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Pallbearers including Kalonzo
Musyoka and President Uhuru Kenyatta carry the casket of the late Prof. George
Saitoti.
Prof. George Saitoti
By JOHN KAMAU
NMG
SEVEN years ago (June 15, 2012), George Saitoti – Kenya’s
most mysterious and excessively paranoid politician – was buried at his
Enkasiti Farm in Kitengela after dying in an air crash six days earlier.
Nobody knows what happened and why a brand new police
helicopter fell from the sky over Ngong Forest – and those who know have kept
their code of silence to date.
In life, and by paranoia standards, Prof Saitoti’s only
equivalent was his erstwhile political mentor Nicholas Biwott, who saw life in
apocalyptic terms, too.
Both were embodiments of the McCarthyism mentality, and
lived in either pseudo or innate fear, real or imagined.
They were not only masters of conspiratorial politics,
but lived in cocoons of distrust and suspiciousness with their own networks of
dystopic characters in both business and politics.
Prof Saitoti always watched his back – or so he thought.
Even as he announced his intention to run for the presidency on Mwai Kibaki’s
PNU ticket, his circle of confidants never widened beyond an arm swing.
ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT
There was a history to that. Ever since he was poisoned
at a Muthaiga restaurant that he frequented — and on the day in 1990 when
Foreign minister Robert Ouko went missing before his body was found — Prof
Saitoti had become an edgy politician, always fearing that someone was out to
kill him.
Those who hobnobbed with him say that Prof Saitoti had
only three trusted security confidantes: Inspector Joshua Tonkei, his personal
assistant, Michael ole Tanju, and a bodyguard named Sultan.
The only other confidant was businessman Jimi Wanjigi,
who was to play a pivotal role in Prof Saitoti’s campaign.
Apart from a single restaurant in Nairobi, Prof Saitoti
would hardly take any food or drinks outside his home.
The only other place was Mr Wanjigi’s private restaurant
at Kwacha House.
My sources say that after the attempt on his life, Prof
Saitoti was wheeled out of Nairobi Hospital to his home where one room was
turned into a ward, and it is only when he required blood transfusion to
clean-up the poison in his system that he would be taken back, under the watch
of a trusted nurse and doctor.
PUBLIC DENIAL
That the near-death of a vice-president through poisoning
was never reported – although it was the subject of bar pep talk — is the
hallmark of state control of information during the Nyayo era.
Those who saw Prof Saitoti say he was in a bad state, at
times unconscious, and that his skin was literally peeling off.
But when he returned after a few months, Prof Saitoti
denied “rumours” that he had been poisoned.
It was only after President Daniel Moi had told a public
meeting that the people who killed Dr Ouko were the same who “poisoned my Vice
President” that the mathematics professor admitted that, indeed, he had been
poisoned.
He would later say that he did not know those who killed
Dr Ouko because he was “was unconscious when Ouko was being killed”.
There was a reason for that. One of his friends, Mohammed
Aslam, had apparently been poisoned after giving crucial evidence to the
commission inquiring into the February 1990 murder of Dr Ouko – a death still
unresolved 29 years later.
GOLDENBERG
Prof Saitoti had known that his poisoning, like that of
Aslam, was a plot to finish him off.
Before he died, Aslam was the chairman of Pan African
Bank and a frequent visitor to Prof Saitoti’s Treasury office.
Here, like many other wheeler-dealers, he would queue to
seek favours as he laid the foundation of the then-Grand Regency Hotel (now
Laico Regency); and he became one of the beneficiaries of the Goldenberg
scandal fortunes where the government paid billions of shillings as
compensation for fictitious exports of gold and diamond.
Unknown to many, and after Aslam’s death, his family
would later sell the hotel project to Uhuru Highway Development Company, whose
chairman was Kamlesh Pattni – the face of the Goldenberg scheme.
Records indicate the project was started in 1985, and the
fully paid-up capital of 2,000 shares was divided between President Moi (800
shares), Aslam (1,020 shares), Chris Kirubi (80 shares), W. Murungi (60 shares)
and G. Lindi (40 shares).
FINANCE MINISTER
By approving the Goldenberg scheme – and playing
Ping-Pong with barons of vice — Prof Saitoti had been initiated into a murky
and frightening world; an underworld that was full of sleaze, skulduggery, and
where only death would extricate him.
As the minister for Finance, Prof Saitoti found himself
at the heart of these intricate transactions; a web that he could never leave
voluntarily.
We now know that four months after he was poisoned – Prof
Saitoti had returned to his Treasury office to prepare his June 1990 budget
speech.
He found that, during his absence, one of the most
powerful schemers of the Nyayo era, Hezekiah Oyugi – by then a permanent
secretary in the Office of the President – had pushed for a gold export
compensation scheme for approval by the Treasury.
Prof Saitoti had apparently been poisoned at a time when
some “gold exporters” were pushing him to allow Arum Limited to receive a
subsidy – or gold and diamond export compensation – in order to compete with
smugglers.
What we don’t know is whether Prof Saitoti had initially
agreed to this scheme, which was first floated to him by his Kajiado South counterpart
John Keen.
COMPLICIT
Shortly after he was poisoned, and as he was recovering
at home, a letter was written to Arum Limited by the Commissioner of Mines and
Geology asking them to await an inter-ministerial decision.
