Friday, January 11, 2008

Calls for Mass Rallies Across Kenya

 

Opposition Calls for Mass Rallies Across Kenya

By Nick Wadhams
Nairobi
11 January 2008

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Kenya's political opposition says mediation efforts with the government over Kenya's flawed December elections have collapsed and the opposition is now calling for mass rallies across the country next week. Nick Wadhams has this report for VOA from Nairobi.

Kenya's ODM opposition leader, Raila Odinga, right, speaks with Anyang Nyongo, secretary-general of ODM, in Nairobi, Kenya, 11 Jan. 2008

Kenya's ODM opposition leader, Raila Odinga, right, speaks with Anyang Nyongo in Nairobi, 11 Jan 2008

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) Secretary-General Anyang Nyongo called for Kenyans in towns around Kenya to gather for three days of protests next week, in a move that it hopes will mimic the Ukrainian revolution that led to the overturning of flawed election results.

Just minutes after the plan was announced, Kenya's police commissioner said the rallies would not be allowed.

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Leaders of the opposition laid blame for the country's political deadlock in the lap of President Mwai Kibaki's government which says the opposition should bring its complaints to court.  Opposition leaders says that the vote count, which has been surrounded by allegations of rigging, was a violation of the constitution and that the courts are in Mr. Kibaki's pocket.

Flanked by opposition presidential candidate Raila Odinga and ODM lawmakers who won parliamentary seats, Nyongo called the vote-rigging and the government's stance a betrayal of the rights of all Kenyans.

"The Kibaki side does not want a just solution," he said.  "It is hell-bent on clinging to power regardless of the verdict of the people of Kenya. The Kibaki side wants only to dictate terms that we should follow. There are no compromises and no second thoughts about what they have done. Talks are just an opportunity for them to delay and silence us, while they consolidate themselves in power."

At least 500 people have been killed and more than 250,000 displaced in violence that erupted since Kenya's vote, and neither side has shown any willingness to compromise.  On Thursday, Ghana President John Kufuor left Kenya after failing to achieve a deal between the two sides.

President Kibaki has named several members of his new Cabinet despite the controversy over the vote, which international observers say appears to have been rigged. Almost all of those appointed are political allies, a fact that the opposition has said is proof of his unwillingness to compromise.

The government says it is committed to constructive dialogue, but opposition leader Nyongo says that is a sham.

"Stealing is still going on, cheating is still going on, and quite honestly, Kibaki should be embarrassed to be, embarrassed every day by the fact that he stole," he added.  "I don't think it's a very good sign to be a head of state who has the extra title of eminent thief."

Meanwhile on Thursday, former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was to arrive with several prominent African leaders to try to broker a compromise. Mr. Odinga's team has said it only wants talks to take place through a mediator, while President Kibaki has insisted on face-to-face negotiations.

VOA News - Opposition Calls for Mass Rallies Across Kenya

 

ODM Plans Three Days of Mass Action

The East African Standard (Nairobi)

NEWS
12 January 2008
Posted to the web 11 January 2008
Nairobi

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) plans countrywide three-day rallies beginning Wednesday as part of its mass action programme to push up its claim President Kibaki stole their victory.

The prospect of a confrontation immediately sprung up as Police Commissioner Hussein Ali once again decreed all rallies, no matter the profile of the organisers, will not be allowed.

"The ban on public protests and rallies is still on. The ODM protests are thus illegal and outlawed," said Ali. But ODM maintained its rallies would be peaceful.

ODM also struck a different cord, a day after African Union effort to bring Mr Raila Odinga and President Kibaki to the negotiating table failed, by calling for aid freeze. ODM, whose previous attempts to hold a rally in Nairobi's Uhuru Park were blocked by a security human wall around the venue, also conceded negotiations had flopped.

ODM escalated the scope of its planned rallies as news arrived former UN secretary general Mr Kofi Annan, who replaces the African Union chairman and Ghanaian President Mr John Kufuor, won't arrive before Tuesday.

Annan's office in Geneva broke the news the global peacemaker who takes up negotiations from Kufuor, would not be around before Tuesday when the Tenth Parliament sits.

Terming the mass action 'a call to defence of our nation' the party said the protests would be held in the full glare of Annan.

