Daktari,
If there is one thing I and the rest of the community does appreciate, is the fact that you at least take the time to look at the comments & critiques coming in through these forums, and taking the time to reply to them.
Your reply I guess, gives me an opportunity to ask more than the one *question* that I had promised to ask earlier.
I also see where you are coming from regarding how the Civil Service works, but IMO, a lot more could have been done.
Let me start with a story that you once told when someone asked you in a forum on whether we should start eBusinesses that used the then nascent Mobile payments platforms, and your answer, for a Civil Servant, was astonishing!
"... Don't just sit and ask whether to do it... Do it and then let GoK, if they ever will, come and ask you questions later..."
The point was, you cannot regulate innovation, as you can only regulate what has been invented.
But therein lies the contradiction in your earlier statements. Simply because, from where I sit, I never saw that level of innovation when it came to pushing for a credible local technology industry employing thousands of our citizens. Your points number 2,3,5.
As the PS ICT, and applying the same analogy, I would have expected that you would have crafted policies or came up with innovative ways, to be followed by say at least your Ministry and the then Kenya ICT Board, in terms of how they ought to push for local innovation and businesses in order to aid in job creation for the local industry.
I would have rather that one day, someone had taken you to court for rooting for Kenyan innovation & businesses, when the policy, said maybe you shouldn't have. You might have lost, but you probably could have earned your stripes in battle.
If I was to tell the story of Alliance Technologies, a firm that I started some 10 odd years ago, we wouldn't be where we are today, if some persons then in Government, who we are eternally grateful to, did not rise up and make some key decisions and recommendations to go with a local firm while the easier route would have been to go with the flow and ensure this country forever imported enterprise business software.
What I then learnt is that, it is not that we do not have such policies to support local enterprises and build local capacity, indeed the Procurement Act 2005, leave alone the newly updated one, gives such leeway to Cabinet Ministers, Ministerial Tender Committees etc. The limit to what any one person in a position of influence can do is determined simply by their resolve and determination to a cause!
Let me use two examples. If anyone in the early 2000s had indicated that we were going to build a 85 Billion USD City in the middle of nowhere, they would have been considered bonkers. Fast forward to 2010, and you had managed to deliver the Konza Project and get the government to commit to putting in such resources by 2030.
If anyone also had told you in 2007 that the biggest bank by customer value and transaction by 2012 would be Safaricom, you would not have believed them. Yet, you were key to making it happen. You were key in making the Central Bank Governor sign-off on this venture against the wishes of the established banks whose lobbying power is quite formidable.
You created and/or changed policy! The results of which speak for themselves.
And that is why I would respectfully say that the reason why we have an almost non-existent technology industry here, employing local persons, the reason why this government is still importing 95% of its software & 100% of its hardware, the reason why Kenya cannot even build or assemble laptops for their primary school kids is not because it is hard to change policy.
So, and for whatever reason, you didn't have enough determination and resolve to change policy and ensure that a thriving local technology industry takes root.
As much as I am cognizant of the fact that you cannot win them all, I still rate that as the single biggest failure in ICT of the past government. Failure not because we tried and failed, but because we didn't even make a serious effort in trying to make it work.
Finally, I do hope, and my prayers are, 10-15 years from now, once I am done with what I need to do in the private world, and perhaps with a bit more wisdom, I could dedicate a good 10 years of my life to Civil Service.
So thank you for your prayers and I do hope that they will be answered. AMEN!