Everything about Mwai Kibaki totally explained
Mwai Kibaki (born
November 15,
1931) is the
President of
Kenya. Kibaki was previously
Vice President (1978 - 1988), and has held several other cabinet positions, including Minister for Finance (1978 - 1981), Minister for Home Affairs (1982 - 1988) and Minister for Health (1988 - 1991).
He was baptized
Emilio Stanley by Italian missionaries in his youth but he rarely uses this name.
He was sworn in on 30 December 2007 for his second term as president of the Republic of Kenya after controversially emerging winner of an election that was marked by accusations of fraud and widespread irregularities that have led to civil unrest.
Early life
Born at
Gatuyaini village in
Othaya division of
Nyeri District, Kibaki was the youngest son of
Kikuyu peasants Kibaki Gĩthĩnji and Teresia Wanjikũ (both now deceased). He was educated at Gatuyainĩ School (two years), Karĩma Mission School (three years), Mathari Boarding Primary School (between 1944 and 1946). Family oral history maintains that his early education was made possible by his much older brother-in-law,
Paul Muruthi, who believed that Kibaki shouldn't be baby-sitting his little nephews and nieces for his older sister. He studied at the prestigious
Mang'u High School between 1947 and 1950 and obtained the maximum possible score in his high school terminal examinations. Kibaki was eager to join the army after high school, but due to a ruling by
Walter Coutts, the Chief colonial secretary, people from
GEMA communities were prevented from the British army.
He studied Economics, History and Political Science at
Makerere University College,
Kampala,
Uganda. During his studies, he was chairman of the
Kenya Students' Association. In 1955, he graduated as best student of his class, and was therefore awarded a scholarship to undertake further studies in the
United Kingdom, obtaining a B.Sc. with distinction in Public Finance at the
London School of Economics.
Kenya African National Union
After obtaining his
Master's degree, he became an economics lecturer at Makerere. In early 1960 however, he gave up his job to become executive officer of
Kenya African National Union (KANU). He helped to draft
Kenya's constitution. In the 1963 elections, he took the then
Donholm Constituency (subsequently called Bahati and now known as Makadara) in
Nairobi. He has been a member of parliament (MP) ever since.
His election was the start of a long political career. Appointed Assistant Minister of Finance and chairman of the Economic Planning Commission in 1963, he was promoted to Minister of Commerce and Industry in 1966. In 1969, he became Minister of Finance and Economic Planning where he served until 1978. Moving his political base from Nairobi to his rural home, he was re-elected to parliament in 1974 to represent his native
Othaya Constituency. The same year
Time magazine rated him among the top 100 people in the world who had the potential to lead. He was re-elected Member of Parliament for the same constituency in the subsequent elections of 1979, 1983, 1988, 1992, 1997 and 2002.
When
Daniel arap Moi succeeded
Jomo Kenyatta as President of Kenya in 1978, Kibaki was elevated to the
Vice Presidency, but was allowed to keep the Finance portfolio, which he exchanged for that of Home Affairs in 1982. Kibaki fell out of favour with President Moi in 1988, and was dropped as Vice President and moved to the Ministry of Health.
Multi-party politics
In December 1991, only days after the repeal of Section 2A of the constitution, which restored the
multi-party system, Mwai Kibaki left KANU and founded the
Democratic Party (DP). He came third in the presidential elections of 1992, and was second in the 1997 elections.
In January 1998, Mwai Kibaki became the leader of the official opposition with the Democratic Party being the official opposition party.
Presidency
In preparation for the 2002 elections, Kibaki's Democratic Party affiliated with several other parties to form
National Alliance Party of Kenya (NAK). NAK allied itself with the
Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) to form the
National Rainbow Coalition (NARC). On
December 27,
2002, NARC won a landslide victory over KANU. Kibaki got 62% of the votes in the presidential elections, against only 31% for the KANU candidate,
Uhuru Kenyatta.
On
December 30,
2002, still nursing injuries from a motor vehicle accident and in a wheel chair, Mwai Kibaki was sworn-in as the third President and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Republic of
Kenya.
Kibaki's first cabinet was a careful balancing act with one Minister or Assistant Minister coming from each of Kenya's forty-two areas. His Presidential style is very 'hands-off', unlike his predecessor, who attempted to control everything from the centre. Kibaki's style has the benefit of allowing his Ministers the freedom to manage their departments and introduce much needed reforms; however there's talk in opposition quarters that he's been unwilling to give any public lead in the fight against corruption. To date despite the efforts of the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission (KACC) through numerous investigations and prosecution of cases, no high-profile figures have been convicted in court on corruption charges.