"We want Mr Annan to mediate the talks with full knowledge of the magnitude of the problem," ODM secretary General Prof Anyang' Nyong'o said, in a statement read before 100 MPs-elect and Pentagon members.

"How can donors trust a government that steals votes to use funds judiciously without pilferage?" Nyong'o asked.

"Talks are just an opportunity for them to delay and silence us, while they consolidate power," the party said.

Pentagon members Mr William Ruto, Mr Najib Balala, Mr Joe Nyagah and Raila were present.

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The venues of the rallies released by the party include Ruringu stadium in Kibaki's home turf, as well as Tonoka Grounds (Mombasa) Jomo Kenyatta Grounds (Kisumu) Afraha Stadium (Nakuru), Muliro Gardens (Kakamega), Kipchoge Keino Stadium (Eldoret), Gusii Stadium (Kisii), Kericho Green Stadium, Moi's Embu Stadium, and Mulu Mutisya Gardens in Machakos.

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At the same time four former African leaders continued to push for face-to-face talks between Raila and Kibaki as the African Union names three new mediators.

 

Meanwhile, President Kibaki attended a funeral service of a family member in Nairobi and called on leaders to help heal the nation from the post-election violence.

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The violence, which exploded in Kitale yesterday after days of relative calm, has claimed about 500 lives, displaced close to 300,000 people and led to wanton destruction of private property in Western, Nyanza, Coast, Nairobi and Rift Valley provinces.

Kibaki said there was need for leaders to find solutions to these problems.

Kibaki calling for dialogue

In a brief speech that hinted that Kibaki had not closed doors on dialogue with the opposition, the President said the challenge facing political leaders was to rebuild the nation and "each one of us is going to rise to the occasion".

"The challenge is to build the nation and each one of us is going to rise to the occasion," he said.

But Kibaki was silent on how he would engage the opposition in talks to end the sporadic skirmishes and the humanitarian crisis that has rocked the country for two weeks.

Finance minister Mr Amos Kimunya said: "The position taken by ODM that the talks had collapsed was not correct, the Government is still open to dialogue."

Kimunya said Kufuor left the country after he looked at the issues under dispute and realised "he had better things to do at home".

"ODM wants to join government and we are encouraging dialogue. We do not see the need for mediation for such an issue. We did not need mediation between ODM-Kenya and us," Kimunya said.

Kanu chairman and Local Government minister Mr Uhuru Kenyatta said the call for mass action by ODM was a sign of bad faith since negotiations were on-going.

"It is not a sign of good faith because we are open for dialogue. The President waited for them and they did not turn up. We are ready and waiting to talk. We ask the same from our colleagues," Uhuru said.

Kibaki's statement came as senior PNU politicians trooped to a city hotel for a meeting with MPs elected on small parties' tickets reportedly to discuss a power-sharing arrangement and a partnership deal in Parliament where PNU is outnumbered.

It is believed PNU dangled the seats left vacant after Kibaki named half the Cabinet this week, to MPs falling under the Small Parties Parliamentary Group.

Raila said he shared every sentiments expressed by his colleagues for protest. "I share in every sentiment expressed here. The views expressed here are also my views," said Raila, in response to a BBC question.

The UK Foreign and Commonwealth offices said in a statement Annan would be joined by South African First Lady Graca Machel and former Tanzanian President Benjamin Mkapa.

A statement by Foreign Secretary David Miliband said UK supports the effort.

Former African Head of States who came in to support the mediation rendered another international effort, rekindling hope all is not yet lost.

Under the aegis of the Africa Forum Mission to Kenya, former Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano, Dr Kenneth Kaunda (Zambia), Sir Ketumile Masire (Botswana) and Mkapa called on the parties to end the turmoil.

Talks collapsed

They maintained the talks were still on course, terming the perception that a breakthrough had stalled, 'dangerous.'

Said Nyong'o: "Talks between ODM and Kibaki collapsed due to the refusal of that side to negotiate with us. We're are responsive and working for a just solution."

"Kibaki side is hell-bent on clinging to power, regardless of the verdict of Kenyans. His side wants to dictate terms for us without the will to redress the situation" Nyong'o added.

Government members insisted mediation had not collapsed and that the doors for negotiations are still open.

Justice and Constitutional Affairs minister Ms Martha Karua has maintained a hard line, arguing President Kibaki was validly elected during an interview with BBC's Hard Talk programme. "President Kibaki had been validly elected and those who opposed to it should seek redress in court," Karua said.

