Kenya is ranked among the world's 20 most unstable countries in
an annual "failed-state index" published on Monday by a Washington think
tank and an online international affairs journal.
"I support the rankings since Kenya is still divided in tribal lines,corruption is rampant,insecurity allover and the most crucial part is land reform necessary to wipe out historical injustices are not yet been implemented."
"I support the rankings since Kenya is still divided in tribal lines,corruption is rampant,insecurity allover and the most crucial part is land reform necessary to wipe out historical injustices are not yet been implemented."
Successful efforts to prevent a repeat of the post-election violence of five years ago did not impress the analysts at the Fund for Peace and Foreign Policy magazine.
"The elections, thankfully, were relatively
peaceful," acknowledges the brief entry on Kenya, which is listed in
17th place on the index -- one spot better than in 2012.
"But, as the International Crisis Group writes,"
the Kenya commentary continues, "'the conflict drivers that triggered
the 2007 bloodshed, including a culture of impunity, land grievances,
corruption, ethnic tensions, weak institutions and regional and
socio-economic inequality, have yet to be addressed adequately.'"
The index annually receives a significant amount of global media attention.
Critics say its rankings are arbitrary, in that comparative degrees of instability cannot be measured scientifically.
The index's sponsors point to their use of
specialised software and "sophisticated search parameters and
algorithms" that produce numerical scores for social, economic and
political indicators for 178 countries.
The index compilers may also be vulnerable to
charges of prejudice since black African countries -- Somalia,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan, South Sudan and Chad -- account for
the five worst cases of state failure.
Despite military and political gains made against
insurgents, "Somalia has the dubious honour of being the world’s No 1
failed state for the sixth straight year," says an introduction to the
index.
Kenya is ranked one spot above Nigeria and just below Niger.
Uganda is placed in the 22nd position, while
Tanzania is listed 65th, which is said to make it slightly more stable
than both Israel and China.
Finland, Sweden and Norway are deemed the world's three most stable states.
That suggests the index may have poor predictive capacities, since Sweden was shaken last month by widespread rioting.
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