Press Statement by Change Associates Trust
KIKUYU COUNCIL OF ELDERS MISLEADING KENYANS
THE KIKUYU MUSICIANS UNDER INVESTIGATION DO NOT SPEAK FOR
THE KIKUYU COMMUNITY
A Press Statement from the ‘KikuyusforChange’ Initiative (C/o Change
Associates)
Our attention has been brought to media reports in today’s
newspapers that a group calling itself The Kikuyu Council of Elders has
stated that three songs sung by artistes Kamande wa Kioi, John DeMathew &
Muigai Njoroge, and under investigation by the National Cohesion and
Integration Commission, are an attack on the Kikuyu community.
As Change Associates and through the Kikuyus for Change
Platform we are extremely disappointed that elders [who are expected to
understand the need for public figures to be careful in their public
utterances] have chosen to present the position that these musicians message
represents the feelings of the entire Kikuyu community; rather than rebuke them
for what are clearly ethnically inciting songs; whatever explanations the artistes
might choose to use to defend themselves. It is our position that the three
songs under investigation are hateful and divisive especially when put in the
context of processes going on in the country; and a clear and present danger to
national cohesion in a country that is still recovering from ethnic-based
violence.
Statements by any group saying that investigating those
behind such songs is an attack against an entire over 6-Million strong Kenyan
community are also blatantly untrue.
These elders who should know better, must be condemned by
all Kenyan patriots, both from within the Kikuyu Community and from other
communities. They have decided to deliberately mislead and misinform Kenyans on
an issue that any Kikuyu-speaker can confirm is wrong. These musicians do not
represent the community, and again we insist that attempts to pull communities
to take responsibility for the mistakes of individuals, must be resisted by all
Kenyans. Kikuyus are not hate-mongers.
Finally we would like to remind Kenyans that before the
Rwanda Genocide that led to the death of over 1Million people, musicians from
one of the communities in that country used to sing harmless-sounding songs
that spoke of the need to cut ‘tall trees’. Such songs were okay when literally
translated, but extremely hateful and inciting when put in the appropriate
context.
The NCIC must therefore bring appropriate context into their
investigations of these three artistes. Kenyans are watching and expect them to
determine that the three songs in question are dangerous, and that the
musicians are actually a threat to our national internal security.
Ngunjiri Wambugu
Executive Director, Change
Associates Trust (Hosts of the Kikuyusforchange Initiative)
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