Monday,
March 25, 2002
Indian Stargazer Says
Kenya's Future Bright
In June
1997, Sharma predicted that a woman would emerge a compromise candidate
in Kenya's troubled opposition ranks, reports VITALIS OMONDI
An astrologer in Kenya predicts
that the country will have a smooth transition and that the economy will
register a strong upturn early next year.
Mr Mahendra Sharma, the young
Indian astrologer who stunned Kenyans a decade ago by his accurate predictions
about the disintegration of the original Forum for the Registration of
Democracy (FORD) political party and the eventual triumph of Kanu in the
first multiparty election, predicts that Kanu will carry the day in the
2002 elections which he says will be held slightly before the end of December,
with a "Young Turk" being elected the president.
"According to planetary positions,
I see a smooth transition for Kenya. There will hardly be any violence
during the general election," said Mr Sharma. "A young president will take
over but he will not weld immense powers as is the case with the current
president." The economy, says the stargazer, will pick up strongly after
February 2003.
"The period between 1991
and 2002 was bad for Kenya," said the star gazer. "But the foundations
of the country have not been shaken. The gloomy period is ending on February
12, 2003."
In a series of predictions
some of which give up-to-date forecasts about world affairs, Mahendra Sharma,
34, predicted President Moi would make known his choice of a successor
before the end of March.
Sharma catalogues compelling
accounts of personalities, diseases, war and natural disasters, movements
in currencies, financial markets, gold and terrorist activity across the
globe, in a 129 page book – 2002 World Prophesies – published in
September 2001. It covers 95 countries.
The man whose prophecies
over the past 10 years have proved uncannily accurate, however avers he
is not 100 per cent correct.
"Many astrological predictions
that I have made so far concerning different countries and people have
been more than 80 per cent accurate.
"I owe the credit for this
accuracy to my esteemed grandfather, my father's guru and Nostradamus."
Sharma was born in 1967 in
a small town in North India to a Hindu Brahmin family. His father and grandfather
had been astrologers and at the tender age of nine he was initiated into
the craft. At the age of 14, he joined an institution in Bombay that taught
astrology. After scouring books on Nostradamus, he set out to predict world
events.
His first public prediction
was made in 1989-90 about the Gulf War.
After the war had begun,
he predicted the day it would end, and turned out to be accurate.
In June 1997, he predicted
that a woman would emerge a compromise candidate in Kenya's troubled opposition
ranks and win the December election with majority votes. The opposition
was engrossed in unity talks similar to the ones going on now.
After surveying his charts,
Sharma decreed that the woman would win the presidential elections in December
with majority votes.
Social Democratic Party's
Charity Ngilu was in the running. Not only did the opposition fail to agree
on a compromise candidate, Mrs Ngilu came a poor fourth.
This time, however, he foresees
the opposition parties coalescing under two groups but adds that they will
fare worse than during the 1997 election. "There will be two main mergers
in the opposition camp after April 10 but Kanu will win the election. Compared
with the last general election, the opposition this time will perform even
worse."
Sharma says, that six months
ago, he advised Kanu to be cautious in the merger with NDP and not change
its name or logo if it wanted to survive as a unit.
Against expectations, a Valentine's
Day parley between the two agreed that the new party retains the name Kanu
as well as the emblem.
Had they not heeded his advice,
Sharma says, the party would have had no future. He says the NDP will be
buried in the new political dispensation, but some disgruntled elements
in the party may try to revive it around May.
The new government will be
a mix of both the young and old guard, but the young turks will hold key
positions, he says.
He paints a rosy picture
for the Kenyan economy from 2003 and says because the government will be
stable the donors will open the aid taps and rains will be sufficient.
He predicts that the Kenya
shilling will strengthen and gain value against the major currencies of
the world. Land and property prices, he says, will rise due to the inflow
of funds and the improvement of of infrastructure during 2002 –2003. "The
current government will take serious steps towards privatisation and slowly
will decline because of increase opportunities for big business."
On the regional scene, he
says the relationship between the three East African Community (EAC) member
states is likely to grow stronger with the three states taking definitive
steps towards achieving convertibility of their currencies.
The predictions for Uganda
are more ominous. He says that at the end of the 2002–2003 period, Uganda
could undergo a bigger crisis than during Idi Amin's time "because Jupiter
will pass through Mars." "In the year 2002, there will be internal fights
between different groups within Uganda." Uganda will fail in its military
adventure in the Congo and at the end of 2002 and 2003 could see bloodshed
because of political killings."
Tanzania however will have
a very copious 2002. The economy will grow very significantly and there
will be a major inflow of investments from local and international investors.
"The export and imports market will rise and agriculture will do extremely
well because of good rains," he says.
He sees boarder skirmishes
between Uganda and Rwanda escalating after April 2002 and getting worse
after May 11 and says that Kenya would step in to play a key role in resolving
the crisis. "There will be great tension between the two, but I see Kenya
playing a bigger role in sorting out the crisis."
On the global arena, he foresees
a tough time for US President George W. Bush, Indian Prime Minister Atal
Vajpayee Bihari, and Pakistani strongman, General Pervez Musharaf. He predicts
that Vajpayee and Pavez will not complete the year 2002.
The Middle East War will
escalate and a key personality will be assassinated. He says that a cure
for aid will be discovered in the period 2002/2003 either in Kenya or South
Africa but there will be a worse disease erupting in 2002 or 2003.