Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Mwai Kibaki, Third President of Kenya

 

Mwai Kibaki, Kenya’s Third President, Dies at 90

He came to power promising to root out corruption and improve government transparency. But his tenure was blighted by widespread graft and a violent upheaval.

President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya in 2010 at the signing ceremony for Kenya's new Constitution, which promised greater freedoms and rights.
Credit...Tony Karumba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
President Mwai Kibaki of Kenya in 2010 at the signing ceremony for Kenya's new Constitution, which promised greater freedoms and rights.

NAIROBI, Kenya — Mwai Kibaki, who helped transform Kenya’s economy and usher in a new Constitution as its third president, but whose tenure was marred by high-profile corruption cases and election-related violence, has died. He was 90.

His death was announced in a televised speech by President Uhuru Kenyatta, who did not specify a cause or provide any other details.

Mr. Kenyatta said that flags would be flown at half-staff in the country and at diplomatic missions worldwide, and that a period of national mourning would be observed until sunset on the day Mr. Kibaki is buried. He said Mr. Kibaki would be accorded a state funeral but did not say when.

Mr. Kibaki was the last surviving former leader who had participated in Kenya’s struggle for independence from British colonial rule. He was preceded by Daniel arap Moi, who died in 2020, and Jomo Kenyatta, who died in 1978.

An economist by training, Mr. Kibaki was a university professor, a lawmaker, a cabinet minister, vice president and leader of the opposition before ascending to the highest office in the land in 2002.

Mr. Kibaki, who was known as a scholarly and cerebral figure in academia, became adroit at navigating Kenya’s twisting and tense political eras. Even though he could come across as aloof and impatient, he managed to maneuver in the political sphere for five decades, becoming an establishment insider whose election ended decades of one-party rule.

His election as president was a hopeful moment for Kenya, coming after Mr. Moi’s 24-year rule, which had been defined by widespread graft and repression.

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Supporters of Mr. Kibaki at a rally in Nairobi during his presidential campaign in 2002. 
Credit...Patrick Olum/Reuters
Supporters of Mr. Kibaki at a rally in Nairobi during his presidential campaign in 2002. 

As president, Mr. Kibaki helped revive the country’s stagnant economy and began efforts to improve access to health care. He pushed vast improvements of the country’s highways and was lauded for introducing free primary school education nationwide.

But his efforts to transform the country were undermined by graft, which remained rife even at the highest levels of government. Even as corruption scandals continued to surface, Mr. Kibaki’s government failed to properly prosecute those involved. His own anticorruption czar, John Githongo, fled the country, fearing that his life was in danger.

But it was the 2007 elections that put Mr. Kibaki’s leadership to the test. After the electoral commission declared him the winner in a tightly contested election, the country descended into a wave of violence and bloodshed that pushed it to the brink of civil war.

During the upheaval, more than 1,100 people were believed to have been killed and more than 300,000 others displaced. The violence subsided only weeks later, when the feuding political leaders settled on a power-sharing agreement.

The crisis pushed Kenya and Mr. Kibaki to revive efforts to draft a new Constitution — voters rejected an earlier effort in a 2005 referendum — to tackle longstanding imbalances in power and competition for resources. In 2010, a Constitution promising greater freedoms and rights for Kenyans was approved with an almost 70 percent majority.

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Supporters of the opposition protested Mr. Kibaki's disputed re-election in Kisumu in 2008.
Credit...Yasuyoshi Chiba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Supporters of the opposition protested Mr. Kibaki's disputed re-election in Kisumu in 2008.

In a move that was a first for independent Kenya, Mr. Kibaki sent Kenyan troops to Somalia in 2011 to fight Al Shabab, an affiliate of Al Qaeda, and to protect Kenya’s northeast border.

Emilio Mwai Kibaki was born on Nov. 15, 1931, in Gatuyaini village in central Kenya. After completing high school in Kenya, he studied economics, history and political science at Makerere University in Uganda and public finance at the London School of Economics.

Following Kenyan independence in 1963, he was a lawmaker with the Kenya African National Union party, which preached what it called African socialism. He later served as finance minister for more than a decade, from 1969 to 1981, and was Mr. Moi’s vice president from 1978 to 1988.

As Kenyans agitated for multiparty democracy in the 1990s, Mr. Kibaki broke ranks with Mr. Moi and challenged him in the 1992 and 1997 elections, both of which he lost. In 2002, with Mr. Moi unable to run for re-election because of term limits, Mr. Kibaki ran for president again.

He defeated Mr. Kenyatta, the current president, whom Mr. Moi had picked as his preferred successor. He stayed in office for two terms, leaving in April 2013.

Mr. Kibaki was an avid golfer. He was also known for his sense of humor; his quips and witty remarks were repeatedly played on television and printed on the front pages of newspapers.

He was married to Lucy Muthoni Kibaki until her death in 2016. His survivors include his children, Judy Wanjiku, Jimmy Kibaki, David Kagai and Tony Githinji.

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Kwaku Ohene-Frempong, Sickle Cell Anemia Expert

 

Kwaku Ohene-Frempong, Expert in Sickle Cell Disease, Dies at 76

When his baby boy was diagnosed with the illness, he made it his mission to combat it. He later took his expertise back to his native Ghana.

