how else can it be?

    And, will not socialism not operate under the same conditions for there are no other?

    In other words, he has not thought clearly what he is saying or telling us.

    With that, we leave to enjoy: African Teacher:

    http://is.gd/FTqiqJ

    ReplyDelete
  21. @Mwara,

    Stop living in your head. You cheapen Samir's work to lack of a definition of capitalism. Well, there you go again delving into theatrics without relevant substance to the book. You are apparently arguing from the title, please read and reflect before you foam at the mouth with delusional rastafarian songs. Will you please?

    ReplyDelete
  22. @Mwara,

    Stop living in your head. You cheapen Samir's work to lack of a definition of capitalism. Well, there you go again delving into theatrics without relevant substance to the book. You are apparently arguing from the title, please read and reflect before you foam at the mouth with delusional rastafarian songs. Will you please?

    12/2/11 2:34 AM

    xxx

    "I deduce from this that the development of the struggles on the ground, the responses that will be given through these struggles to the future of the peasant societies in the South (almost half of mankind) will largely determine the capacity or otherwise of the
    workers and the peoples to produce progress on the road of constructing an authentic
    civilisation, liberated from the domination of capital, for which I do not see any name other than that of SOCIALISM.

    The real challenge is therefore as follows: will these struggles manage to converge in order to
    pave the way – or ways – for the long route towards the transition to WORLD SOCIALISM?"

    Source:

    SAMIR AMIN

    Lecture , Part 1
    Dar es Salam, april 2010-04-18

    Ending the crisis of capitalism or ending capitalism in
    crisis ?

    @ http://is.gd/LyjYvW

    So, who is delusional?

    Ati global socialism? What animal is that now?

    So, where are the Angels to run this Heaven of Global Socialism? What will prevent it from becoming tyrannical?

    Listen KID!

    Socialism entails INTEGRATING PLANS and SOCIAL CONTROLS like those of ancient Sparta and is a by - product of BIG GOVERNMENT and BIG BUSINESS. In other words, socialism is TYRANNY. As a matter of fact, we do have global socialism as we speak.

    If Samir would attended an African Teacher school, he would have been educated of failure of Socialism in:

    - ancient Sparta,
    - Ptolemaic Egypt,
    - Ancient Sumeria,
    - Ancient Rome,
    - China under the Szuma Ch'ien 145 B.C. etc etc.

    This guy in China, in introducing his socialism in 145 B.C. said socialism was needed:

    "... to prevent private individuals from reserving to their sole use the riches of the mountains and the sea in order to gain a fortune, and from putting the lower classes into subjection themselves."

    NB: Read Samir Amin's Lecturer 1 and it opens like this:

    "The principle of endless accumulation that defines capitalism is synonymous..."

    Can't you see the SAME, SAME ILLUSIONS, DELUSIONS and CHILDISH FANTASIES as of this ancient Chinese?

    Since he does not know history of humanity, he deludes himself with his global socialism.

    Well, he can delude his fellow IVY LEAGUE of FOOLS graduates, but, not the African Teacher students.

    We can go on and on, but, we doubt your capacity for understanding some of these stuff.

    With that, we leave to enjoy delusional music: Subject In School:

    http://is.gd/xzrKaJ

    ReplyDelete
  23. mwara is correct. the global socialism is in the last stages of becoming complete. north america and europe will join soon....

    ReplyDelete
  24. @Mwara,

    Here is the gauntlet: put all your rants together into a book (you will obviously and predictably dismiss that as ILF process) and let us see who is and can be trusted. Being a BLOG RANT doesn't make you a scholar. One minute you trash the west, the next you make BBC/CNN your authentic source/s. Well I guess you have no clue what delusion means. Keep on expanding the ego.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous says,

    "@Mwara,

    Here is the gauntlet: put all your rants together into a book (you will obviously and predictably dismiss that as ILF process) and let us see who is and can be trusted. Being a BLOG RANT doesn't make you a scholar. One minute you trash the west, the next you make BBC/CNN your authentic source/s. Well I guess you have no clue what delusion means. Keep on expanding the ego."

    My response:

    I made the same request. I've waited for his book for so long. I hope it will come soon.

    Mwarangethe will need to tell us his stands on economy etc. I hope Mwarangethe will also explain how his proposals will be implemented in current political environment.

    ReplyDelete
  26. @Kumekucha,
    Help some of our wannabe judicial kingpins like Ojimba or Ojiboa, whatever his name is, understand that now is not the opportune time to mess with nusu-Arabs like al Bashir of Khartoum, while our troops are busy on the frontlines.

