April 4, 2026

16 thoughts on “New Book On Kenya 2007 Election Crisis Launched In Stockholm

  1. Osewe,

    You’ve done exemplary work by writing the book and I sincerely wish you Good Luck as you spread the message.

    KSB: Thanks. The big job is just beginning.

  2. Ndugu Osewe: Hongera kwa kuchapisha kitabu cha maana sana katika enzi hii ya mateso kiuchumi nchini Kenya. Nafuatilia vitukio na habari mtandaoni, na nimefurahi kwa kusoma ripoti kwamba kila kitu kilienda salama katika sherehe jumamosi iliopita.

    Zidi kuonyesha ushupavu wako katika mapambano ya kisiasa kuhusu Kenya kwa kuandika ukweli wa mambo. Vita viendelee hadi tujikomboe kutoka vinywani mwa hao viongozi wezi!

    KSB: Asante sana. Lazima tujiunge kwa sabau kazi ya kukomboa inchi ni kazi ya kila mwananchi.

  3. Congrats Bw.osewe.lam really looking 4ward to getting mine and reading it.You told me something some weeks back THAT,KENYANS WE DO HAVE POTENTIAL!and thats so true.Its about going for the goals coz any goal is obtainable.l will kepp in touch to get mine…..all the best….

    KSB: Thanks. Sky is the limit. Let us try to tap into our potential and help build our country even though we are miles away.

  4. I have just returned from Kenya after a long holiday and I can report that things are really bad in our country. There is a lot of poverty and, as usual, when I arrived, I was immediately being viewd as some kind of world Bank or IMF. I did what I could but the bottom line is that our government is a total failure. People are starving to death while poverty is driving people (especially the youth) to crime.

    There is no medicine in hospitals and the Chemists and private Doctors are doing booming business. Chemists are mainly controlled by waindi and I can report that our country is going to the dogs unless something drastic happens.

    Apparently, people had a lot of respect for me just because I live abroad. I had nothing to offer (apart from some few chums here and there) but still, people believed that I could somehow save them from poverty and suffering.

    I was very saddened that well educated youths have no jobs. They are so idle that some friends could afford to take their time to walk around with me in town because in so doing, they were benefitting. They were eating properly and having fun on my pocket and somehow, I could understand the arrangement because I also needed them to get around. I wa not playing big but you know, I had to show that I have been to Sweden. The little I saved for the trip was well used.

    My message to Kenyans in Sweden is this: You are very privileged. How can we use our positions here to make a difference at home. I was so pissed off when every time I got online and had a peep at KSB, Kenyans in Stockholm were pouring filth at one another. There was nothing constructive.

    The only positive thing I can mention and which I experienced at home is the attention home people give to what is happening in Diaspora. In Stockholm, KSB is the place to check and so, let us not liter this place with filth.

    By the way, Osewe’s book is the talk of town and it appears that Osewe may be headed for big stuff. I left my signed copy behind and now, I have to buy a new one. I don’t know about Osewe’s plans but if he can get that book in Kenya, its gonna be a big deal.

    I have read the book and I agree with Dr. Jared that the book is a major contribution by our Osewe. It is a major challenge and source of pride for Kenyans in Stockholm. That someone from our midst could accomplish such a feat should be a good reason for celebration.

    I missed the launch but I take this opportunity to congratulate Mr. Osewe for a work well done. I enjoyed the pleasure when my contacts realized that I know the author who had signed the book. Let us put personal differences behind us and begin to play big because WE CAN!!! change our country!!!

  5. What Osewe has written is now being discussed openly. The American sponsored exit polls by the International Republican Institute had indicated a win by Odinga during the bungled 2007 Presidential election. However, they refused to release this in time, partly leading to the post-election violence. The world must know the truth about Kibaki’s lies.

    When Kibaki claimed victory on Dec. 30, 2007, the State Department quickly congratulated him and called on Kenyans to accept the outcome, even though observers had reported instances of serious fraud. U.S. officials backed away from their endorsement the next day and ultimately pushed the deal that made Odinga prime minister.

    After insisting for months that the poll was flawed, the institute released it in August – long past the point of diplomatic impact – after outside experts whom it had hired determined that it was valid. It showed Kibaki losing by about six percentage points.

    Odinga was viewed skeptically by some in Washington because of his flamboyant manner and his background: He was educated in East Germany and named his son after Fidel Castro.

    In February, with Kibaki resisting calls to share power, the leaders of two Kenyan human rights groups wrote an opinion article for The Times, saying the refusal to release the poll had “fueled mistrust.” After the poll was mentioned during a Senate hearing, the institute stepped up its public criticism of the poll, saying it “does not have confidence in the integrity of the data and therefore believes the poll is invalid.”

    For Odinga, bitterness lingers. He declined to sign a letter the institute drafted that amounted to an endorsement of its conduct. He wrote instead that while he appreciated the institute’s past work, “the 2007 experience has cast some doubts among ordinary Kenyans.”

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/01/30/africa/kenya.4-419736.php

    KSB: As you might have noticed, a whole chapter in the book is dedicated to exploring why American imperialism decided to support Kibaki after election rigging. You are one commentator who has shown objectivity here. Keep it up!

  6. Thura, you have now proved to yourself that are an authority. You can use the power of the pen to inform, educate, direct, sculpture, entertain name it! You could also manipulate your pen to degrade, dehumanise, or diminish people you have it all!
    I am proud of Kenyans who sacrifice their energies for worthwile achievements. And please, do not stop there, I am sure your second book is on the way and will also be such a read. You see you are not to be told you have potential. You have already done it, so just carry on so that our youngstars can emulate you constructively.
    We need real role models here. You have encouraged yourself I just hope you hit the roof brotherman!!
    CONGRATS A MAJOR ONE!!!!!!!

