Scary military reaction to General Ogolla crash | Kenya news

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Mr Mutahi Kagwe, Please Note That There Are Some Images That Can’t Be Cleaned





Recent developments in government clearly show Mutahi Kagwe’s rising influence within government. One of the things that he has been promoting is the increased use of professional Public Relations (PR) services.

This blogger has practiced PR extensively and I can tell you that no amount of PR can clean this government’s image.

Mutahi Kagwe (pictured above), the current minister for communications has had some past experience in PR and owns a local PR firm called Tell-em PR.

The Bush PR Campaign Of The Century
Probably what is inspiring Kibaki government insiders to try out PR is the amzing victory that President George W Bush handlers managed with their PR campaign in the last American presidential elections.

However there are a few differences with that case. Firstly there is very strong party affiliation in the American political system. President Kibaki has no political partyu as we speak.

Then the biggest difference is that the American scanrio was a two-horse-race-affair which is extremely easy to manipulate. Bush did it beautifully by creating fear in the electorate that terrorists needed a tough President and that the weak John Kerry was exactly what Osama Bin Laden and company wanted. In the end Americans voted Bush not so much because they liked it but because he seemed the better option in the circumstances.

Then Kerry went and committed the classic PR blunder. He refused to open up and let the electorate get to know him – warts and all. Many Americans did not vote Kerry because they said they didn’t know him. Bush was very well-known because he made his stand clear on many controversial issues. Voters will always prefer an honest person rather than somebody who seems to agree with them on everything and even changes their minds with them when they start to think different.

Can Kibaki Pull Off A Bush?
The situation is very different in Kenya. Even the ODM is in for a few surprises. You see for the first time in Kenyan history politicians will be facing very angry voters. An angry person is capable of doing anything.

Our advice to the government is to stop wasting tax payers funds trying to pretend they are somebody else. Why not just do it the plain old fashioned way and change genuinely. Kenyans don’t need some expensive spin doctors to see genuine change, especially now.
=============
(See election 2007 predictions)

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

President Kibaki's Health

You Don't Look Well Mr President

Shortly before the Kibaki administration started earning the name "crisis" as its' middle name, the influential Economist carried an interesting article detailing wild drinking sessions at State House. The report attracted a lot of interest from the public and the usually slow selling international magazine quickly sold out in the streets of Nairobi. (Or did State House staff purchase all copies?)

It is a well-known fact that the President prior to being elected loved his beer (just like many old men his age, including my father. The big difference is that my dad is retired and does not hold any public office.)

This issue of drinking and the President's health is an issue that The Weekly Citizen tried to bring out. The entire staffs were quickly arrested and the case is still pending in court. Meaning that this is an extremely sensitive issue at State House.

Still the facts cannot be ignored. President Kibaki was involved in a very serious road accident shortly before the 2002 general elections. In fact early in his presidency he was re-admitted at the Nairobi Hospital for a number of days. It was rumored that he had suffered a mild stroke.

The pressure that the President has had to face in the last few months has been enormous. And the pressure does not stop on the political front, President Kibaki has had to contend with what looks like a long-standing family rift between First lady Lucy Kibaki and his other wife, Wambui wa Mwai. Lucky is the man who comes from pressure in the office to a relaxing atmosphere at home. Imagine the man who steps from one war zone into another!!

We saw President Moi rapidly age after 1991 before our very eyes with the re-introduction of multi-party politics. And don't forget that Moi was a much fitter and healthier man. He has always been a teetotaler who has stuck to an amazingly healthy diet that includes plenty of milk and brown porridge for years. A friend of this blogger who had lunch at State House with the President once remembers how Moi loved his brown Ugali. It is no secret that even now Moi is much fitter than the younger Kibaki.

Moi was lucky in that he had many years that cushioned him before the re-introduction of multi-party politics. President Kibaki moved into State House while still recovering from a serious road accident. And then he had previously been leader of the opposition running a sleepy DP political party. You be the judge as to what the possible current state of his health could possibly be.

Well, photographs don't lie. And recent photographs of the aging President with Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete were far from flattering. It looks like our President has lost a lot of weight, which has had the effect of exaggerating his potbelly. Or is his pot belly evidence of a current regime of heavy beer drinking? If this were true, would you really blame him?

The President has not announced officially whether he is seeking re-election but those close to him including first lady Lucy Kibaki are on record as saying that he will be in the race for re-election. That is his democratic right but a very bad idea indeed. It is an example of an individual putting their personal interests ahead of national interests, (which is really the story of Kenyan politics since independence). If the President were to for example step aside from the 2007 race for State House, it would go a long way in helping to cool the current political temperatures in the country heightened by the November 2005 national referendum on the new constitution.

Besides the current problems in Kenya need handling by a much younger, more energetic new-ideas-Kenyan.

It would also be best for the President's health, which should surely be more important than any other personal ambitions he may have.

(See election 2007 predictions)