Mwai Kibaki the man.

Kenyatta, they say, loved roasted goat ribs downed with a glass of muratina (traditional honey beer). Second President Daniel Moi never touched beer but loved milk and boiled maize.
But the third and fourth Presidents – Mr Mwai Kibaki and Mr Uhuru Kenyatta — have a common denominator by way of thirst for cold beer.
While Uhuru played rugby in his youth, Kibaki loved golfing until a near-fatal accident made it practically impossible for him to tee off and take the long walk in the golf course.
But a point of correction is in order; Kibaki walked away from the drinking table after the 2002 road accident because of medical reasons, and Uhuru’s favourite drink isn’t actually beer but whisky, especially Jameson and John Walker Green Label.
However it is in interviews with old friends that you get to know of the different, fun-loving and somehow reserved but not that generous Kibaki.
Four things stand out on Mzee Kibaki’s drinking days: he loved White Cap. Despite the number, he had the capacity to remain on his seat long hours without having to leave for the washrooms; he kept a close circle of friends and patronised only a few select joints; and finally he was able to steer off controversy and calm those who the drink had literally gotten into their heads.
Though he stopped the visits, he kept a good count of his rounds which he would later pay exclusive of what others at the table had taken.
Kibaki’s old friends speak with nostalgia about those days.
These men, most of who ended up in his old Democratic Party, recall treasured moments of Kibaki’s social life as he traversed the country campaigning.
To these men Kibaki has always been the ‘economist’, even when it came to paying bills.
His old joints have defied their former client’s status and are still strong. Whenever he visited Othaya, Kibaki relaxed at Silent Lodge where the proprietor, Mzee Geoffrey Kagiri hosted him for drinks in the evening before the former Vice President retired to his home about a kilometre away.
Mr Matu Wamae, former Mathira MP had fond memories of the old days when he and Kibaki would spend hours enjoying their drinks, especially in his Ngong Hills Hotel.
“It was fun spending the evening with Kibaki. He was an easy-going man who had a way of warding off arguments during drinking,” Wamae recalled.
An evening with Kibaki was not complete without roasting of nyama choma (roast meat) and traditional irio, which the former president relished.
Wamae recalled, “If one got tipsy or tried to pick an argument with Kibaki, he would just say, hivyo ndivyo ilivyo (that is the way it is) and refuse to comment further.
Ordinarily, Kibaki was conservative even in a bar and rarely cracked jokes but would at times engage in animated debates about culture.
Wamae added how Kibaki would spend hours chatting with a barman in a bar just next to Outspan Garage.
Kibaki’s other watering holes included Nyeri Golf Club, White Rhino, Outspan, and Elephant Castle in Karatina.
Esau Kioni, another close confidant of the former president and a former State House operative recalled how Kibaki disliked drinking binges.
“Mzee liked relaxing with old friends. He disliked gossip or discussing other people during social drinking. When bored he would introduce a new topic. He signified his boredom by closing and opening his legs,” Kioni recalled.
According to another old friend, the former president’s favourite pastimes were golfing and sipping his White Cap beer. It is said he later switched to Tusker.
Apparently Kibaki frequented Nyandarua where an old friend, the former deputy governor, Waithaka Mwangi, recalled how he could ‘forget’ to order drinks for other people.
“He only ordered for his drinks forgetting the persons sitting next to him. He attested to the fact that he would not overspend on his outings.
We always liked his idea of spending what one can afford,” Mwangi added.
Another ally, former Nyahururu deputy mayor John Muritu remembers how Kibaki loved visiting Thomson Falls Lodge where he sat at a favourite corner sipping beer as he chatted with acquaintances.
Muritu recounts, “He only ordered for his drinks and rarely threw parties for his friends or his political supporters although he had a lot of money. We ended up paying for his drinks.”
According to Muritu, Kibaki liked serene environments and never went to noisy bars.
To another friend, former councilor Nelson Rintari of Majengo ward in Embu County friend, Kibaki led a cautious and frugal social life to the point of being eccentric.
Rintari who formed Democratic Party (DP) branch in Embu County in 1992 describes Kibaki as a social but unique man. He says after holding a rally DP officials would head to a bar where Kibaki would take his favourite White Cap as they engaged in talks.
A former Othaya councillor who was also one of Kibaki’s drinking partners on being asked who footed bills during their social outings exclaimed,” You do not know Kibaki!”
The man recounts how Kibaki, not known for buying drinks for friends, shocked patrons at Muthaiga Golf Club shortly after retirement by paying Sh25,000 for their drinks and snacks.

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Mdau tutaenda mazishi ya Obako unipe lift kwa ile Succeed yako?

Muthee. Ndī haha Gakindů ndorete Othaya.

Othaya ni karibu tembea

gojea nikutaftie official VIP invitation, mzito kama wewe hawes keti na raia

Some senior government officials approached Kibaki to tell him on their intentions to name the then newly refurbished Thika road after him, they got a rude shock…"Hio barabara inaenda wapi? wakajibu… Thika mzee,…akawambia "Basi wacheni umpumbavu"https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/images/emoji.php/v9/td2/1/16/1f604.pnghttps://static.xx.fbcdn.net/images/emoji.php/v9/td2/1/16/1f604.png “Meffi ya Kuku”

That treatise cannot be complete without mentioning Moi’s doctor said he used to drink, Moi was a pretender. Also Kibaki used to drink at To Go Is To See in Ruringu Nyeri, that was his joint before presidency

Geithania kûu. Nitukonana hingo ya mathiko

SAA hii Niko mbali na huko

He was a good man that lived a life that was and is different to current politicians lifestyle.

I.e he was not like the current known thieves

Is that it?

Kibaki was very wealthy even before he became president. How did he make his fortune?

The most ignominious legacy on the part of President Kibaki was the blatant rigging of the 2007 presidential election.

The violence that the stolen election caused pushed the country to the brink. More than 1,300 people were killed and more than 500,000 displaced.

Had the international community not swiftly intervened to facilitate a power-sharing agreement, there is no saying what might have become of Kenya.

Arguably, therefore, his able stewardship of the economy notwithstanding, Kibaki will be remembered as the president who squandered a historic opportunity to remake Kenya and ended up plunging the country into unmitigated chaos, all for the sake of clinging onto power following an apparent electoral loss.

My Best Memory Of Kibaki In A Nutshell.... - General - Kenya Talk

I recall watching a video where Wanyiri Kihoro was bitter that Kibaki never visited his wife when she was admitted in hospital.

But to me Wanyiri seems too entitled, though Kibaki should have at least paid the money he owed him even if it was given unconditionally.

https://nation.africa/kenya/life-and-style/weekend/wanyiri-kihoro-kibaki-owes-me-sh16m--884944

Another bizarre aspect of Kibaki’s personality was the press conference in which he disowned his wife Wambui. Seems Lucy called the shots in the home.

Finally, Kibaki’s brother and sister lived a really simple life. Some say he should have helped them but I believe no one should expect too much from a relative.

Development wise Kibaki tried a lot, scandals weren’t as rife as with Uhuru’s administration.

If there was one thing that got into Mzito Kibaki nerves; it was bonoboism. He really hated the level of stupidity often exhibited by bonobo’s. He couldn’t sometimes believe he had to figure out shit for them ninja’s.

Lucy got mentally unstable in her later years.

Mzee did that to calm her in one of those episodes.

Second wives hawananga noma, she understood.