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MAL /17/17 FIRST WORD Marketing Africa limited P. O. Box 36481- 00200 Nairobi, Kenya Cell: +254 - 717 - 529 052 Email: [email protected] TANZANIA Marketing Africa limited Cell: +254 - 717 - 529 052 Email: [email protected] UGANDA Marketing Africa limited Cell: +254 - 717 - 529 052 Email: [email protected] Marketing Africa Team William Kalombo Dorah Nambwenya Mutua Mutua Stephen Waweru Herman Githinji Evans Majeni Diana Obath Ruth Ruigu Wasilwa Miriongi Felix Okatch Carolyne Gathuru Kepha Nyanumba Jeniffer Mwangangi George Gathu Isaac Ngatia Eugene Wanekeya Catherine Kiiru Boniface Ngahu Tim Oriedo Elissa Moses Caroline Mwazi Ronnie Roberts Dr. Maureen Owiti Dr. Kellen Kiambati Thrity Engineer-Mbuthia Marion Wakahe Frank Maina Tabani Moyo Editorial Contributors Design & Layout Ashdown Limited 11th Flr, Pension Towers, Loita Street. P. O. Box 73414 - 00200 | Nairobi, Kenya. Tel: +254 20 249 0286 | Cell: +254 - 722 - 304 677 Email: [email protected] | Web: www.ashdown.co.ke Feedback/ Comments Email: [email protected] web: www.marketingafrica.com @MarketingAfrica Marketing Africa Marketing Africa Magazine is published by Marketing Africa Limited. Views expressed in the articles and contributions are not neccessarily those of the publisher. The Publisher reserves all rights. Material may only be reproduced with prior arrangement and due acknowledgement to Marketing Africa Magazine 00 MAL 11/16 APRIL ON POLITICAL INSULTS F ew, we believe, miss those bad old days when the mere mention of the president’s name created tension and disquiet. Those were the days when the president was a demi-god and was spoken about in hush tones and furtive looks. Yes, there was a time in Kenya that we had even been told it was a crime to contemplate the death of a president, retrospectively we wonder how such a charge would have been prosecuted and who would have been a witness. Those were the times that walls had ears and an unfortunate criticism of the president would land you an invitation to the dreaded Nyayo house to explain why you were hell bent on spoiling and disparaging our hard earned peace and freedom. People who came out of the Nyayo house experience tended to be become suddenly very quiet and withdrawn from society, no doubt as a show of remorse for their utterances. The unlucky ones landed in detention without trial for unspecified crimes against the state. That was our version of the reign of terror where you could not trust your neighbor because every other person seemed to work for state security. The few we believe miss those days are the cohorts of sadists that enjoyed torturing and maiming fellow citizens in the name of security. It would be wise to remember that those were also the days when the unofficial slogan for Kenya was ‘Kenya, Hakuna Matata’. This was possible because we lived in a police state where all rights were curtailed and freedom of the press was a myth. The only problem with freedom is that our memories are short and we so easily take it for granted when we have it that sometimes we fail to put into place mechanisms to protect it. Our constitution requires it but it is our public conduct that guarantees it. Political contests create heat, frustrations and anger and that is why the drafters of the constitution saw it fit to specify the rules of engagement in the august house to allow the maintenance of decorum in house debates.