Uganda
Still a democracy?
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Journalist abduction (International Freedom of Expression Clearing House on allafrica.com) (See also Jina Moore blog)
A Radio Simba journalist, Arafat Nzito, has been missing since 3 November 2010 and his whereabouts remain unknown.
Nzito, 23 years old, was picked up by plain-clothed men in a Toyota vehicle at around 2:00 p.m. from the Radio Simba offices.
He is a resident of Kitintale, Nakawa division, in Kampala, Uganda’s capital city.
Radio Simba’s chief news editor, Emmanuel Okello, told Human Rights Network for Journalists-Uganda (HRNJ-Uganda) that Nzito’s disappearance followed him receiving numerous phone calls about meeting some people in the station’s parking lot, about 30 meters away.
Nzito left his work half done and went to meet these people but he never returned to complete filing his news story. He did not return the following day either.
According to an eye witness who declined to be identified, Nzito was whisked away by four men in a vehicle with tinted windows at around 2:30 p.m. He first talked to them before he sat in the back seat in between two men. The witness did not notice the car registration number.
“More than just a gathering storm in Kenya’s tea cup”
The banner “theme” photograph for this blog and the inset above were taken on a James Finlay Co. tea plantation outside Kericho, Kenya only a few weeks before post-election violence swept the area at the end of December 2007. I have other pictures from the area on Flickr. This is an old story–mechanization versus manual labor. Efficiency for the firm against social costs. Foreign or multinational firms, local workers. Ethnic and class issues among owners, managers and “pickers”. (I write from Mississippi, where cotton was once king . . . )
Kenya is the world’s leading exporter of black tea. This is an important part of the overall GNP. Much tea is grown on small estates–much is also on plantations, some owned by multinational businesses such as Finlay, some owned by politicians, most notably former president Moi. Like horticulture, it provides a large number of low wage jobs with associated rural housing. Surely no one’s ideal for long term development (unless you happen to own a large farm yourself) but a lot better than nothing (and very photogenic). Over time presumably the pickers lose the basic argument to the owners of the land suitable for tea production on the inexorable logic of the firm–lower cost production.
To first-time visitors in Kericho and adjoining highlands of Nandi, Nyamira and Kisii, the well-trimmed tea bushes, dotted with pickers with extended baskets, is a sight to behold.
The visions of tea-pickers have been revised somewhat; the baskets have been replaced with gadgets that are pulled by two pickers hauling select leaves into its storage space.
But this calm view of the tea plantations is deceptive; the low hum of the tea-picking machines has been replaced by angry shouts that hit a crescendo Monday, as workers protested unemployment accelerated by machine use.
Workers at James Finlays Tea Estate operate a tea plucking machine, which has been blamed for job losses, triggering a workers’ strike. [PHOTO: VITALIS KIMUTAI/STANDARD]
Some 50,000 tea pluckers in the tea estates spread across Kericho, Bomet, Nandi, Nyamira and Kisii counties protesting the mechanisation of picking green leaf were expected to participate in the labour protest, although its success appeared partial.
The strike was called by Kenya Plantation and Agricultural Workers Union (KPAWU) yesterday, and whose members work in tea estates under the Kenya Tea Growers Association (KTGA).
The affected companies are James Finlays Tea Kenya, Unilever Tea Kenya, George Williamsons, Sotik Tea and Eastern Produce, among others.
Mechanical Plucking
In 2006, when Central Organisation of Trade Unions (Cotu) first called tea pickers’ strike to protest mechanisation, the area under mechanical plucking consisted of 694 hectares or 2.3 per cent of the total area under tea in the association’s 42 members estates, which has 30,000 hectares.
Then, James Finlay had 600 hectares under mechanised production, Unilever had 54 hectares while Sotik Tea had 32 hectares.
“We have tried to reason with the multinational tea companies over the issue but they have refused to listen. The only way out for us is to let workers down their tools,” said Issa Wafula, KPAWU assistant secretary general.
. . . .
Tom Okinda, a worker at a multinational tea company in Kericho County said favouritism, tribalism and nepotism were rife in employment tea plucking machine operators.“Those retained are relatives, friends or neighbours of senior managers who have the final say in employment matters, while those who do not have any connection with the management are laid off,” he claimed.
Hellen Tangi, a businesswoman, said there were days when it was prestigious for one to work for a multinational tea firm as some of the unskilled jobs offered a good pay.
But not anymore.
“Despite raking in millions from the fertile farms, these foreigners do not care about locals working for them,” she lamented. Francis Atwoli, the Cotu Secretary General said mechanisation in the tea industry should be discouraged, as it was not good for the economy of developing countries like Kenya.
“The direct and multiplier effect of mechanisation of tea plucking and pruning in the country outweighs the implied cost-savings that employers are claiming,” Atwoli said.
Atwoli further claimed introduction of machines compromised the quality of tea thus affecting the overall auction prices. “Quality of tea is bound to drop with use of the machines since selective plucking of two leaves and a bud will not be adhered to as should be the case,” Atwoli said.
Democratic governance–one man, one vote, rather than one acre or one shilling–can support opportunities for policies that account for needs and interests of displaced workers, such as support for alternative development over time, education and training and such. Another theory of course would be that this isn’t a governance question at all and the government should have as little to do with any of this as possible other than to, say, keep the Ugandans out.
This is a little girl in one of the areas affected by violence in the last election. Please pray for a peaceful and fair election. Thanks.
The Daily Nation reports “It’s all systems go for Kenya’s referendum” (Subliminal “Green”/”Yes” message there?)
The Economist also has a late take on tomorrow’s vote: Kenya’s constitutional referendum: a chance to improve how Kenya is run
At the end of the day, they wisely conclude, much work remains:
Even if the constitution is endorsed by a fat majority, the dangers that have afflicted Kenya will not evaporate. There has been a lot of talk about peace. But the power-sharing government formed after the violence of early 2008 by President Kibaki and his rival, Mr Odinga, has dismally failed to address the main causes of instability: a lack of land and jobs. Far too many young men have no chance of getting their hands on either, especially in the volatile and tribally mixed Rift Valley and in the teeming, fetid slums of Nairobi. Many Kenyans fear that the anger of such people could boil over again in 2012.
A comment worth quoting:
Whatever the outcome in the plebiscite, we must put in place better mechanisms to hold leaders to account and stop this abuse and impunity. Leadership connotes serving as a faithfully fiduciary and finding the best solution to intractable challenges the nation faces. Good leaders are not necessarily those who brandish the sharpest intellect, or possess the most alluring visage, but those who, through determination, ingenuity and wise counsel, achieve the aims of the nation. These qualities are severely wanting in Kenyan leaders if the misery that bedevils the nation five decades after independence is considered.
We all know that even with a very good constitution, if we have poor leaders and people are not vigilant in holding them to account, Kenya will not make progress. What we need is a good constitution coupled with good leaders keen on fighting corruption, curbing negative ethnicity, appointing officials on merit and improving efficiency in the bureaucracy. We need a leadership that will abandon slogans and platitudes and work hard to lift the millions of people in want out of poverty.