Youth Should Oppose Oppressive Laws
The thing about bad laws is that sooner or later, they afflict the lives of the most vulnerable groups in society — youth and women.
In the
past five years, Kenyans have witnessed successive attempts to violate the
prevailing progressive spirit of the Constitution.
This
has been done through the introduction of laws that are subtractive of the
fundamental liberties that we enjoy as citizens.
The
latest of these disastrous laws is the Kenya Film and Classification Board
(KFCB) Draft Bill that was recently withdrawn after a wave of criticism.
The ICT
Practitioners Bill was equally problematic.
Encouragingly,
it was rejected by the government in August this year.
There
are common alarming threads to be noted in these two failed legislations.
First
is that both of them lacked stakeholder participation in their legislative
process.
In both
cases, practitioners complained that they were excluded from the drafting
process.
Film
and theatre practitioners criticised the manner in which the draft law seemed
to have been arrived at — through boardroom meetings.
In a
memorandum presented to Parliament in July, ICT practitioners also complained
that they were not involved in the legislative process.
However,
this was a Private Members Bill and, given the manner of parliamentary
proceedings, public participation was to commence after it had been tabled.
RETROGRESSIVE LAW
Second, both were incongruent with the spirit of the Constitution.
Second, both were incongruent with the spirit of the Constitution.
Article
33 (1) (b) explicitly grants freedom of artistic creativity.
Article
24 is also clear on the manner in which fundamental rights and freedoms might
be limited.
Third,
both documents suppress innovation, entrepreneurship, and the realities of
creative and ICT practice.
KFCB’s
Draft Bill was a backward document that sought to make possible punitive
interventions that would repel practitioners, hence discouraging
entrepreneurship and innovation.
Primarily,
the registration and licensing of practitioners, according to the ICT
Practitioners Bill, would have locked out millions of Kenyans, mostly youth,
from engaging in any kind of ICT work.
With
this juxtaposition in mind, it is important to appreciate that most of the practitioners
in the ICT and creative sector are the youth.
Hence,
more than any other category of citizens, these bad laws would have affected
them.
There
is insufficient articulation of the immediacy with which creative sector and
ICT practitioners should bring to the fore their liberties as prime civic
rights concerns.
For the
government, a policy lacuna always presents an opportunity for the introduction
of broad, repressive laws that contract the civic space.
Unfortunately,
widespread apathy prevents youth from sustained engagement in the country’s
political apparatus and discourse.
Young
people have adopted a discouraging distance that is aloof from human rights
discourse.
COME OUT, ENGAGE
A
disengaged opposition to bad laws that contract the liberties of artists and
ICT professionals through hashtag activism does not substitute real engagement.
The
role of social media in contemporary protests cannot be gainsaid, but if young
people do not physically come out to spaces where critical issues are
articulated, then Facebook and Twitter remain just that — chambers of uproar.
What
social media provides is a platform for reactionary engagement following
prolonged backbench spectatorship to legislation while what is really needed is
active disruptive participation in legislation and governance.
As
practitioners in these two sectors, young people need to own the processes
through which these industries are regulated.
The
articulation of these legislations should be originated and owned by them and
not the government.
Many of
the comments on social media reveal a narrow interpretation of the bad laws,
particularly their chilling effect on the freedom of expression and that of the
media.
Hence
it has not been surprising that certain artists have ill-advisedly kept away
from the KFCB Bill debate as they do not see how it directly affects their
practice.
Young people
need to realize that by concertedly and disruptively opposing such repressive
laws, they are carrying out a significant political role as active citizens.
Bad
laws vitiate the human rights gains secured in progressive legislations like
our Constitution.
Intellectuals
also need to articulate these concerns as issues that must be responded to
seriously to secure freedoms.
This article
was originally published in the Daily Nation (Friday December 9 2016 - http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinion/Youth-should-oppose-oppressive-laws/440808-3479726-ad2ipuz/index.html)
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