    KSB: Nice words Jackie and thanks. Kenya is our country and changes come through generations. It is time our generation took up its historical responsibility. I hope that my work will inspire Kenyans to get even more serious with the agenda of liberating our country.

  7. Osewe you have shown Kenyans that YOU CAN!! Hongera Osewe. Congrants ndugu.

    KSB: Asante Mzee. We keep up the spirit.

  8. Bwana Osewe!
    Congratulation for walking the talk “YES WE CAN” you are an inspiration to many keep it up.
    Hope the leaders at home will read your book and try to make the difference coz together we stand and divided we fall.

    KSB: Thanks Margaret. We no longer have to believe that change will come. We are the change we are waiting for!

  9. Osewe has done a great job by documenting and analyzing the failed 2007 presidential election in Kenya. I like his position and book title that perceives Kibaki as a thief who stole Raila’s victory. It’s important to have a position in weighty issues such as this.

    There have been numerous articles on the matter but Osewe has written the first book. This means that future writings will refer to his work, making it the “bible” of the subject.

    Thumbs up to Osewe!

    KSB: Thanks. I hope that my work will inspire other Kenyans esp the “Uhuru generation” where I belong. We need to stop payukaring and contribute to the struggle in our country. We all have potential and the question is whether you know where you are standing in the struggle as Bob Marley says in his song “So much things to say”.

  10. WELL DONE OSEWE.Your contribution will not be invain,you have opened my eyes.God bless you.

    KSB: Thanks and welcome. Let us unite to address the crisis eating our country.

  11. I have just gone thru the ”fat cats who kidnapped Kibaki’s Presidency” and now, I understand the real Osewe. Thanks for this book. I agree with others who have said that the book it is well written. It answers 98% of my questions about election rigging, from the background to the actual stealing. You are a writer bwana Osewe and please, continue and give us even more. Kenya needs people like you. The insight you give on Kenyan politics is rare among Kenyan writers. I notice that you never left your ideology behind especially in the analysis.

    KSB: Thanks. The book is a kinda kionjo of things to come.

  12. Standard on Sunday: You cast the image of the Kibaki regime as incurably corrupt at the top but he still won a second term. How do you feel about his return and do you see any difference between his first term and the first year of his second term?

    John Githongo:I don’t think the second term was won. The 2007 election was stolen in broad daylight. I acknowledge from the evidence that has emerged that there were electoral malpractices on both sides but ultimately the presidential poll was illegitimate.

    The Electoral Commission, the National Intelligence Security Service, provincial administration and a wide range of agencies and individuals have specific questions to answer about what happened. This current presidential term is therefore hobbled.

    Coalitions are difficult to manage at the best of times but in our low trust environment, it is particularly challenging. We are thus in a situation of policy paralysis with a lot of plans being articulated but not much being done to implement them.

    There is not much happening in terms of reform. There are those in fact who argue that corruption is the glue holding together the coalition since it is clear its not any reform programme, ideological platform or shared values; that the kind of free-for-all ‘graft’ that is being reported about is, what keeps everyone at the feeding trough. That, this is honey badger season and all the badgers have their snouts in the honey…

    http://www.eastandard.net/InsidePage.php?id=1144006120&cid=4&ttl=Githongo:%20Kibaki%20lacks%20the%20will%20and%20Raila’s%20hands%20tied%20behind%20his%20back

  13. John, thanks for this link. I have been going through Osewe’s book and I have to accept that he has captured this theft in a way that I never imagined. The book raises very thorny issues about politicians in Kenya and the relationship between Kenya and “Imperialist powers”. I can report that this book is not just about a stolen presidency. It touches on things which, I think, will surprise some Kenyans. Pongezi bwana Osewe and keep up the spirit.

    KSB: Thanks Omunene. The main issues have to be understood if we are to liberate our country. We have both internal and external enemies of the Nation.

  14. But even the world’s leaders will be bowing and scraping to get Obama’s favour. He doesn’t even have to oblige a sitting president stopping down in Chicago to offer respect (and hoped-for approval).

    African leaders are trembling at the thought of his “advice” to clean up their act. What would a phone call by Barack Obama to a few southern African leaders do to the negotiations in Zimbabwe? My guess: Robert Mugabe isn’t sleeping well.

    And how about the Kikuyu president of Kenya who stole the election from, yes, a Luo no less, a few years ago? The Luo is now prime minister — and a half-Luo, Obama, is president of the United States. That Kikuyu isn’t stealing anything next time.

    http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Sunday/Columns/2466706/Article/index_html

  15. A brilliant student at the London School of Economics, Kibaki entered Kenya’s first post-independence government in 1963.

    Six years later he stood in Nairobi’s Bahati constituency against Jael Mbogo, the popular head of Kenya’s biggest women’s association. He won by a wafer-thin margin in remarkably similar circumstances to December’s 2007 election; behind in the early tallying, the verdict was delayed for days and a crack squad of police officers (GSU) swarmed around the vote-counting centre when the result was announced.

    “I was so far ahead in early vote counting that even the BBC even reported that a young woman had felled a government minister,” Mbogo, now a civil society activist in Nairobi, told The Observer.

    “Kibaki stalled the result, and then robbed me of victory. Because he looks so holy, people are still asking if he really was capable of stealing this election. What I say is “Of course, he has done it before”.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/03/kenya.xanrice

  16. Gentlemen,

    Where is the debate? we need to start thinking about 2012 before Kalonzo takes the sportlight. Sure, he was never my man.

Leave a Reply to CaroCancel reply

Discover more from KENYA STOCKHOLM BLOG

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading