Kenya’s ability to hold sway on the continental and indeed the international scene cannot be gainsaid. Kenya is famous for her political stability, constitutional and institutional reforms in response to emergent international conventions, and for her cold-blooded realism and “non-alignment” in relation to international affairs. However, what many might not be aware is that Kenya’s star in matters diplomacy began to shine as far back as its first decade of independence. It is this little-appreciated fact that the author, former Kenyan diplomat and UN staffer, Donald Kaniaru, seeks to illuminate in this precious archive. Here is a collection of documents, speeches, meeting minutes, and a historical presentation of Kenya’s first year as a member of the United Nations Security Council, 1973-1974. Mr. Kaniaru has privileged access to this material, having at the time been stationed as a diplomat at the permanent mission in New York where he directly assisted the then Permanent Representative of Kenya to the UN, Ambassador Odero-Jowi. This book is a painstaking record of Kenya’s involvement and strong voice in key world affairs such as: the 1973 Arab-Israel War in the Middle East; condemning the oppressive minority regimes in Southern Rhodesia and South Africa; and perhaps most significantly, influencing the setting up of UNEP headquarters at Nairobi; among others. The book, by highlighting Kenya’s confidence and strong capabilities at the most significant global stage, the Security Council, has an intent to provoke patriotism and sovereign pride in Kenyan readers, in addition to providing a needed record for posterity.
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