US-based Kenyan lawyer Prof. Makau Mutua has hit out at Kenyans at home for treating their compatriots in the diaspora with contempt.
In an opinion piece published in Sunday Nation, Mutua reckons that Kenyans in Kenya loathe fellow citizens living abroad but love their money.
The 61-year-old scholar argues that it is the other way round for Kenyans abroad, who according to him love their country and their people back home.
“Kenyans in Kenya have a love-hate relationship with the Kenyan diaspora, especially those with dual citizenship,” Mutua begins by saying.
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“Ironically, Kenyans in the diaspora have nothing but love for the country, and their kith and kin back home. It’s a puzzling one-way relationship – Kenyans at home hate us, but we love them. Sadly, our love is unrequited. It’s like that girl you’ve courted all your life although she wouldn’t look your way, or give you the time of day,” he adds.
But Kenyans in Kenya do not hate everything about their compatriots in the diaspora, they love their money, they see dollars in them, according to Mutua.
“Every time they see us, they look past our humanity and only see dollar signs,” notes Mutua.
He goes ahead to demonstrate how the Kenyan supreme law provides for the treatment of Kenyans abroad, especially dual citizenship holders, as second-rate citizens.
“Most unacceptably, it [the Constitution] prohibits diaspora Kenyans with dual citizenship from holding certain elective and appointive offices. This is egregious and intolerable,” he explains.
Mutua pokes holes at MPs’ decision to compel President Uhuru’s nominee for Kenya’s High Commissioner in South Korea, Mwende Mwinzi to renounce her US citizenship.
He gives a detailed account of who Ms. Mwende is and why she deserves the position without being forced to relinquish her American passport.
Here is Mutua’s full opinion piece in Sunday Nation.
Kenyans in Kenya have a love-hate relationship with the Kenyan diaspora, especially those with dual citizenship.
Let me be clear – there’s more hate than love. Ironically, Kenyans in the diaspora have nothing but love for the country, and their kith and kin back home. It’s a puzzling one-way relationship – Kenyans at home hate us, but we love them.
Sadly, our love is unrequited. It’s like that girl you’ve courted all your life although she wouldn’t look your way, or give you the time of day. Let me revise this unequivocal statement.
Kenyans at home don’t hate everything about us. They love our money. Every time they see us, they look past our humanity and only see dollar signs.
Let’s dig deeper. Discrimination against Kenyans in the diaspora was legalised by the 2010 Constitution and codified in law. The Constitution doesn’t even pretend that diaspora Kenyans are second-class citizens. It provides for their second-class citizenship in black and white.
Most unacceptably, it prohibits diaspora Kenyans with dual citizenship from holding certain elective and appointive offices. This is egregious and intolerable.
MWENDE MWINZI
The matter has been brought to the fore by the legislature’s bull-headed refusal to clear Mwende Mwinzi, a Kenyan born in the US of a white American mother and a black Kenyan father.
Those who know Ms Mwinzi know that there’s no person who’s more Kenyan than her. She takes a back-seat to no one in her Kenyan-ness.
Let me tell you about Ms Mwinzi. Her mother, Mary Mwinzi, and her father, Maluki Mwinzi, were my teachers. The two were the best teachers I’ve ever had. I babysat Mwende as a kid. Her parents met in America when Mr Mwinzi was in college.
After Ms Mwinzi (Mwende) was born, the family moved to Kenya to build the young country rather than take the easy way out in America. They raised their children in Kenya. Her late father loved Kenya with every fibre of his body. Her mom is a bona fide Kenyaphile.
That’s why Ms Mwinzi (Mwende) speaks impeccable Kikamba. Far much better than me. The parents toiled all their lives for Kenya and its people.
Mr and Mrs Mwinzi never took a single shilling from public coffers, or acquired anything corruptly. Mwende, like her parents, has invested her resources from the United States in Kenya. She’s decided to uplift Mwingi, one of the most challenged regions in Kitui.
Who doesn’t know she single-handedly founded Twana Twitu, the charity that works to provide basic services for Aids orphans?
Like her parents, she’s given to Kenya more than it’s given her. How can she be a second-class citizen with this stellar biography? She didn’t choose to be born in America to a Kenyan father. It’s cruel to deny her the opportunity to serve Kenya in South Korea as Kenya’s ambassador.
Like Ms Mwinzi, most Kenyans make their money in the diaspora the old-fashioned way – they earn it by the brow of their sweat.
While she held comfortable jobs, many Kenyans flip hamburgers or do more menial jobs like nurse’s aides to make ends meet. They save and send money home to invest and help relatives and friends. The vast majority are honest hardworking people just trying to raise their families.
REMITTANCES
In case you don’t know, Kenyans in the diaspora remit more to the country than it gets from selling coffee, tea, or tourism. In 2018, Kenyan diasporans remitted $2.47 billion or Sh247 billion. More than 45 per cent or Sh111 billion of that amount came from the US and Canada. Diasporan remittances is the largest source of foreign exchange in Kenya.