"There is nothing like negotiations for power. The talks are to restore peace and calm, not for power," the Government spokesman Dr Alfred Mutua is on record saying.

But Science and Technology minister Dr Noah Wekesa said the Government was still committed to mediation and refuted claims it had declined to have round-table talks with ODM.

"There is room for negotiations and we are willing to sit with ODM. We must allow ourselves to talk to each other," he said.

Speaker of the East African Legislative Assembly has announced the commitment of the assembly in finding a solution to current political crisis.

"The assembly reaffirms its commitment to play its part in this process and do all in its power to assist in getting a lasting solution," said Mr Abdirahin Haithar Abdi.

Other appeals for negotiations to go on came from National Council of Churches of Kenya, Hindu Council of Kenya, Evangelical Churches of Kenya, Anglican Church, and the Nairobi Pentecostal Church, after a press conference to back negotiations.

Acknowledging the daunting task in front of the ODM's media consultant Mr Salim Lone, told Britain's Sky News, on Friday, "It is going to be very hard," to resolve the impasse.

He said ODM had "gone two or three extra miles to show we are reasonable, we are flexible, even though we won the election. The whole world knows we won the election."

The Council of Imams and Preachers of Kenya asked Kenyans not to react violently to the collapse of talks between the Government and ODM.

The secretary general Sheikh Mohammad Dor, however, says Kenyans should continue fighting for their rights peacefully, "Until Kibaki steps down".

"Kenyans should continue with countrywide but peaceful protests until they get their rights," Dor he advised.

 

Kenya opposition announces new protests


Xan Rice in Nairobi
Friday January 11, 2008
Guardian Unlimited

Kenyans were bracing themselves for further unrest today after opposition leader Raila Odinga announced a resumption of mass action around the country in defiance of a police ban on public rallies.

The call came after the failure of a mediation effort by African Union head and Ghanaian president John Kufuor, who met Odinga and President Mwai Kibaki, although not together.

Kibaki, accused by the opposition of stealing the election, maintains that no external help is needed to solve the political crisis and violent social turmoil that erupted after the December 27 vote.

The rallies are planned for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at more than 20 locations across Kenya, to protest against Kibaki's election victory, which local and international observers say was deeply flawed.

Earlier attempts at mass action in Nairobi saw clashes between Odinga's supporters, mostly drawn from the city's slums, and riot police, who used tear gas and water cannons to keep them away from Uhuru Park, near the city centre.

"Kenyans are entitled to protest peacefully at this blatant violation of their fundamental rights," said Anyang' Nyong'o, secretary-general of Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement, who also called for international sanctions on Kibaki's government.

Nyong'o's anger is echoed across the opposition leadership, who feel they were duped into calling off mass action last Monday in anticipation of talks with Kufuor and Kibaki.

While it had the effect of calming tensions that have already seen 500 people killed and more than 250,000 people displaced, the negotiations never occurred and Odinga's momentum was lost.

Kibaki, meanwhile, announced half of his cabinet, filling all the key ministries with his close political allies.

One of them is Uhuru Kenyatta, son of Kenya's first president Jomo Kenyatta, who abandoned his role as leader of the official opposition to join Kibaki's party just months before the election.

"Dialogue is not engaged in the streets," said Kenyatta, the new minister for local government, today. "Dialogue suggests that people resolve their differences peacefully, over a table, not through destroying property and killing innocent Kenyans."

The timing of the opposition rallies is significant. Parliament is due to open on Tuesday, and Odinga's party will have the majority of the seats.

The same day, Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary general, is due to arrive in Kenya together with Graca Machel, the wife of Nelson Mandela, and former Tanzanian president Benjamin Mkapa, as part of follow up to Kufuor's visit.

Analysts say this gives Kibaki two separate opportunities to reach out to Odinga - who refuses to meet him without an international mediator present - and to avoid a repeat of the ugly scenes that marred earlier protests.

But so far there has been little indication that Kibaki is willing to compromise.

Some younger, more junior members of the government have entered into tentative negotiations with the opposition. But hardliners in the office of the president, including Stanley Murage, a wealthy businessman from Central Kenya who Kibaki appointed as his "special advisor on strategy" in 2004, are refusing to give any ground.

