The Business Daily has it right:
It may be passing off as an ordinary security problem in which the police are taking a whacking for sleeping on the job.
But the repeat discovery of a large stock of arms in a private residence in Narok is a reflection of the grim realities of our economy.
Kenyans should be deeply worried that someone has been able to move such large amounts of dangerous weapons without detection by the country’s rather elaborate security machinery or with its tacit participation.
If indeed it is true that the arms moved without the knowledge of the police, it is largely because our security apparatus has not moved with the times.
The truth is that lucrative but illicit trade in illegal substances such as arms, counterfeits and drugs has to be oiled by large sums of money.
Unless and until the Kenyan government is less corrupt, Kenya will be a place to do business for terrorists and international criminals of other types, and for illicit weapons trade and money laundering. There is a great opportunity in that the interests of Western donors and of Kenyan citizens converge here, as ordinary Kenyans are both victims of criminality and bear the costs of inflation associated with the illicit funds. The change necessary is for the donors to take the long view and get serious about consistent action over a period of years to fight the criminality instead of swinging back and forth among alternative competing priorities.
In the meantime, a new Senate report indicates that funds representing the fruit of corruption in Africa, as well as other parts of the world, continue to enter the US in spite of the post-9/11 crackdown on money laundering.
__________
With its own issues would Kenya really send troops to Somalia as suggested by Foreign Minister Wetangula?