Ochola Ogaye Mak'Anyengo

Ochola Ogaye Mak'Anyengo, also known as George Philip Ochola (1930–1990) was a Kenyan trade unionist and Member of Parliament for Ndhiwa, South Nyanza, Kenya.[2] He was involved in the fight for Kenya's independence and was a beneficiary of the Mboya-Kennedy airlifts.[2][3][4][5]

Ochola Ogaye Mak’Anyengo
Member of Parliament (Ndhiwa Constituency)
In office
1983–1990
PresidentDaniel Arap Moi
Preceded byZablon Owigo Olang
Succeeded byMartin Otieno Ogingo
Assistant Minister of Health
In office
1983  April 1986
PresidentDaniel Arap Moi
Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
April 1986  March 1988
PresidentDaniel Arap Moi
Assistant Minister of Culture and Social Services
In office
March 1988  November 1990
PresidentDaniel Arap Moi
Personal details
Born
George Philip Ochola

(1930-04-13)13 April 1930
South Nyanza, Kenya Colony
Died6 November 1990(1990-11-06) (aged 60)
Nairobi, Kenya
Political partyNairobi People's Convention Party
Kenya African National Union
Kenya People’s Union (K.P.U.)
MotherRael Ogondi
FatherYohana Anyengo[1]
EducationAfrican Labour College (Kampala)
University of Chicago
OccupationTrade Unionist
Politician
Trade Union PositionsSecretary-General of the Kenya Petroleum Oil Workers Union

Assistant Secretary-General of the All Africa Trade Union Federation

Vice-President of the Africa Chapter of the International Federation of Petroleum Workers

Secretary-General of the Kenya African Workers Union

Secretary-General of Railways and Harbours Union

Early life and Education

George Philip Ochola (later known as Ochola Ogaye Mak’Anyengo) was born in 1930 in South Nyanza, Kenya Colony, to Yohana Anyengo, a Licensed Minister in the Seventh-day Adventist Church - Ranen Field and Rael Ogondi.[1][6][7] He completed his primary school education at Kamagambo Mission School and high school at Kisii Secondary School.[1] Ochola first worked as a teacher before he worked as a freight dispatcher with the East African Railway and Harbour Administration. He left this job because of its low pay - 330 shillings a month. He then became a pump service and retail clerk with Kenya Shell Oil Company Ltd. He was then selected for a management trainee course at Kenya Shell Oil Company Ltd in 1954 in Nairobi.[1][8][9][2]

Ochola was a beneficiary of the Mboya-Kennedy Airlifts. This was an initiative thought of by Tom Mboya and William X. Scheinman in order to address the colossal educational challenges facing Kenya. Kenya was agitating for independence from Britain but was plagued by a severe shortfall of African human capital. Opportunities for further education after high school for Africans were severely limited. The colonial government had feared that if a critical mass of educated Africans existed, they would demand greater participation in their own governance.[4] Through the airlift program, several hundred Kenyans and other East Africans obtained scholarships to study in the United States of America with the support of John F. Kennedy, the African American Students Foundation (AASF) and prominent African Americans including Harry Belafonte, Jackie Robinson, Sidney Poitier and Martin Luther King Jr.[4] Ochola had been elected as the Secretary General of the newly formed Petroleum and Oil workers Union and therefore had to negotiate labour contracts with international oil companies. This was a major challenge for him given his lack of experience and further education. Tom Mboya encouraged him to apply for the airlift program. Like many of the applicants for the airlift program, Ochola had to apply to several colleges and universities before he finally got accepted by the University of Chicago. He attended the African Labour College in Kampala for a preparatory course before flying to Chicago. Supported by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organisations (AFL-CIO), he obtained a diploma in Industrial Labour Relations from the University of Chicago. While he was studying there, the local branch of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic workers Union helped him find part time work at the Corn Products Refining Company in Summit, Illinois, to pay for his upkeep.[5][10][8]

Politics and Trade Unionism

Independence struggle and civil rights activities

While working at Kenya Shell Company Limited, George Philip Ochola became involved in the struggle for Kenya’s independence. He was a member of the Nairobi People’s Convention Party (NPCP), led by Tom Mboya.[3] The Mau Mau rebellion had been suppressed and political activity by Africans was discouraged by the colonial government.[3] This party became the only effectively organised and legal African nationalist party in Kenya. Jomo Kenyatta had been imprisoned on charges that he led the Mau Mau movement. This party took up the call for the release of Kenyatta following the lead by Oginga Odinga. The colonial government continually harassed party members and attempted to crush the party by arresting several members in March 1959 in what was the biggest round-up since the Mau Mau emergency. The state of emergency regulations drafted for the Mau Mau emergency were used to subjugate this party. George Philip Ochola stepped into a prominent leadership role following this round-up and his efforts ensured that the party continued to increase in size and popularity.[3]

