So no feasiability study on the availability of water was done before embarking on this massive fraud?
If I recall correctly, there were supposed to be some irrigation works. And, in general, a place like Kenya, where poor rains always lead to starvation, needs to have some serious irrigation thing going. And?
Take a look at how much has been spent on arming toddlers with tablets containing .pdf files and how much has been spent in the same period on irrigation for the
entire country. Priorities. Popular gimmicks vs. substance.
Almost a year ago, Uhuru at his inauguration stated that:
78. The recent prolonged drought has taught us some painful and expensive lessons. We must completely re-engineer our agricultural sector in order to be food secure. Never again should we allow the vagaries of weather to hold us hostage.
https://www.nation.co.ke/news/Uhuru-Kenyatta-inauguration-speech-/1056-4206194-t1nh18/index.htmlPainful and expensive. The same lessons how many times? So, what have we seen by way of even the slightest signs of the "re-engineering"? How we plan to escape the vagaries of weather? Oh ... wait a minute! This is now a Big 4, so there. "
Mzungu, come quick and help" is for later.
I used to wonder about the thinking processes of these guys. These days I wonder if they think at all. Manufacturing is another of the Big 4. At the same speech cited above, Uhuru had this to say:
72. Over my term, we will grow and sustain this manufacturing sector, and raise its share of the national cake from 9 to 15 percent.
According to his website (State House) he is even more ambitious today: 20% by 2022. And how does he plan to do what has been near-impossible for decades? He had an answer in the same speech:
73. To achieve this leap, I have directed that with effect from 1st December 2017, the power tariffs charged to manufacturers will be reduced by 50 per cent between the hours of 10:00pm and 6:00am. This in line with our policy of a 24-hour economy.
That's it, according to the man. All just a matter of power tariffs. If he has any other plans for how to achieve that "leap" (and the new-and-improved bigger one), he is certainly not sharing them with anyone else, which seems unhelpful. So guess where manufacturing will be in 2022.
Still, in the Kenyan context, there is something positive about the new Big 4: the Eating Field has been reduced from the huge and amorphous Vision Thing.