@Simonkabz
In other words, Obama will need his kenyan birth cert or what?
The question to ask, perhaps, is who benefits from attempting to keep the Kenyan voters from the polls on August 4.
New constitution will upend the status quoThe draft before the voters would restrict sweeping presidential powers, strengthen the courts system, and overhaul policies seen as protecting powerful politicians alleged to have stolen vast tracts of land. So, a firm approval for the constitution, which would be enacted within a week of a 'Yes' result, would immediately begin the work of undoing decades of privilege and loot which has flowed to Kenya’s leaders.
This cuts across all sides in the debate, as there are few senior Kenyan politicians who have not had to defend themselves at some point against allegations of corruption or looting from the state.
If the constitution passes, land reform policies will be passed through Parliament, which will restrict the total area of property any one person can hold. And idle land must be seized by the state.
“Clearly those with the greatest vested interest in keeping the status quo are the guys who have benefited most from that status quo over the years,” says one European diplomat in Nairobi.
“So there’s been lots of chatter today that these bombs were planted on behalf of the elite, on both sides of the argument, to try scupper the whole thing under the provisos of a national security crisis or whatever.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/...dARzbGsDZXYtY29uc3BpcmFjGo overdrive in purchasing the goods when there's blood on the streets, expecially if the blood is your own