In Africa, Kenyan diasporans rank third in remittances. Kenyans in the diaspora are a critical constituency for the country’s economy.
During every election cycle, candidates for high office come calling on Kenyans to raise campaign funds, generate buzz, and seek votes. But then they forget us after the elections. This duplicity and hypocrisy must end. You can’t continue to love our money and votes and hate us.
The Building Bridges Initiative must remove the constitutional and legal barriers and prohibitions that make dual citizens second class citizens.
That’s one of the ironclad conditions that diasporans must set to support BBI. Learn from Israel that fully embraces its dual citizens.
The people from whom I come – the Akamba – predate the Kenyan state, a creature of the British imperialists. It’s unfathomable that an imposed state can then declare me – a true son of the soil – a second-class citizen by virtue of my domiciliary in a different country.
It shouldn’t matter how and why we went abroad, or where we were born – as long as we are Kenyan by birth. Disenfranchising us only hurts Kenya, and prevents it from benefitting from our expertise and treasure.
Most of those who’ve looted and pillaged Kenya don’t have dual citizenship. I agree not all diasporans are clean. But full citizenship is their right.
Me think if we diaspora come…
Me think if we diaspora come together we can build our county in Kenya ..called diaspora county..corrupt free with all the amenities and infrastructure one month remittance if channeled..oncest o a common cause can buy some idle land..investment ianze..iwe kama show ground on how simple gvt can run manage resources. ..vile tuko na kileleshwa..buruburu..Umoja…pia tuwe na yetu I call it plus 1 for USA…PIA ZINGINE ZIFUATE
A good example are the…
A good example are the divided Mulembe nation (Subtribalists) in Huston, TX that failed dismally (to unite) it’s people in the name of “Bosi”. Instead they became con-artists in the name of owning Group homes “to help Western Kenya people back home”, manipulating their WhatsApp groups, fakking Adopt-a- Polling Station (2017) and pocketted donated money, questionable Mashujaa “Awards”, jealousy, envy, and destruction of other Mulembe people’s marriages. Takataka hawa waKenya majuus.
ARe you one of those idots…
ARe you one of those idots wanashindwa na kazi ya bedorook
@Mhalisi -where art thou? ha…
@Mhalisi -where art thou? ha ha hah . “Let me be clear – there’s more hate than love. Ironically, Kenyans in the diaspora have nothing but love for the country, and their kith and kin back home. It’s a puzzling one-way relationship – Kenyans at home hate us, but we love them”
I concur with you Professor…
I concur with you Professor Mutua. Let them also be reminded that due to that, more Kenyans in the diaspora have decided or are about to decide to start investing and building where they live, a place where there kids call home not our mother land Kenya anymore.
It’s the truth?….and it…
It’s the truth?….and it hurts?
A very tribal nepotistic…
A very tribal nepotistic rant.
Miguna Miguna was born in Kenya.
Start with,
Miguna who was born in Kenya, then you can talk of Mwende Mwinzi who was born in the US.
Not really. I’m no fan of…
Not really. I’m no fan of Migunax2 but his treatment by GoK pretty much lines up with the author’s contention about diasporans. Just because he is a naturalized Canadian does not mean he is not a true Kenyan but that is precisely the government’s stance.
Miguna has never killed…
Miguna has never killed anybody in Kenya or anyone in the Kenyan government.
And he has never stolen public funds.
FYI: A government is an institution not a person. It’s devoid of feelings. Government employees should take note of this.
…Makau Mutua has no point. She was born in the US, not Kenya.
I think you might have…
I think you might have missed my point which is a dual citizen in Kenya is regarded as suspicious no matter where born or how they conduct themselves-the biggest crooks don’t have dual citizenship but are heading government and assorted parastatals. Did Mwende kill someone and does it not actually speak to her dedication to Kenya that she didn’t take the easy way out but stayed in a country that shows madharau to the likes of us? As I said I’m not a Miguna fan but his treatment was wrong and his citizenship is irrevocable as far as I’m concerned
I think you might have…
I think you might have missed my point which is a dual citizen in Kenya is regarded as suspicious no matter where born or how they conduct themselves-the biggest crooks don’t have dual citizenship but are heading government and assorted parastatals. Did Mwende kill someone and does it not actually speak to her dedication to Kenya that she didn’t take the easy way out but stayed in a country that shows madharau to the likes of us? As I said I’m not a Miguna fan but his treatment was wrong and his citizenship is irrevocable as far as I’m concerned
I don’t think that there is…
I don’t think that there is a Kenyan State, or Government job offer that is worth renouncing US Citizenship. It is like forgoing an opportunity to make an honest Shs 100, so that you can work twice as hard, to make Shs 10, and have an opportunity to steal another Shs 10. It is not worth it.
if the United States…
if the United States declared war on Kenya, where would her loyalty lie …as a dual citizen of Kenya and the US? The Kenya parliament is ? correct in this one!!