At the University of Chicago, George Philip Ochola, now often referred to as Ochola Mak’Anyengo, was a student leader of the All Africa Student Association.[11] This was at the height of the civil rights movement in United States of America and anti-colonial movement in Africa.[4] Mak'Anyengo published an article titled “Why Mau Mau” in Liberation, a publication which engaged with anticolonial struggles in Africa.[12] Following the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, the first democratically elected leader of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mak'Anyengo led a peaceful protest along Michigan Avenue in March 1961 which was met by counter protesters.[11]

President John F. Kennedy started the Peace Corps in February 1961 with the official aim of encouraging mutual understanding between Americans and other nations and states.[13] Foreign students in the Chicago area had divergent opinions regarding the intentions and usefulness of the program.[14] Ochola Mak'Anyengo was quoted in an article published in the Chicago Tribune saying "It is pointless to extend the arm of friendship to my country when a group of United States citizens, descendants of Africans, have no friendship here. Your best peace corps to African nations would be to improve the racial situation in America."[14]

In September 1964, a delegation of the Organisation of African Unity arrived in Washington to seek an audience with President Johnson to discuss the American military assistance given to Moise Tshombe, the Premier of Congo. Ochola was quoted in the press warning that massive workers demonstrations against the American embassy and Americans in Kenya would occur if President Johnson did not meet the delegation. According to the press, he stated: “The time has come when Africans must resist the Americans’ stupid idea of looking on Africans as inferior people who cannot judge for themselves what is good or bad for them. The sons and daughters of Africans must arise to resist by all means American Imperialism and colonialism.”[15]

Trade Unionism and Politics

Before travelling to Chicago, Ochola Mak’Anyengo was elected to head the Petroleum and Oil workers Union soon after completion of the management trainee course with Kenya Shell Company Limited.[2] After obtaining his Diploma from the University of Chicago, he returned to Kenya and took up several trade union positions.[16] These include the Office of the Secretary-General of the Kenya African Workers Union, the Office of Vice-President of the Africa Chapter of the International Federation of Petroleum Workers, the Office of the Secretary-General of Railways and Harbours Union and the Office of the Assistant Secretary General of the All Africa Trade Union Federation.[16]

Mak'Anyengo was also appointed to the Ministry of Labour Advisory Board in March 1963. As a member of this advisory board, he was involved in the development of the National Social Security Fund. This government agency, tasked with managing retirement funds for employees, was established in 1965 through an act of parliament.[17][18]

Mak'Anyengo was a founding member of the Kenya People's Union (K.P.U.), a left leaning opposition party that was led by Jaramogi Oginga Odinga. This was during the cold war, when Kenya was a stage for a proxy ideological battle between the western and eastern blocs. Although Kenya was a member of the non aligned movement, cold war ideological divisions became enmeshed with local politics.[19] Oginga Odinga, Bildad Kaggia, Pio Gama Pinto, Achieng Oneko, Dennis Akumu and Ochola Mak’Anyengo were among those who voiced concerns relating to corruption in government and increasing western influence in the country. They promised to pursue policies that would benefit all Kenyans but these were criticised as being radical.[20][21]

Pio Gama Pinto Assassination

Pio Gama Pinto was a Kenyan of Goan descent. He was a freedom fighter who was detained during the colonial period.[22] He was also Jaramogi Odinga’s chief tactician and link to the eastern bloc. He was assassinated on 25 February 1965 in what is recognised as Kenya’s first political assassination.[23] The report of the truth, justice and reconciliation commission (2013) concluded that the Kenyatta government was responsible for numerous gross violations of human rights including the political assassination of Pio Gama Pinto. Ochola Mak'Anyengo was briefly arrested following accusations that he had hired men to frighten Pinto ostensibly because Pinto was his trade-union rival. One of these men ended up assassinating Pinto. These charges were dropped when one of the accused assassins denied having met Mak'Anyengo.[24][23][25]