Kibaki's intransigence over negotiations, which appears out of character for a man long regarded as one of the gentlemen of Kenyan politics, has been criticised in the local media, as was his move to appoint cabinet ministers at such a sensitive time.

To many people on the street, his defiant conduct since the election appears callous, especially given the dire humanitarian situation caused by the unrest.

It took Kibaki 10 days to visit any of the people displaced by the post- election violence. Yesterday his press team said that he had made another public appearance, joining thousands of mourners in "eulogising" Alex Muriithi, a wealthy businessman who headed a regional development authority.

Muriithi, who was Kibaki's nephew and a key political ally, died not in the unrest, but of cancer, a few days before the election.

Kibaki's office has also responded to reports that Uganda's president, Yoweri Museveni, was the only world leader to congratulate him on his reelection, releasing a statement saying that four other countries had also applauded his victory: Morocco, Kuwait, Swaziland and Somalia.

More violence expected

NAIROBI, Kenya (CNN) -- Kenya's opposition party has called for mass protests and rallies, a spokesman told CNN on Friday, raising the prospect of further bloodshed in what has long been one of East Africa's most stable and economically-developed nations.

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Raila Odinga's supporters protest against the government in the streets of Nairobi.

more photos »

 

The call follows the failure of the African Union to mediate a bitter conflict sparked by the disputed presidential election on December 27.

The Orange Democratic Movement spokesman did not say when the rallies could take place. The party has had to cancel two previous publicized gatherings when government troops met its supporters with force.

Several hundred people have died in the violence, prompted when President Mwai Kibaki declared victory over challenger Raila Odinga.

Much of the violence has taken on ethnic overtones, pitting supporters of Kibaki, a member of the Kikuyu tribe, against supporters of Odinga, a member of the Luo tribe.

International monitors, including a senior U.S. diplomat, have cited irregularities in the voting.

A U.S. diplomat told CNN Thursday said that former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan would take over mediation efforts in the dispute as African Union chairman John Kufuor, Ghana's president, had left Kenya without a resolution to the dispute.

The news concerning Annan's role in

Kenya faces further violent clashes - CNN.com

 

  • NEW Kenya's opposition party has called for more mass protests and rallies
  • Orange Democratic Movement unhappy that government has sworn in Cabinet
  • Hundreds have already died in unrest sparked by allegations of vote-rigging
  • Former U.N. chief Kofi Annan taking over mediation in Kenya election dispute
  • Next Article in World »

 

 

Bid to resolve Kenya crisis fails

U.S. and African diplomats leave after talks to settle the election dispute fail. A new round of negotiations is planned, to be led by Kofi Annan.

 

NAIROBI, KENYA -- Efforts to resolve Kenya's disputed presidential election faltered Thursday as diplomats from the United States and African Union left the country without forging an agreement.
As he departed, African Union Chairman John Kufuor, who is president of Ghana, said both sides had agreed to a new round of talks under the stewardship of former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
Annan will lead a panel of African experts expected to convene soon in Kenya.
But the prospects appeared dim as Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and his challenger, Raila Odinga, who have refused to meet, blamed each other for the collapse of talks supervised by the African Union.
"The failure of this mission is a big blow," said Salim Lone, Odinga's spokesman. "We are exhausted and very jaded. And now we are back to square one."
The breakdown raises the specter of more rioting, which has left about 500 people dead and 250,000 displaced since the Dec. 27 presidential and parliamentary elections.
Odinga plans to meet today with his advisors to consider renewing his call for massive rallies in Nairobi to demonstrate his popular support. He previously had agreed to call off the protests in the capital while negotiations with Kibaki were underway.
Though Odinga has asked his supporters to refrain from violence, many Kenyans fear that mass demonstrations will increase the death toll as police and protesters clash.
Earlier Thursday, riot police in Nairobi used tear gas to break up a demonstration of about 70 women, who taunted the officers by shouting, "Shame on you."
Kenya has been in turmoil since the balloting, which international observers say suffered from widespread irregularities. The country's election commissioner declared Kibaki the winner, and he was hastily inaugurated Dec. 30. But the same official later acknowledged irregularities in the voting.
Under the African Union initiative, both sides had been working on a proposal drafted by the World Bank in which they would share power in a coalition government, according to Lone, Odinga's spokesman. But he said Kibaki refused Thursday to sign the agreement.
In a statement, Kibaki accused Odinga of being unresponsive to his overtures. Kibaki this week offered to include Odinga in a unity government, though details were never made clear.
Jendayi Frazer, the U.S. State Department's top Africa diplomat, arrived in Kenya this week to help resolve the dispute, but she left Thursday.
Kibaki's administration has adopted an increasingly hard-line approach toward talks, moving quickly to solidify power by appointing ministers and a vice president. The president watched Thursday as 15 new Cabinet ministers were sworn in, brushing aside pleas from the international community that he delay such decisions until the dispute is resolved.
Now even some Odinga supporters say that his political options appear to be dwindling. Because his party won a slim majority of seats in the parliament, Odinga could attempt to exert his influence there. But the parliament historically has been weak and easily manipulated. By Edmund Sanders, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer ,January 11, 2008