Dr. Kwaku Ohene-Frempong, a global expert in sickle cell disease, in an undated photo. He found that the disease could result in blockages in blood vessels in the brain, leading to a high rate of strokes in children with sickle cell.
Credit...Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
Dr. Kwaku Ohene-Frempong, a global expert in sickle cell disease, in an undated photo. He found that the disease could result in blockages in blood vessels in the brain, leading to a high rate of strokes in children with sickle cell.

Soon after his first child, Kwame, was born on May 13, 1972, Dr. Kwaku Ohene-Frempong discovered that the boy had a fatal genetic disease.

“I was holding Kwame, and he came upstairs with tears in his eyes,” Dr. Ohene-Frempong’s wife, Janet Ohene-Frempong, said in an interview, recalling the moment her husband broke the news. “He said, ‘Our son, Kwame, has sickle cell disease.’ He knew what that meant.” Sickle cell can result in searing pain, organ damage, strokes, susceptibility to infections and premature death.

Dr. Ohene-Frempong, a medical student at Yale at the time, then called his mother at their family home in Ghana. “God is telling you something,” she told him. The message, she said, was to use his medical training to help combat the disease. And that is what he did “until he drew his last breath,” Ms. Ohene-Frempong said.

“The most important thing that happened to us is Kwame’s birth,” she added. “It changed the trajectory of our lives and of hundreds and hundreds of people around the world. All the work he did — every bit of it — he did because of Kwame.”

Dr. Ohene-Frempong, familiarly known by his initials, Kof (pronounced cough), died on May 7 in Philadelphia. He was 76. His wife said the cause was metastatic lung cancer.

Dr. Ohene-Frempong worked for decades at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, an affiliate of the University of Pennsylvania. At CHOP, as it is known, he established the hospital’s Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center.

Dr. Alexis Thompson, a colleague and sickle cell expert there, said in an interview: “I relied on his wisdom at almost every turn in my career. Part of it was watching with this tremendous awe what his vision was and the things he thought to do to move this field forward.”

Dr. Ohene-Frempong was a leader of a large federally funded study, the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease, that helped answer an important question: What is the natural course of the disease?

Analyzing the study’s data, he found that the disease could result in blockages in blood vessels in the brain, leading to a high rate of strokes in children with sickle cell. That led other researchers to be able to predict which children were most at risk, and to discover that regular transfusions could prevent most strokes in those children.

In his native Ghana, Dr. Ohene-Frempong established a pilot program to provide screening for sickle cell disease among newborns in the southern city of Kumasi. It was the first such program in sub-Saharan Africa. In addition to identifying children with the illness, the program referred them to specialized clinics that provided treatments like antibiotics to prevent infections, routine immunizations and a drug, hydroxyurea, that can reduce the risk of complications from sickle cell.

Kwaku Ohene-Frempong was born on March 13, 1946, in Kukurantumi, in eastern Ghana, to Kwasi Adde Ohene and Adwoa Odi Boafo. His father was a cocoa farmer and a prominent member of a royal family.

Kwaku attended a boarding school, Prempeh College, then went to Yale University, where he majored in biology and was captain of the track and field team, setting indoor and outdoor records in the high hurdles. While a student, he met Janet Williams, who was attending Cornell University. They married on June 6, 1970, one week after they had both graduated.

Dr. Ohene-Frempong said in an interview in 2019 that he first found out about sickle cell when he and some friends attended a lecture about the disease at Yale. As he sat listening, he said, he suddenly recognized the disease: It was in his family but had gone undiagnosed. One of his cousins had the symptoms and died at 14.

“He was in pain,” he said of his cousin. “His eyes were very yellow, and he was very skinny.”

Dr. Ohene-Frempong continued on to medical school at Yale, then went to New York Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center in Manhattan for his residency. He studied pediatric hematology at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia before moving to the Tulane University School of Medicine in New Orleans, where he was associate professor of pediatrics.

In his six years at Tulane, he established the Tulane Sickle Cell Center of Southern Louisiana, a medical care facility, and helped the state health department develop a newborn-screening program for the disease.

Dr. Ohene-Frempong returned to Children’s Hospital in 1986 and remained there for 30 years before leaving to work full time in Ghana, at the Kumasi Center for Sickle Cell Disease, a research and treatment center. He was still based there when he returned to Philadelphia for cancer treatment.

“He was very, very aware of the limitations of working in Africa,” Ms. Ohene-Frempong said. “His goal was to raise the standards of care. He said, ‘It can be done in America, and that is our goal here.’”

As part of that mission, Dr. Ohene-Frempong became president of the Sickle Cell Foundation of Ghana and the national coordinator for the American Society of Hematology’s Consortium on Newborn Screening in Africa.

His honors and accolades were many, including, from Ghana, the Order of the Volta in 2010 and the Millennium Excellence Award in Medicine in 2015. In the United States in 2020, he received the Assistant Secretary of Health Exceptional Service Medal, the highest civilian award given by the Public Health Service, part of the Department of Health and Human Services. The American Society for Hematology honored him in 2021 with its Stratton Award for Translational and Clinical Science.

But despite the progress that Dr. Ohene-Frempong and others had made in caring for people with sickle cell disease, his son, Kwame, did not survive it: He died in 2013 at age 40, the father of two young children.

In addition to his wife, Dr. Ohene-Frempong is survived by his daughter, Afia Ohene-Frempong; three brothers, Kwabena Ohene-Dokyi, Kwasi Ohene-Owusu and Reynolds Twumasi; a sister, Ama Ohene-Agyeiwaa Boateng; a grandson; and a granddaughter.