Detention without trial

In August 1966 Ochola Mak'Anyengo was arrested together with other leaders of the K.P.U. and detained without trial for several years. Those arrested included Oginga Odinga’s private secretary Oluande Koduol, the general secretary of the East African Common Services Civil Servants Union, Peter Ooko. Mak'Anyengo was imprisoned until July 1968. Upon release, he was unanimously re-elected, by popular vote, to continue heading the Petroleum and Oil Workers Union.[26][27]

On the 25th of October 1969, a major incident occurred in Kisumu town, the capital of Nyanza Province. President Jomo Kenyatta attended the inauguration of the New Nyanza Provincial Hospital. Tom Mboya, a popular leader amongst the resident Luo community, had been assassinated on the 5th of July 1969 and as a result, political tensions were high. A demonstration ensued during the inauguration which led to the deaths of at least 11 civilians in the hands of police, by official accounts. Other estimates placed the death toll at closer to 100 men, women and children, some of whom were shot up to 50 km (31 mi) away from the demonstrations. This incident is often referred to as the Kisumu massacre.[28][29] The Kenya People's Union (K.P.U.) was banned following this incident. Several party members, including Mak'Anyengo, were arrested on the 27th of October 1969. This was his second detention without trial.

Amnesty International ran a campaign - postcards for prisoners - to publicise his imprisonment without trial. In June 1970, Mak'Anyengo announced his intention to go on hunger strike to protest his imprisonment. In August 1970, several of those detained were released but Mak'Anyengo was held in prison until March 1974. Despite the official allegation, that he acted illegally against the government at the time of his arrest, Mak'Anyengo was never formally charged or tried for any wrongdoing. No evidence was ever brought forward to support the imprisonment.[30][31][32]

Return to Trade Unionism and Politics

Following his release, he eventually returned to trade unionism and politics. Mak’Anyengo successfully ran for the office of secretary general of the Railways and Harbours Union in 1981. In 1983, he was elected as the Member of Parliament for Ndhiwa Constituency on a K.A.N.U. (Kenya African National Union) party ticket. During this period he was the Assistant Minister for Health, Assistant-minister for Culture and Social Services and Assistant-minister for foreign affairs.[2][16]

Death

Ochola Mak'Anyengo died in 1990 while in office following a short illness.[2][16]

Legacy

A eulogy delivered at the start of a parliamentary house meeting following his death described him as a veteran trade unionist and renowned freedom fighter with a notable sense of humour and debating skills. It was stated: "His contribution to the national development, devotion to serving his constituents and his dedication to the ruling party Kanu all speak for themselves."[33]

Publications

  • Why Mau Mau by George Philip Ochola. Liberation. January 1960. Available from the University of Illinois Library at Urbana-Champaign. Digitised 9 March 2011
  • Union Problems in Developing Countries by Ochola Mak’Anyengo. IUD Digest. 1962 Available from the Wayne State University Library. https://reuther.wayne.edu/node/4616
  • How Politics Affect the Role of the Trade Union Leaders in Developing Countries by Ochola Ogaye Mak'Anyengo, Vice-President International Federation of Petroleum Workers. Petro. International Federation of Petroleum Workers 1963. From Cornell University Digitised 11 July 2011

See also

  • Tom Mboya, the man Kenya wanted to forget by David Goldsworthy. East African Publishers, 1982

