Margaret Thatcher was a dominating public figure for over 30 years in British and international politics. She won three general elections in a row, was a formidable Prime Minister, influenced a generation of politics and her policies still influence debate on issues as wide ranging as taxation in the UK to land reform in Zimbabwe. After her elected political career she still commanded great respect and had a lot of influence as her public speaking and book deals show.
In 2002 she suffered a series of strokes and aware of the damage a gruelling schedule would have her doctors advised her family to withdraw her from public life. There was also the question of preserving the dignity and integrity of this public colossus by protecting the effects of her illness from the public eye. Lady Thatcher retains her dignity even in ill health.
Kenneth Matiba is a colossus of the Kenya politics, a hero who put his limbs and his life on the line fighting the brutal dictatorship of Moi. He was instrumental in the democratization of Kenyan politics as a leader of the “2nd liberation” which forced Moi to accept multiparty politics and political freedom for all Kenyans.
In 1990 Matiba was detained, in solitary confinement, without charge or trial in the Kamiti Maximum Security prison and tortured at the torture chambers of infamous Nyayo House in central Nairobi. As a result of the torture Matiba suffered a stroke that nearly killed him. He survived to vie for the presidency in 1992. It is generally accepted that Matiba won the 1992 Kenyan general election although the massive rigging machinery employed by Moi regime doctored the result.
It is now clear that the effects of the stroke Matiba suffered under Moi’s goons are advanced. He can not read and he can not sign documents, his speech is slurred and his mobility is impaired. Matiba turned up at the Electoral Commission of Kenya session held at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre Thursday last week to present his papers as he intends to vie for the presidency in this years general election. It was painful to watch and left me shaking my head at the TV saddened at what I was seeing. I was not alone.
Where is this hero’s family? Why are they not protecting him like Thatcher’s family are protecting her? Matiba should not be making public statements leave alone vying for the presidency. Where are those who have his interests at heart? Why subject him to this? LET THE MAN KEEP HIS DIGINTY. My goodness has it come to this? Matiba deserves better, a whole lot better.
If any good can come out this terrible situation it is this, Matiba’s condition remember is a direct consequence of the torture he suffered under Moi’s orders. Remember the brutality of the Moi dictatorship directed towards anyone who did not agree with him. Remember how Moi, Kibaki’s “Envoy of peace”, trampled over and tried to destroy ALL our independence heroes and heroines (and then turns up at their funerals full of crocodile tears). Remember also that while, “Matiba was fighting Moi, Kibaki was saying in parliament that proponents of change were trying to fell a Mugumo tree with a razor blade” to illustrate his argument that one party rule was here to stay. Remember this also before you approach me and insult my intelligence telling me that I should not vote for this or that presidential candidate because they would be dictator yet you do not provide a single evidence of intellectual proof to support that ridiculous claim, remember that we, the Kenyan electorate, kicked out a dictator in 2002 and we all know who welcomed him back.










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November 19, 2007 at 5:52 pm
3N
I completely agree with your sentiments on Matiba and I am disappointed that his family has not urged him to stay away from public life.
He served the country well and he deserves to be honoured as an elder and accorded that respect.
November 28, 2007 at 11:44 am
Ms K
Well in!
December 1, 2007 at 7:36 pm
Zee Harrison
Margaret Thatcher? A woman who caused irreparable harm to the UK. A woman who caused non-white people to feel afraid, who condoned and covertly condoned prejudice and ignorance, who promoted greed for the sake of greed. A woman who protected her son from being identified publicly as the work-shy mercenary that he is, who protected him in order to prevent him from spending many years in prison.
Thank you for sharing your opinions, but as a person who lived through the Thatcherite era, it was gloom and doom for the masses and watch the fall out from her legacy play out over the next few months and years as Britain falls headlong into a recession.
Zee.
http://www.blackwomanthinks.blogspot.com
December 3, 2007 at 12:14 pm
Mentalacrobatics
Zee, I get the feeling you read the first few lines, saw a red button labelled Thatcher (actually maybe a blue button) and launched straight into comment mode without getting to the essence of what I was saying. What I said about Thatcher is this:
• A dominating public figure for over 30 years in British and international politics
• Won three general elections in a row
• Was a formidable Prime Minister
• Influenced a generation of politics
• After her elected political career she still commanded great respect
Those are facts whether you like her or not. She did win those elections. She did redraw global politics. She did influence a generation of politicians. Whether or not those are good things is not something I get into in this post because this post is not about Thatcher. And you can be assured that Thatcher is not my most favourite person either. Oh and we could launch into the whole “were Thatcher’s policies more harmful to Africans in Africa than Africans in the UK” but again that is for another day. My post was not some kind of praise sheet on Thatcherism. My post was not even about Thatcher. It was about the attitude of Thatcher’s family and friends to her stroke as opposed to the position taken by Matiba’s family. Thatcher crying on TV that her son was lost in the desert while she was sending British men to die in the Falklands is really irrelevant to this debate (as is the pro or cons of all her other crazy policies).
December 26, 2007 at 5:59 pm
bemused
It could be that Matiba’s family is also in denial, and cannot bring themselves to stop him, who can tell their father, brother, cousin, husband that they are not competent to go out into public? I Even if you do, the only way to make sure you do that is too lock them up, and I don’t think there are many who can do that.
I think there is a silver lining, he is a public testament to what torture does to a human being. Torture is ussually an academic subject, and when people are confronted with it’s after-effects it really hits home. Unfortunately, Matiba is one of the “lucky” ones, there are others who are living through the after effects. I would the media to do an indepth series of the physical and psychological effects of torture.