Henry Must have given Google a headache to fish out that old email from Dr. Ndemo, of October 19th, 2011. :-) I see what you did there.. :-) To your point, that discussion is a relevant today as it was 6 years ago. To Ndemo's point on cultural re-orientation. The point he was making is best used to re-orient government. Citizens are evolving with the use of information and data. This issue of Army worms started making headlines weeks ago in Southern and Central Africa. What made us think we were immune as a country? *Ali Hussein* *Principal* *Hussein & Associates* Tel: +254 713 601113 Twitter: @AliHKassim Skype: abu-jomo LinkedIn: http://ke.linkedin.com/in/alihkassim <http://ke.linkedin.com/in/alihkassim> 13th Floor , Delta Towers, Oracle Wing, Chiromo Road, Westlands, Nairobi, Kenya. Any information of a personal nature expressed in this email are purely mine and do not necessarily reflect the official positions of the organizations that I work with. On Thu, Apr 20, 2017 at 1:31 PM, henry--- via kictanet < kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
Dear All,
The demand side for information is clear but it continues to be frustrated by the bureaucracy. For instance, we have the Fall Army Worm attacks in a number of counties in the country. Farmers sought information on what could be done to mitigate and the type of seeds, pesticides to use and at what frequency?
The government remained talking of settling aside 300million and hiring NYS to help. How then can we have farmers ask other questions if the information given is irrelevant and if not incomplete and delayed.
I ended speaking to agronomists and proposed a set of pesticides by an NGO Acre Fund long before bureacrats in Govt run an advert a week ago.
Kind regards
Henry
----- Original Message ----- From: bitange@jambo.co.ke To: henry@article19.org Cc: "KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions" <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> Sent: Wednesday, October 19, 2011 4:17:22 AM Subject: Re: [kictanet] Freedom of Information laws and records management/ e- discussion continued
Grace, I am sort of disappointed with the discussion on FOI. We are delving much into theoretical assumptions. The whole issue of FOI has not built demand for the information into the kind of model we are discussing. Let us not allow foreigners dictate why we need information to be available to our citizens.
What needs to be done is more of cultural reorientation to make our people use information. We rarely make informed decisions. I mean use of science to make decisions. Poverty keeps on going up yet science tells us our productivity has dropped to the extent those we call farmers cannot make ends meet. Whereas we need qualified people in work place we do not require qualification for farmers. We now have novice farmers as wen grapple with food insecurity. If we cannot use available information on how we can be food secure, what more information you need that would change our lives?
For as long as we have lived on earth no Kenyan community has information on their own recipes. The assumptions is that if you want Ugali you just get to know how to cook it. There are more than fifteen Ugali recipes and none is documented. There are more than 100 Githeri recipes and none is documented to create rich information that application developers can proudly create apps. Until we move from our oral culture, information will be confined to storage places where it will occasionally be used.
We are also confusing information and data. The Government can release data and unless someone converts it into information, it will never translate to your theoretical assumptions. We generally want to listen to someone tells us what information is available. You recall some communities did not read the constitution since the leaders had read it. I had difficulty explaining some sections of the constitution even though we all had the document.
FOI will pass as has been many legislations that were key. We have fought for these legislations but after they are passed nothing happens. We wanted the ICT policy but many of it's advocates have not gone out there to tell Kenyans how to benefit from it. This certainly will happen the same way to FOI. We are rebels without a cause. I have met dozens of women groups and taken them through our census report highlighting the glaring disparities between men and women but in spite the fact that they promise to do something, none has ever done anything even bringing the issue up for debate.
We must aim to change our culture. We must make our people to demand to know what information they require in order to change from where they are to a desired future. We must build institutional frameworks to move date into information. As we debate, let us put a side theories from textbooks and begin from the end. Ask questions such as what formats are we to get the information? Who will set the standards for information? How will the poor benefit from the information? How will the information be disseminated?
Picture our problems and create the vision on how information can be used to bring better life for our people. Work the food security issue I mentioned backwards. We have mapped our soils in the country and the result is available on the open data yet you see farmers growing crops that will never give them the desired productivity. For example, in Ukambani, farmers can grow cassava or water Mellon which will give them more money to buy maize from the north rift instead of them growing the maize that would impoverish them. How can we effectively communicate this.
We must create language institutes for every ethnic group in Kenya. Language is dynamic yet we have not kept pace with technological advancement with our languages. This is why we fail to communicate. There is no African language that has a translation of break-even point or productivity yet these two words determine whether you will be poor or not. Information is information if the medium of communication is understood by all. We all need FOI but we have a lot to do if it is to making meaning in our lives.
Ndemo.
Harry, thanks for those probing questions that have kept this discussion going and continue to raise more questions. As a result, our attention has been drawn to a very important document. Kudos to Kerubo for the responses.
Rosemary, the Africa Platform on Access to Information Declaration is a great document. It is comprehensive and we appreciate your bringing it to our attention. It will contribute to the review of the IRMT/IDRC study on aligning records management with ICT, e-goverment and freedom of information, which has been the basis of this e-discussion.
In your contribution, you point out that access to information cannot succeed unless government takes initiative to develop legislation and ensure its implementation. Harry felt that the State must at all costs avail information. The question to listers is:
What demands would Freedom of Information (FOI) legislation place on government?
Henry, you have unpackaged the Right to Information (RTI) concept in a very practical and relevant manner. The local example using Mavoko is on spot. I know listers will take you up on your offer to seek more information on the topic.
You point out the need to have information in retrievable formats and proactively making as much of such information public. Also, that public servants/officers have a duty to assist citizens who may not know where
to
find information they may need.
What strategies could be developed to synchronize Freedom of Information and records management initiatives?
And finally to Harry: did you find out what the citizens' responsibility would be in all this?
A great day to all of you listers. Lets hear your views.
Rgds Grace
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If you have the strength to survive, you have the power to succeed. Life is all about choices we make depending upon the situation we are in. Go forth and rule the World!
From: harry@comtelsys.co.ke Date: Tue, 18 Oct 2011 13:58:44 +0300 Subject: Re: [kictanet] Freedom of Information laws/ e- discussion continued CC: kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke To: ggithaiga@hotmail.com
Many thanks Kurubo/Grace,
I suppose then, in light of the foregoing, State must at all costs avail "information" under it's possession.
Citing the "Freedom of information" clause within this context however, makes it imperative for State to do so within universally adopted benchmarks. But within the same context, what is the citizen's responsibility?
I could check this out. But does the clause in the same vein confer a mandatory responsibility upon the citizen to ensure their exercise of this "Right to access" does not go to waste, or does he/she have the freedom to exercise this right/liberty liberally.
One can argue that for instance, a mother who fails to vaccinate her child against polio, because of "failure" to access information as opposed to "lack" of access to information should be held responsible. Is this enforceable in law..? How?
Lastly but not least, State has only a tiny custody of information consumable by the public. I dare say that a lot of information/knowledge sought after by information consumers fall well outside the State domain.
How do we police those outside, who hoard information desperately needed by consumers...? And what of those who deliberately avail misleading information/knowledge, including state..?
Harry
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