    With all due respect to some of our people living in the coastal region of Kenya, the real descendents of the Omani, Yemeni, Saudia, Shirazi, Lebanese, Misri, Baluchi, Portuguese, et al that have no nusu-Arab Sudanese ancestry.

    Anyone who has lived, schooled, worked or even risked being friends with nusu-Arabs (Sudanese of course) will know by now that their retaliatory methods and measures are always the same and very predictable in deed.

    To say the least, al Bashri like most of his nusu-Arabs from that part of Africa, will definitly find ways and the means to sabotage Kenya's security efforts along the northern-and-eastern border corridors.

    They know what Eritrea is all about, and we have always known what Eritrea has been up to since the days it picked a costly fight with one of its neighbour.

    So, they wouldn't hesitate to be used as messagers, carriers and shelters for al-Fulanis in Somalia if they're guaranteed some much needed financial and petroleum assistance they have desperately been searching (dying) for siince their economy went belly up.

    Some of us may not agree with Waziri Wetangulia Mbele, but the bottom line is that now is not the opportune time to provoke our former neighbour, al Bashir and his nusu-Arabs from that region of Africa.

    It's not worth the political aggravation and cost in terms of a protracted instability along the north-eastern border corridor of Kenya.

    Let's pick our enemies and fights wisely and deal with the select few in the best way possible, but at the same time, leave al Bashir, nusu-Arab alone, and let the international community deal with his legal affairs.

    Kenya does not have the political, military, legal and financial muscle for dealing with al Bashir at all.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Two wrongs don't make a right.

    Just because he was allowed to enjoy a peaceful retirement and live to experience the golden sunset years of his life, does not mean the international community should allow others like him to have the opportunity to enjoy the same type of lifestyle in this day and age.

    Despite being responsible for the deaths of nearly two million people, no attempts were made to arrest him nor extradite Idi Amin Dada or even make him pay for his crimes against humanity in any court of law. - Kato, Uganda's former aviation director.

    ReplyDelete
  28. At what point can the end ever justify the means in the context of criminal justice in Kenya?

    Kenya needs patriotic high court judges and lawyers who are courageous enough to inform the public as to what's wrong with the current judicial system and why.

    And how 89.9% of LSK members have failed the public, helped block legal reforms, and how they can make amends and slowly begin to restore the ailing and corrupted legal society back to its one time rightful and respectable place in Kenya.

    Otherwise, pariahs they shall remain for decades to come if the can no longer distinguish themselves from their current competition, the fork tongued and double barrel mouthed politicians of the Republic of Kenya.

    ReplyDelete
  29. There have been many instances over the last nine years in which well-confirmed cases of criminal wrongdoing were later shown to have been thrown out of court, dismissed, or left unprosecuted due to unknown reasons, or due to obvious underhanded dealings that bear the traditional signature of the rot and endemic corruption that still lingers within the judicial system.

    Usually, the culprits are allowed to bribe their way out in order to avoid being prosecuted, or they are protected by some well connected politicians and other powerful entities who normally collude with the prosecutors by inducing them to look the other way and let the crimnal cases to lay fallow as was the accepted tradition during the dark political era of the 80s and 90s.

    Practically speaking, I'd advise the so-called concerned high court judge who is trying so hard to go after Bashir, to stop worrying too much about the international arrest warrant issued against Bashir, without ever forgetting the real evil that continues to be perpetrated in eastern Sudan, but to pay much needed attention on what's been taking place within Kenyan borders, especially the post-election violence and the consequent death toll, and take some overdue legal action against those involved.

    Right now, there are those among us who have been laughing out loud and wondering at the same time, whether the high court judge was trying so hard to score some potential political mileage on the domestic scene and among his peers by engaging in wasteful legal gimmicks of desperately seeking to have Bashir arrested if and when he steps on Kenyan soil.

    While the known perpetrators of post election violence, looters and former neighbours who forcifully grabbed all the properties belonging to the surviving victims as well as those who perished have yet to be brought to justice in 2011.

    Nonetheless, as the saying goes, KENYA IKO NA WENYEWE who have always believed that they're above the law and the rest of us, except when the bell tolls for them.

    ReplyDelete
  30. Instead of yapping that the HC Judge should prosecute PEV and leave Bashir alone please gather evidence and sue to test your case. Two wrongs never made a right and ICJ took their case against Bashir to court so do yours with evidence to test the judiciary's independence.


    From your rants one cannot fail to smell the cowardice in your LOOK-THE-OTHER-SIDE monologue/sermon. FYI the law is an ass, milk it at the risk of a fatal kick.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Instead of yapping that the HC Judge should prosecute PEV and leave Bashir alone please gather evidence and sue to test your case. Two wrongs never made a right and ICJ took their case against Bashit to court do yours with evidence and test the judiciary's independence.

    xxx

    So, you expect the victims of the 07/08 PEV who are the poor of the poor to gather evidence? What rubbish is this now?

