It's Our Turn to Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistle-Blower

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By: Michela Wrong
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EDITORIAL REVIEW



In January 2003, Kenya—seen as the most stable country in Africa—was hailed as a model of democracy after the peaceful election of its new president, Mwai Kibaki. By appointing respected longtime reformer John Githongo as anticorruption czar, the new Kikuyu government signaled its determination to end the corrupt practices that had tainted the previous regime. Yet only two years later, Githongo himself was on the run, having discovered that the new administration was ruthlessly pillaging public funds.



"Under former President Moi, his Kalenjin tribesmen ate. Now it's our turn to eat," politicians and civil servants close to the president told Githongo. As a member of the government and the president's own Kikuyu tribe, Githongo was expected to cooperate. But he refused to be bound by ethnic loyalty. Githongo had secretly compiled evidence of official malfeasance and, at great personal risk, made the painful choice to go public. The result was Kenya's version of Watergate.



Michela Wrong's account of how a pillar of the establishment turned whistle-blower, becoming simultaneously one of the most hated and admired men in Kenya, grips like a political thriller. At the same time, by exploring the factors that continue to blight Africa—ethnic favoritism, government corruption, and the smug complacency of Western donor nations—It's Our Turn to Eat probes the very roots of the continent's predicament. It is a story that no one concerned with our global future can afford to miss.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Harper
Pub. Date: 16th June 2009
Catalog: Book
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 368
Ean: 9780061346583
Isbn: 0061346586

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

I Was In Nairobi For Ten Days And Saw People Not Animals
~ Written on Nov 22, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

I wish I had read the book before I went there. Corruption takes 1/3 of a Kenyan's income but it is not clear how much they pay in taxes. 40% of OUR taxes go to pay for the national debt. How much better off are we? If China dumps dollars and/or oil producers go off the dollar, what will happen to us?
Kenyans know how to live poor and we are spoiled but they have a tendency to chop people up when they are vexed while our poor people break into liquor stores. I felt that I was seeing our future in Nairobi but the the book outlines a level of corruption that is just as clumsy done as in America.
Stealing through the political process is accepted by them and Americans because we root for political parties as they root for their tribe. Health care and war may tip over our country? It won't be able to be put upright as we begin to decay like Kenya? We have had our turn to eat?
You say that it can't happen? Think Rome and Mexicans.

Outstanding - a must read for anyone interested in African politics
~ Written on Sep 14, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

Michela Wrong's third and latest book is an outstanding read. Having been the FT correspondent in Kenya for several years, Wrong has an excellent grasp of Kenya's history and contemporary political scene and it shows in her writing and analysis. Corruption is often lamented by commentators the world over and it usually just leads to people shrugging as though there is nothing they can do about it. This story explains what happens to one man who decided to try to do something about it and paid heavily for his courage. Yet Wrong explains just how complicit the international donor agencies were in the Kenyan debacle, to the extent that the World Bank tried to downplay the violence that followed the last election. There is something that ordinary westerners can do about the corruption in African countries - put pressure on their own donor agencies to stop funneling more and more taxpayers money into the corrupt governments. These funds become the life blood of corrupt regimes and allows them to continue to repress their own people.

This book helps us understand Kenya, corruption, development or lack thereof. It is a gripping read and highly recommended. Not for nothing the Kenyan govt. has tried to suppress it and almost every Kenyan I have spoken to is desperate to get a copy.

All You Can Eat
~ Written on Sep 9, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

It's Our Turn to Eat is a real-life political thriller that lifts the curtain on the inner workings of an African government.

And where else do you get that? Most books by outsiders about Africa - the ones you see on the bestseller lists - trade in cliches and stereotypes. They divide the continent into innocent victims and venal dictators. At one extreme you get books that could be titled: "My Adventures in ..." (fill in the war-torn country). At the other, you get dry textbooks by people who spent years researching their subject but don't know how to tell a story.

This book is far smarter. It doesn't aim for an everything-you-need-to-know-about-Africa view of the continent. Instead it says more by saying less, focusing on the story of how John Githongo became a whistle blower at the heart of Kenya's government, why he blew the whistle and what happened next.

Githongo comes across as a visionary but if he's a saint he's a 21st century kind of saint. He makes silly decisions as well as brave ones. He infuriates his friends by constantly skipping appointments. He might have a true moral compass but by the end of the book it's not clear how he's going to get there and even he doesn't seem to know. In other words, he's a rich, rounded character: not a cliche, not a stereotype.

One other thing to like about the book: it has cool enemies. Michela Wrong shares Githongo's view of corruption and she writes with controlled outrage.

Yet the villains of the story aren't so much the looters themselves. They're the army of donors and diplomats who have invested so much in the status quo they can't really imagine Kenya - and by extension Africa - being any different. And she nails them: certain senior diplomats and aid donors will not enjoy this book.

But you will.

A wake up call for the west
~ Written on Aug 26, 2009. 3 out of 3 users found this review helpful.

It's not clear to me why other reviewers persistently recharacterize one of this book's strongest points as a negative. The author has brought to bear her considerable experience with the country, region, culture, and political landscape to tell a story that has long needed telling about Africa's failure to come to grips with the tyranny of corruption. As long as donor nations continue to fund the kleptocracies that exist only to serve and perpetuate themselves, we in the west will continue to be played for fools.

I found this to be a strong and engaging account of one of the more intractable problems I've run into. I wish it had left me feeling hopeful, but it was far too consistent with my own experience to permit such self-delusion. Instead, it left me filled with admiration for a hero who, thanks to the author's incorporation of her personal experience, can be seen as a human and not as the caricature that time will eventually make of him. I also appreciate the historical and political canvass she offered to illuminate just how audacious his actions were.

Yes, the book does have the occasional hyphen, but the prose is never dull and the account moves very briskly. I found the style refreshing and enjoyed reading a treatment that mixed the personal with the historical with the social with the legal with a touch of suspense in a package that showed some respect for the reader who is hoping for something more considered than what might be offered from the Live Aid stage.

A must read for any African head of state or dictator
~ Written on Aug 25, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

The book "It's Our Turn To Eat" does not only provide ample examples on how the Kenyans successfully has pilfered and looted their country throughout the years, the book also list some highly innovative ideas on how to get rid of opponents, silence critics or drive potential whistleblowers into exile. Ideas and techniques that surely will come out fresh and handy even for the most experienced dictator. Written in an eloquent and pedagogical language, this book is a must read for any African head of state keen on getting his hands on the very latest research on how to boost his own personal Swiss bank account by yet again screwing his own people - highly recommended!

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