Examining Leaderships Impact on Society
Written by Black Hot Fire Network Team on January 25, 2026
Recent comments by former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua regarding the underdevelopment of Northern Kenya have sparked considerable debate and criticism. His remarks, attributing the region’s challenges to poor leadership and corruption, have been perceived by many as dismissive of historical injustices.
Historical Context of Marginalization
For decades, Northern Kenya faced deliberate exclusion from national development planning and was denied crucial infrastructure investments. The region was often treated as a security frontier rather than a development priority. Climate shocks, insecurity, and vast geographic distances have further exacerbated these challenges, shaping current outcomes.
Contemporary Leadership and Governance
While acknowledging historical injustices is important, contemporary governance failures also contribute to the region’s underdevelopment. Devolution, intended to empower local communities, has in many instances resulted in corruption, elite capture, stalled projects, and inadequate service delivery. Auditor reports consistently highlight mismanagement of funds and missed opportunities, despite ongoing poverty.
Political Culture and Clan-Based Politics
A significant factor hindering progress is the region’s political culture, which has historically prioritized clan-based calculations over merit, vision, or integrity. Elections are frequently viewed as ethnic contests, where loyalty supersedes competence. Campaign bribery and short-term inducements have replaced substantive discussions on policy and accountability.
Accountability and Collective Voice
The defense of corrupt or ineffective leaders based solely on clan identity undermines accountability and rationalizes poor performance. This internal fragmentation weakens the region’s collective voice nationally, as leaders focus on local maneuvering rather than advancing shared regional interests.
Pathways to Transformation
Addressing Northern Kenya’s underdevelopment requires acknowledging the interplay between external neglect and internal factors, sustained by a political culture that rewards mediocrity. Progress necessitates a dual shift: leaders prioritizing service over self-interest and citizens voting with conscience and ethics rather than clan affiliation or inducements.
Role of Community Stakeholders
Religious leaders, elders, youth, women, civil society, and the media have a crucial role to play in reshaping norms, rejecting corruption, and restoring moral clarity to politics. Northern Kenya’s future depends on truth and a willingness to address both leadership and societal shortcomings. Only through simultaneous changes in leadership and societal values can the region realize its potential.