    Since the ICJ has the resources (we add from their Western MASTERS) why have they not gathered evidence on behalf of the PEV victims?

    NB: Bashir has his masters in JEDDA.

    Or, is the ICJ - Kenya Chapter more concerned with justice in Darfur? If so, why?

    xxx

    Any leadership, be it that of lawyers, politicians etc which believes that, Africans issues can only be sorted by foreigners is a leadership unto slavery.

    Let us give you a hint for your world view is limited like that of a CHILD.

    When Arabs started their world conquest, the Roman cruel rule in the North Africa was crumbling.

    So as to remove the yoke of the Romans, the Africans joined hands with the Arabs.

    What was the result?

    The systematic pushing of Africans from North Africa which is STILL ON GOING.

    NB: Didn't you see that in Libya the other day under the protection of NERO HOOVER Obama?

    NB: Bashir and Obama are the same thing.

    Just as an example, the ZULUS of South Africa used to live in East Africa. Their journey to the southern tip of Africa was an act of running away from Arab slavery over a 1000 years ago.

    In other words, the Arabs who came as liberators, became the new masters and we are still trying to sort out the mess 1500 years later as you see in Sudan today in 2011.

    In other words, do not deceive yourself that, the West is coming to rescue you.

    No, they, West, Jedda, China etc are INVADERS who will do what invaders have always done in Africa for THOUSANDS of years now.

    Know they history! Know thy enemies!

    Anyway, since your bogus IVY LEAGUE of FOOLS legal education has decapitated your mind, we are off to enjoy:

    Dont gain the gold and lose your soul,

    WISDOM is better than silver and gold,

    TWO THOUSAND years of history,

    Could not be wiped away so easily.

    http://is.gd/J4kND2

    ReplyDelete
  32. Bwa ah ah haaa haaaaaa!

    This Mwarangethe dude is a real IDIOT!!!!! or is it EGO!!!

    This dude must be a suffering, lonely wanabe! I have never seen a pretender who thinks he knows it all, yuck!!!!

    ReplyDelete
  33. Reminds me of the village rastafarian who sings and yaps to lyrics he never comprehends. When you think reggae makes you authentic it only succeeds in exposing DELUSION.

    You refuse to realise you are a great fool when you delude yourself that YOU KNOW ALL and everybody else is foolish. You never build a career nor become a scholar by being a serial irritant trashing everything to hide your insecurity.

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  34. @Kumekucha,

    Pardon the interruption for a moment.

    Don't I just hate to remind some of you that I told you so when I said I have always been anti-colonial.

    And my Ph.D. dissertation which is titled Belgian Education Policy in the Congo 1945-1960 is all the proof that's necessary at this stage of the commentary.

    Hence, I need to be respected whenever I claim that I am an authority in all things Africa, especially Congolese and why the ongoing elections continue to add up to many other institutional failures from the colonial era and the despotic era of the one time mighty King of Zamuda, the oen and only, General Mobutu Sese Seko, conqueror of all worlds in and around the Congo Rain Forest.

    I have always maintained that if the Congolese are to confront the future with realism they will need a solid understanding of their own past and an awareness of the good as well as bad aspects of colonialism.

    I have also argued for decades and on record of course, that it would be just as misleading to speak of generalities of 'white exploitation' as it once was to talk about 'native backwardness.'

    And one of the reasons why people like Mwarang'ethe calls me a certified dodo member of the ivy league of fools is due to the fact that brainwashed mbunis like me (Kin al-Krich and Tembo clan) still see colonialism as a complicated thing with good and bad effects rather than a terrible with collateral benefits.

    Did I just allude to the fact collateral benefits did precipitate from a terrible thing (erea) like colonialism?

    No I, Jin al-Krich, didn't but I think I did somewhere in between my so-called Ph.D. dissertation that was written at a time period when 98.8% of Kumekucha members were not yet born. No offense intended by the way.

    Anway, pardon me for my usual ignorance and especially for always sounding like a benign despot - that I have always been - with a colonial subtext: Until I bring you the benefits of civilization, we will regard you as savages that we (the clan of Jin al-Krich) have always known you and your continent to be for the last couple of centuries.

    I remain as always, yours truly,
    Jin al-Krich*.

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  35. FYI, Jin al-Krich* is the old fox from the marshlands of warped conservatism, who still wants to be the next leader of the United Republican States of North America, and he can't wait to implement his so called 'Contract with the Americas' if he manages to outwit, outlast and outsurvive the Son of Kongelo (spl) in the eagerly awaited wrestling match of 2012.

    ReplyDelete

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