References

  1. Steve Osieyo. Ochola Makanyengo. What a manner of a man. Cited 25th June 20. Available from: https://www.namlolwe-anecdotes.com/post/ochola-makanyengo-what-manner-of-a-man
  2. Makers of a nation. Ochola Mak'Anyengo the men and women in Kenya's history. DVD, Video Disc. A Nation Media Group/Kenya History & Biographies Co. Ltd. co-production ; written, produced and directed by Hilary Ng'weno. Available From: https://iucat.iu.edu/iub/13727400
  3. Kenya, the National Epic: From the Pages of Drum Magazine By Garth Bundeh and James R. A. Bailey East African Publishers, 1993
  4. Airlift to America: How Barack Obama, Sr., John F. Kennedy, Tom Mboya, and 800 East African Students Changed Their World and Ours by Tom Shachtman. St. Martin's Press (September 15, 2009)
  5. Kenyan Student Airlifts to America 1959-1961: An Educational Odyssey By Stephens, Robert F. East African Educational Publishers (Jan, 2014)
  6. 1934 Yearbook of the Seventh-Day Adventist Denomination
  7. 1948 Yearbook of the Seventh-Day Adventist Denomination
  8. Union Problems in Developing Countries by Ochola Mak’Anyengo. IUD Digest. 1962 Available from the Wayne State University Library https://reuther.wayne.edu/node/4616
  9. International Transport Workers Journal, Volumes 21-22, publisher: International Transport Workers' Federation, 1961; Cornell University
  10. “African Unionist gets ‘Liberal Education’ in US” The Minneapolis Star (Minneapolis Minnesota), Tuesday, August 22, 1961, page 7 Available from: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15272040/african-unionist-gets-liberal-education
  11. “Funeral March Held Sunday for Lumumba”. The Daily Chronicle (De Kalb, Illinois) Monday, March 13, 1961 page 10 Available from: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15272470/funeral-march-held-for-lumumba
  12. Where the boys are: cuba, cold war America and the making of a new left. By Van Gosse. 1993
  13. JFK Library. Peace Corps. Available from https://www.jfklibrary.org/learn/about-jfk/jfk-in-history/peace-corps
  14. Students Tell View on Peace Corps Plans. Chicago Tribune. Saturday April 15th, 1961. Page 7. Available from https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/374621963
  15. “Kenyan Warns Johnson must see Africans” Chicago Tribune (Chicago Illinois), Sunday September 27, 1964. Page 2
  16. Western-Educated Elites in Kenya, 1900-1963: The African American Factor By Jim C. Harper. Routledge; 1 edition (September 10, 2012)
  17. Kenya Gazette 26th March 1963. Notice 1263
  18. National Social Security Fund Kenya https://www.nssf.or.ke/about
  19. Exposed: Power Struggles that set Jaramogi Oginga Odinga and Jomo Kenyatta on warpath. By Standard Team. Available from: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2001229148/exposed-power-struggles-that-set-jaramogi-oginga-odinga-and-jomo-kenyatta-on-warpath
  20. Birth of a Nation. The Story of a Newspaper in Kenya by Gerard Loughran 2010
  21. Underdevelopment in Kenya: The Political Economy of Neo-colonialism, 1964-1971 By Colin Leys 1975
  22. https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2001298979/pinto-untold-life-story-of-first-unsung-martyr
  23. Pio Gama Pinto: Kenya's Unsung Martyr. 1927-1965 By Shiraz Durrani. Vita Books, October 2018
  24. Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission Final Report Volume 1 (2013) http://www.tjrckenya.org/index.php?option=comcontent&view=article&id=573&itemid=238
  25. “Kenya: How Pinto Murder Was Plotted . . . And Kisilu Framed” Allafrica.com stories June 19th 2000 https://allafrica.com/stories/200006190052.html
  26. "500 TU members in overseas prisons" The Guardian (London, Greater London, England) Monday, Nov 16, 1970, page 20 Available from: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15272376/500-tu-members-in-prisons
  27. “Five Opposition Leaders Seized by Kenya Police” Pasadena Independent (Pasadena, California) Fri Aug 5 1966. Page 1 Available from: https://www.newspapers.com/clip/15272844/5-opposition-leaders-seized
  28. "Kenyatta Regime Covered Up the Kisumu Massacre." Daily Nation. Saturday Nov. 02 2019. Available from: https://www.nation.co.ke/oped/opinion/Kenyatta-regime-covered-up-Kisumu-massacre/440808-5334552-jmfjxh/index.html
  29. "Dark Saturday in 1969 when Jomo’s visit to Kisumu turned bloody." Daily Nation. Wed October 24, 2018. Available from: https://www.nation.co.ke/kenya/news/dark-saturday-in-1969-when-jomo-s-visit-to-kisumu-turned-bloody-101870
  30. Monthly Newsletter from Amnesty International. Postcards for Prisoners campaign. August 1970. Available from: https://www.amnesty.org/download/Documents/204000/nws210111970en.pdf
  31. Amnesty International Annual Report 1973-1974. Available from: https://www.amnesty.org/download/Documents/POL100011974ENGLISH.PDF
  32. The New York Times. Letter to the Editor: Kenya's Costly ‘Stability’ by BARBARA C. SPROUL, Amnesty International of the U.S.A. New York, Dec. 28, 1973. Available from: https://www.nytimes.com/1974/01/16/archives/letters-to-the-editor-birth-rates-and-energy-use-the-questionable.html
  33. Kenya National Assembly Official Record (Hansard) 1 Nov 1990 Available from: https://books.google.co.ke/books/about/Kenya_National_Assembly_Official_Record.html
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