So so true Prof. All they …
So so true Prof. All they (Kenyans at home) want from their relatives in the US is $$$..
This is a githeri of issues…
This is a githeri of issues. Which issue do you want to tackle first? The relationship between diasporians and those back home or this multiple citizen ambassadorship issue.
I wouldn’t deem it fair to accept this position, especially in the current political climate, unless I can give up the US passport. S.Korea isn’t a place you want to put a non-committal ambassador, especially one with ties to the US and its current unpredictable leadership.
I don’t understand where the huge confusion is, either, because it’s quite simple. The US government DOESN’T recognize dual citizens. If she’s in S. Korea, she is simply a US citizen and subject to all the rules and commands of the US law. It doesn’t matter how much she loves Kenya, while in South Korea, as long as she carries a US passport, she’s a US citizen, she will have to do the bidding of the US, if it’s required of her, whether she wants to or not. Kenya can claim her all it wants, but the US doesn’t care. She has sworn her allegiance to the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and to the REPUBLIC for WHICH it STAND and is unwilling to let that go. The embassy space is considered as Kenyan space. In essence, Kenya would have an American as its representive in S. Korea, with keys to every Kenyan room, drawer and store. That’s not to be taken lightly.
If she’s unwilling to giving up her allegiance to the US now, do you think she’ll do it when it comes to either proof your loyalty or we will cancel your citizenship?
My question is, what’s she really after? What’s her true motivation? It’s definitely not for the love of Kenya, because she’d have proved it quite easily by now.
No nation on this earth, would allow a dual citizen to be its ambassador in a foreign state. That’s just unwise…
I don’t know her and I’m sure she’s a very nice person but her actions lack patriotism, in every sense of the word.
Let’s be wise!!
The fact that I also hold…
The fact that I also hold Kenyan citizenship does not exclude me from any post in the US government other than president. I am a Kenyan who loves Kenya and I can tell you, it is far more lucrative, cheaper and easier for me to invest in other places in the world than it is for me to put my money in Kenya as I am doing now. There might come a point when I just decide to invest in those other places if my own homeland won’t have me.
Obama’s father was a Kenyan…
Obama’s father was a Kenyan.
There is a difference between being born in Kenya and born in America.
U.S govt doesnt recognize…
U.S govt doesnt recognize dual citizenship but recognizes dual nationality . I.e you can hold multiple passports but you cannot vote or participate in the electoral process of other countries if you do so in the states. You’d have to choose.
That is not true!! We vote…
That is not true!! We vote in all countries we are citizens.US Supreme Court reversed that in 1990…
It’s true the government…
It’s true the government doesn’t recognize the diaspora people….we are treated like second class….but our contribution to nation is.paramount,actually we do great things than the people in positions on the government……Therefore let Bob look into the the following
issues
1.doulcitizenship
Switch Mwende Mwinzi with…
Switch Mwende Mwinzi with Obama and they would have started “Obama Tosha” petition to change the constitution to allow him to vie for President.
M.M article is confusing as…
M.M article is confusing as hell. Read the article but couldn’t understand the main idea. MM is all over the place, mixing apples and oranges. MM seems to have written the article based on an issue he knows personally or privy about. I wonder if his article is based on a sample and if so, what was the sample size # and geographycal area so we can understand otherwise his assumption is ass good as mine that the world is flat!!!
Some of us here in Kenya in…
Some of us here in Kenya in truth love our people in diaspora beyond the ??? etc
The only thing we hate is the fact that you have to be away.
Makau Mutua is often guilty of taking strong positions based on assumptions and generalizations which is in itself is an affront to the tenets of scholarship.
If his people are ticks, let it remain his people, not every other Kenya.
What decent Kenyans hate such condescending attitudes from shallow minded disporans who believe they have solutions to every Kenyan problem.
100% of those hating on…
100% of those hating on Mwende in this comments section are who Makau Mutua is talking about…..beneficiaries of diasporan remittances directly or indirectly but still hate the diasporan.
Hating because you’re not and cannot vs appreciating he/ she who can and is.
Until they fix what they did…
Until they fix what they did to Miguna Miguna.
Every other argument about Mwende Mwinzi is null and void.
Her nomination is a symbol of impunity and the people supporting her like Makau Mutua are exposing their hypocrisy since it seems he Accepts impunity when it favors him.
K.K. aka Kenyan kenyans can…
K.K. aka Kenyan kenyans can hate all they want.Eyes of a frog don’t stop cows from drinking water!wacha waongee,President Kibaki told us loud mouths aka empty debes can continue yapping.We are dual citizens and proud of it.
And dual citizens stop…
And dual citizens stop lamenting,let us withhold remmitances for 3 months and we will get our respect from Kenya Shilling.
Dual citizenship is…
Dual citizenship is important for a country. chinese,japaneses, Indians and others are doing it,why not us