By the time Prof Saitoti returned to read his budget
speech of June 7, 1990, he found that the Export Compensation Scheme was now
part of his projections.
He played ball, like everyone else – perhaps out of fear,
or out of greed. There was little he could do. Later on, he received in his
office Kenya’s most fear-provoking man: James Kanyotu.
Mr Kanyotu, known for his intimidating authority, was not
only the head of Special Branch (now National Intelligence Service) but also a
voracious politico and businessman.
He knew Prof Saitoti was not clean. With him was a young
Indian, Kamlesh Pattni, who had incorporated a new company, Goldenberg
International Limited, and wanted to be granted 35 per cent export compensation
– in line with the budget proposals.
The two had been to State House to lobby for the same,
according to the report of inquiry into the saga.
SOURCE OF WEALTH
Having become a millionaire by assisting the political
and business networks, Prof Saitoti had also become one of the richest men in
Moi’s Cabinet.
That way, he was a trapped man, unable to salvage his
name as one of the architects of the Goldenberg scandal.
Finally, he used the Judiciary to clean him up – and with
that, he thought he would eventually succeed President Moi, when the time came.
It was the merger of Raila Odinga’s National Development
Party and Kanu on March 18, 2002 that signalled to Prof Saitoti that the road
to State House was rough, tortuous and mean.
As he drove towards the Kasarani Gymnasium Stadium that
morning from his Lavington home, Saitoti was confident that he would retain his
seat as Kanu’s vice president.
What he didn’t know was that his fall was choreographed
behind his back at State House by some key Rift Valley elite who he associated
with in the past.
Another person who was to fall with him was Kanu
Secretary-General Joseph Kamotho, whose position was to be taken by Mr Odinga.
The time to cut him to size had come. Why? Nobody knows.
GROOMING UHURU
What Prof Saitoti did not know was that President Moi was
looking elsewhere and secretly he was campaigning for a newcomer, Uhuru
Kenyatta, to take over from him.
He had already appointed Mr Kenyatta as chairman of Kenya
Tourism Board shortly after he had lost the race for Gatundu South
parliamentary seat and in October 2001.
President Moi had forced Mark Too to step down as
nominated MP in favour of Mr Kenyatta. In November 2001, he had been appointed
to the Cabinet.
That day, and as the merger of Mr Odinga’s NDP into Kanu
started, Prof Saitoti was shocked to find that his name was nowhere in the list
of candidates.
He walked over to President Moi and reportedly complained
loudly about his missing name. It was the first time that many of his friends
saw him complain bitterly.
But President Moi dismissed him with: “Kimya (shut up!)
Professor; if your name is not on the list, it is not there.”
Embarrassed, Prof Saitoti returned to his seat, beaten,
dishevelled and politically rained on. His friends still say he was pained.
Up until that morning, Prof Saitoti was campaigning
hoping that he would retain his seat as Kanu’s vice president.
PLANE CRASH
It was then that he took the microphone and made his now
most famous political speech. “I know there are many of you who wanted me to
contest, is that not so?” he asked the delegates.
“There come (sic) a time when the nation is more
important than an individual… but one day I will be proved right.”
His friends believe that the day was to be his
presidential bid – but that ended as he took a flight to Nyanza.
A pathologist, Dr Dorothy Njeru, who examined Prof Saitoti’s
body after the June 2012 crash, told a commission of inquiry led by Justice
Kalpana Rawal that Prof Saitoti may have died from inhaling a poisonous gas
before the helicopter crashed.
What shocked the pathologists was that the six bodies had
“cherry pink” patches, an indicator that the victims inhaled high levels of
carbon monoxide before the crash occurred.
Although Dr Njeru noticed these patches, which she said
were tell-tale signs of poisoning, that was omitted in the final post-mortem
report.
How the poisonous gas found its way into the cabin has
never been known – and remains one of the questions that has never been
answered to date.
STATE OF EMERGENCY
The pathologist told the inquiry that from her
assessment, that may not have been “a normal aviation accident”.
Born of Kikuyu parents, Zacharia Kiarie and Zipporah
Gathoni, he had grown up as George Kinuthia Kiarie in Olkeri, Lower Matasia,
but went through the Maasai initiation rites.
Saitoti’s father had escaped to Maasailand from Dagoretti
at the height of the State of Emergency in the 1950s with many other Kikuyus
escaping the colonial crackdown of Embu, Meru and Kikuyu in Nairobi and Central
Kenya.
Here, he hid among his Maasai relatives and adopted the
name Musengi – taken from the Kikuyu word Muthengi, which means an “immigrant”.
His children, born in the post-emergency era, adopted
Maasai names as they attended local primary schools and became integrated into
the Maasai cultural world.
Disguised as a Maasai herdsboy, Prof Saitoti had entered
Brandeis University in September 1963 through the Wien International
Scholarships to study economics and mathematics after a brilliant performance
at Mangu High School.
For years, this dual identity continued to bother him —
like a child of two worlds.
It was also going to cost him in politics, where tribal
foundation was the basis of political negotiation.
Seven years after his mysterious death, Prof Saitoti’s
life is still shrouded in mystery.
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