I wasn't alive during the 82' coup so all I know about it is what I learnt in school and what I've been told by my parents and have seen for myself on documentaries on KBC
What I do know is that it was a defining moment of Kenyan history. My parents tell me stories of driving in town at a snails pace holding their IDs out in the air through the car windows to avoid being shot by the military. We have lived in Langata most of my life, right next to the Barracks housing the "Maroon Commandos"the army unit that is said to have done the most to crush the Coup
My father can name at least 4 Airmen from our village who were killed during the coup, he says that although the period leading up to the coup was filled with fear and mistrust, nothing could prepare Kenyans for what was to come
He says that before the Coup, the prevailing conditions were ripe for revolution. The dreaded Special Branch listened in to any conversations in the streets, in Bars, Churches, in fact in any large social gathering and arrested people on such frivolous charges as imagining the death of the president
The coup was bound to happen, according to him, but the dead bodies of airmen that littered the streets of Nairobi were not worth it.
Apparently most people at the time thought that Raila was being punished by the Government for the sins of his father, Jaramogi. The "revelations" in his book RAILA ODINGA:AN ENIGMA IN KENYAN POLITICS prove otherwise
For Mr Odinga to associate himself with this part of Kenyas history this close to what is likely to be a hotly contested election is quite frankly in my view irresponsible .It may be an amazing marketing tool for his new autobiography but it is not what we expect from a possible contender for the post of President
It makes me think about what will happen after the election, given his "alleged" track record of subversive activity
I will try to read the book as he suggests, but the look in my fathers eyes when he talks about the coup is the strongest testimont to the fact that it should never happen again, no matter the motivation
rK
Tuesday, July 18, 2006
IPO
An initial public offering (IPO) is the first sale of a corporation's common shares to public investors. The main purpose of an IPO is to raise capital for the corporation. While IPOs are effective at raising capital, they also impose heavy legal compliance and reporting requirements. The term only refers to the first public issuance of a company's shares; any later public issuance of shares is referred to as a Secondary Market Offering.
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