Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kenya: Lift Secrecy Lid Off The Mysterious Armenian Duo

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Kenya: Lift Secrecy Lid Off The Mysterious Armenian Duo

    LIFT SECRECY LID OFF THE MYSTERIOUS ARMENIAN DUO
    By Lumiti Cedric Khabuchi

    Kenya Times, Kenya
    March 27 2006

    MERCENARIES or no mercenaries, it cannot be wished away that this
    government is juggling with the security of its citizens. Those charged
    with ensuring our security owe Kenyans an explanation regarding this
    Armenian saga. Any wonder that the whole issue has now been narrowed
    down to politics as usual with its attendant blame game as the whole
    country keeps guessing what really is happening?

    It is naive to assume these are ordinary illegal immigrants. It
    is more persuading given what has been going on to conclude they
    are well connected individuals with strong ties to people in power
    or close to those in power which explains the essentially lukewarm
    reaction the government gave what started as a rumour that strange
    individuals were suspiciously operating in the country.

    Instead of closely following the leads given by Raila Odinga, including
    the exact location of the said 'mercenaries', the government instead
    surprisingly, trashed the information as untrue and a fabrication with
    conflicting responses from the police commissioner and the CID chief
    both of whom ironically are supposed to coordinate investigations.

    Push has now come to shove and anxious Kenyans are demanding an
    explanation detailing who really is hosting these liberally 'golden
    visitors'. With conflicting statements from confused state officials
    streaming in, it remains to be seen how a government that always
    seems not to know what to do will act given that time is running out
    and the whole issue getting blown out of proportion. For the minister
    in charge of immigration to differ with Kenya Airways officials over
    what plane allegedly flew in one of the foreigners is a case of the
    right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing.

    To start with and perhaps in characteristic manner, the president
    has not found it worthwhile commenting on this very critical issue
    touching on state security despite being the custodian of the safety
    of his subjects.

    We have watched in awe as the government spokesman who happens to
    play the role of spin doctor for the blunders of his bosses rubbished
    the allegations as 'uwongo na upuzi mtupu'. Somebody please tell Dr
    Alfred Mutua that the ills being committed by these septuagenarian
    pensioners will remain to haunt him since he still has a long future
    to take care of.

    It is startling that suspicious foreigners can enter into the country,
    be given state security, chauffeured around in government cars and
    accorded state honors and five star accommodation presumably paid for
    by the taxpayer who is not told who they are and to what their mission
    is. It pains that despite paying heavily for our extravagantly pampered
    government while the rest of Kenyans survive on a shoe string budget,
    the ingrates can still bring in strangers who threaten our security
    and still expect us just to smile it away.

    If really the government was unaware of the Artur brothers, the first
    thing it would have done would be to put them in custody while going
    on with investigations to ascertain their mission. This was not done
    and the two still go about their unknown business with impunity. It
    is worth noting that Artur Margaryan is the only individual who is
    not a government official but uses a 'GK' vehicle.

    If really the said Orange Democratic Movement leaders had deals
    with the two 'golden brothers, then it could give the beleaguered
    government a leeway of netting its harshest critics in the name of
    Raila Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka at last.

    I refuse to buy the line that these people held talks with the Orange
    luminaries. The talk of loaning Odinga more than Sh100 million does not
    add up. Which serious businessman would lend a stranger on the first
    meeting such a colossal sum of money without any paper work and not
    forgetting that the amount was in cash? I mean how serious was Odinga's
    problem with the alleged girlfriend to warrant such huge sums of money?

    I also have a feeling that in terms of money spent during the
    referendum campaigns, the whole country saw what happened and which
    side was spending government funds to bribe voters. We have not
    forgotten Kiraitu Murungi's statement that the government war chest
    for the exercise was meant to shake every corner of the country.

    Kenyans are now an enlightened lot and had already known that the
    infamous Banana constitution was unworkable and a government project
    as Murungi said. I, therefore, will continue treating the allegations
    against ODM leaders as cheap propaganda to shift attention by a
    government cornered in the middle of a crisis.

    Coming hot on the heels of a thuggish midnight raid on the Standard
    group by hooded government agents that left a terrified staff and a
    trail of destruction ranging from disabling computers, looted mobile
    phones, burning newspapers to shutting down the group's TV station
    for more than 12 hours. Surprisingly non-Kenyan looking individuals
    were spotted in the raid. We all know that our police force has
    no Caucasians and therefore the demand to know who the white man
    who was commanding the raiders was. It is not by coincidence that
    just around the same time two strangers have been forced from their
    hideouts by our hawk-eyed opposition only to come and claim that they
    are businessmen. This government should remember that the media was
    there long before they came to power and they will leave it there on
    return to the opposition benches which they greatly miss.

    My fear is that from the look of these expensive men, their mode of
    dressing, sly disposition and golden jewellery while we do not know
    their business, they might either be international criminals of the
    'Carlos the Jackal' type or drug dealers on a transit mission. At a
    time when we as a nation have a cool Sh.6.4 billion worth of cocaine
    in our stores and authorities who have been foot-dragging to speed
    up the case and bring the concerned to book, we might as well not
    rule out the possibility of the second option.

    It might not be a coincidence that these two men have appeared at
    a time when there are spirited call from both the locals and the
    United Nations Office on drugs and Crime for the destruction of the
    drug haul. The drugs must be weighed and certified packet by packet
    before destruction. For a country reeling on the pangs of starvation,
    official corruption, political blackmail and aid freeze, this is just
    another of the string of worries the common Kenyan has to live with.

    Any issue of national importance that is not well explained to the
    masses leaves room for all kinds of speculation.
Working...
X