Really?

I would have loved to hear his views on the candidates for the IEBC particularly seeing as the following made the cut on merit


Mohammed  Isaack - Chairman

Mohamed Alawi Hussun

Abdullahi Sharawe

as part of the 8 person commission. Yusuf Nzibo was also cited as his faith lent 5 out of the 8 commissioners Muslim hence the argument for imbalance.

I think Hassan needs to wait for the applicants to go through selection the way we've done for Judges and other commissions. It could be, thought not likely, that the only applicants are Kikuyu. In that case, what is Hassan's advice?

If the man wants to talk balance, then I would want him to tell me just how much temperance, Gen. Ali brought upon his colleagues. I seem to recall this being the time Hassan has complained most bitterly about police excesses and extra-judicial killings.

What we need is to systematically recruit for all those top security positions giving the job to the most qualified. I should expect after the Inspector General, that the head of the NSIS, the CID, the Kenya Prisons, KWS, etc etc be also advertised and filled with the most competent individuals.



On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 9:08 PM, Barrack Otieno <otieno.barrack@gmail.com> wrote:
Agreed Dr. Ndemo, the last few weeks have made me realise that watu
wetu syndrome is still  deeply rooted and that it will take
intentionality from the days leadership to weed it out, you recently
made a post about leaders being led by the people as opposed to people
being led by the leaders, i once came across a story of some brothers
who led one of the Asian Tigers through benevolent dictatorship and
contributed to what the country is in this age, it will take great
leadership to get our beloved country out of the present quagmire and
onto Vision 2030.

Best Regards

On Wed, Nov 30, 2011 at 9:04 PM,  <bitange@jambo.co.ke> wrote:
> Listers,
>
> This morning I briefly watched Omar Hassan’s interview on Citizen and felt
> sorry for our interpretation of democracy.  The bill of rights will either
> destroy us or build us.  Omar is a member of Kenya National Commission on
> Human Rights.  He is also a member of the selection committee of the
> Inspector General of Police.   In his view a Kikuyu will not be considered
> for this coveted job.  In other words if the best candidate turns out to
> be a Kikuyu, the committee will discard merit and pick a non-Kikuyu
> applicant.  This will be wrong.
>
> Vindictiveness will not build Kenya.  We must detest tribalism in whatever
> form.   We have a real chance to change this country for the good.  If we
> have to succeed each one of us must weigh the consequences of our
> utterances.    Every step we move forward is now reversed by some unknown
> belligerent Kenyan.  When we thought all with our peace imitative within
> the horn of Africa, we are faced with utterances that undermine the lives
> of our forces.  Only in Kenya where we issue warrants of arrest for a head
> of state that happens to be a Muslim Nation that is so close to Somalia.
> In other countries, the nation’s interests take priority over mundane
> issues that have no direct consequence to the state.
>
> National interests a side, tribalism under the guise of freedom of speech
> will hurt us.  Just like Mandela spoke out on racism – “I detest
> racialism, because I regard it as a barbaric thing, whether it comes from
> a black man or a white man” - we must begin to speak out before it is too
> late.  Democracy needs nurturing because it is not straight forward
> concept.  It has the power of cutting from both sides.
>
>
> Ndemo.
>
>
>
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--
Barrack O. Otieno
+254721325277
+254-20-2498789
Skype: barrack.otieno

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KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth, share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.