In November 2004, in an ABC PrimeTime interview with
Peter Jennings, former US President
Bill Clinton identified Kibaki as the one living person he'd most like to meet "because of the Kenyan government's decision to abolish school fees for primary education." Clinton added that, by providing free and compulsory primary education, what Kibaki had done would affect more lives than any president had done or would ever do by the end of the year. The free education programme saw nearly 1.7 million more pupils enroll in school by the end of that year. Clinton's wish was granted when he visited Kenya in the summer of 2005 and finally met president Kibaki on July 22nd.
Constitutional referendum and dismissal of cabinet
The
2005 Kenyan constitutional referendum was held on
November 21,
2005.
The main issues of contention throughout the drafting of the constitution were over how much power should be vested in the Head of State (the President, in this case). In previous drafts, those who feared a concentration of power in the president added provisions for European-style power-sharing between a ceremonial President elected via universal suffrage and an all-powerful Prime Minister appointed by the President. However, the final draft of the constitution retained sweeping powers for the Head of State, which were however well checked by other branches of Government, including Parliament.
Though supported by Kibaki, some members of his own cabinet and the main opposition party mobilised a powerful campaign that resulted in a majority of 58% Kenyan voters rejecting the draft.
As a consequence of this, Kibaki made a historic and decisive political move on
November 23,
2005 by dismissing his entire cabinet in the middle of his administration's term. About his decision Kibaki said, “Following the results of the Referendum, it has become necessary for me, as the President of the Republic, to re-organise my Government to make it more cohesive and better able to serve the people of Kenya".
Although the dismissal of individual officials is commonplace in government, the dissolution of the cabinet in its entirety is rare. The only members of the cabinet office to be spared a midterm exit were the
Vice President and
Minister of Home Affairs,
Moody Awori, and the
Attorney General whose position is constitutionally protected. The Cabinet was thereafter appointed, but some MPs who were offered ministerial positions declined to take up posts.
New cabinet
On July 24, 2006
Narc-Kenya, a new political Party set up by Kibaki allies won three out of five parliamentary seats. This indicated Kibaki's government had recovered from the defeat at the constitutional referendum.
Vision 2030, a scheme to raise annual GDP by 10% was unveiled by Kibaki on October 30, 2006 . The prudent management of the economy under Kibaki has seen continued Kenya GDP growth during 4 straight years from a low 0.6% (real -1.6%) in 2002 to 3% in 2003, 4.9% in 2004, 5.8% in 2005 and 6% in 2006. GDP growth of 7% in is projected for 2007, a very significant recovery from total decay preceding Kibaki's presidency. As a direct result of the consistent reforms undertaken by Kibaki's government, infrastructure rebuilding has been going on in earnest, and all the sectors of the economy have recovered from total collapse pre-2003.
On
15 November 2006 he reinstated
Kiraitu Murungi, who had stepped down to allow for independent investigations of corruption allegations in the
Anglo-Leasing scandal, as Energy minister, and
George Saitoti, who had been previously accused in connection with the
Goldenberg scandal, as Education minister. Both the ministers were exonerated in the investigations.
2007 elections
On
January 26,
2007, President Kibaki declared his intention of running for re-election in the
2007 presidential election. So far four major parties have stated that he'll be their presidential candidate of choice in the coming general election. The parties are
DP,
NARC,
Narc-Kenya and Ford People. In opinion polls from Steadman International released in October 2006, it was stated that 41% of Kenyans would vote for Kibaki. His closest rival,
Kalonzo Musyoka, got 20%. Kibaki was initially considered the front-runner in the presidential election, although he was subsequently overtaken in the polls by
Raila Odinga.
On
September 16 2007, Kibaki announced that he'd stand as the candidate of a new alliance called the
Party of National Unity, which will include a number of parties, including
KANU,
DP,
Narc-Kenya,
Ford-Kenya,
Ford People, and
Shirikisho.
Following the election, held on
December 27, the electoral commission declared Kibaki the winner on
December 30 2007, placing him ahead of Odinga by about 232,000 votes in a hotly contested election. This was announced despite accusations by the
ODM that the election was rigged. Odinga accused Kibaki of fraud and
violence broke out in some places. Kibaki was immediately sworn in for his second term, calling for the "verdict of the people" to be respected and for "healing and reconciliation" to begin.
Private life
He is married to
Lucy Kibaki (
née Muthoni), with whom he's one daughter, Judy Wanjiku, and three sons, Jimmy Kibaki, David Kagai, and Tony Githinji.
In 2004 the media reported that Kibaki has a second spouse allegedly married under customary law,
Mary Wambui, and a common daughter,
Wangui Mwai. Mary Wambui is said to be provided with state bodyguards and other VIP privileges. She is also a
National Rainbow Coalition activist. After the news broke, the State House released an unsigned statement that Kibaki's only immediate family is his wife, Lucy and their four children.
Mwai Kibaki is known to be a keen golfer and is one of the longtime members of the
Muthaiga Golf Club. He belongs to the
Roman Catholic Church and attends the Holy Family Basilica Church.
Further Information
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