dc.description.abstract | Kenya has declared war on the HIV/AIDS pandemic. But a victory in any war is often
achieved when those managing the war possess unity of purpose, a common set of
deeply cherished values and, above all, a conscience large enough to make them feel uncomfortable
at the thought of deviating from those values. Kenya lacks such a conscience.
This has undermined efforts to win the now much publicized war on HIV/AIDS
pandemic just as it has done in many other countries in Africa today. This article, first,
presents the situation of the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Kenya today, highlighting the measures
the country has taken to wage war on the pandemic. Second, the paper attempts to
show that the efforts to win the war are undermined by corrupt political leadership that
lacks a nation’s conscience to restrain leaders from committing economic crimes, resulting
in reckless blunders and misappropriation of the very funds meant for the war on the
HIV/AIDS pandemic. By analyzing the events that led to the loss of the nation’s conscience,
the paper then shows how this political leadership without conscience has now
left the ordinary citizen in abject poverty despite the availability of immense wealth in the
country. This in turn has not only created a fertile ground for the spread of HIV/AIDS but
has also rendered the citizen unable to fight back the scourge. The paper then suggests
that one way of winning the war on the pandemic is to direct more efforts toward the restoration
of the nation’s conscience by putting in place measures that would ensure the
cultivation of a culture of transparency, accountability and good governance in Kenya. | en |