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Fighting for Land or ethnic cleansing ...

In village after deserted village across Kenya's fertile Rift Valley, the story is the same. Rampaging mobs have chased away Kenya's most powerful tribe, the Kikuyu, burning homes to the ground and killing hundreds in the worst ethnic bloodletting in 15 years.

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The violence erupted amid accusations President Mwai Kibaki, a Kikuyu, stole the Dec. 27 vote. But for many here, it's all about one thing: land.

"They think all of Kenya is theirs," Felix Biwot, an ethnic Kalenjin, said of the Kikuyus. "But this land belongs to all of us."

Biwot spoke near Kiambaa, where dozens of Kikuyus were burned alive in a church last week by Kalenjin mobs. The atrocity was the worst in a week of mayhem that killed 500 people and displaced 250,000.

The tensions trace back to Kenya's colonial era, when white settlers seized land in the Rift Valley of West Kenya. The Kikuyus who lived there were dispersed throughout the country, and the British ruled by keeping the ethnic groups divided.

At independence in 1963, Kenya's first president, Jomo Kenyatta, took over. Kenyatta, a Kikuyu, helped Kikuyu families buy land from white settlers, including territories across the Masai- and Kalenjin-dominated Rift Valley. He also packed top government posts with his ethnic kinsmen.

The Kikuyu quickly prospered, growing into the most powerful ethnic group in the country, running business and politics. The favoritism shown to Kikuyus fueled a simmering anger among the nation's 41 other tribes. Kikuyus make up the largest tribe, but still only about 22 percent of Kenya's 34 million people. The Kalenjin make up 12 percent, and the Luo — the tribe of presidential challenger Raila Odinga — about 13 percent.

Now the old bitterness is erupting over the land, which stretches golden with corn to the horizon, dotted with flat-topped acacia trees.

"Many people were disposed of their land during the colonial era, and these historical injustices were not addressed until now," said Odenda Lumumba, national coordinator of the Kenya Land Alliance.

Kenya suffered similar clashes during its first multiparty elections in 1992.

Then, as now, there were tribal killings and home burnings. And then, as now, the desire for land — and the economic power and security it brings — stoked the anger.

"Kenyans romanticize land," said Ken Ouko, a lecturer in sociology at the University of Nairobi. "They use the land as identity because the Kenyan nation has failed to rally the people together as one."

President Kibaki paid a visit to thousands of displaced Kikuyus Wednesday in Burnt Forest, about 20 miles south of Eldoret. The Kikuyus here were chased away from their villages by mobs armed with machetes, sticks and arrows.

Kibaki promised he would rebuild their homes and said the government would protect them and their property.

"Nobody will be chased away," Kibaki said to roaring applause. "Anybody who owns land here, who bought land here, has a right to that land. That is Kenya. That will never change."

But healing the newly opened wounds will not be easy.

The overflowing morgue in Eldoret, the closest town, offers gruesome testimony to the bloodletting: at least 100 corpses — hacked, shot and burned — have been dumped onto the floor of four rooms. At the casualty ward, the wounded wince in pain under makeshift tents outside. Inside, dozens of men, women and children lie two to a bed.

At least 13 of the wounded are from Kiambaa, including Stephen Mburu, 43, the pastor of the church that was torched on New Year's Day. He was pulling children out of a back window when mobs beat his skull with clubs, knocking out 11 teeth, and left him for dead. He awoke hours later in a pool of blood, and lay Monday in a hospital bed in Eldoret.

Asked if Kalenjins and Kikuyus could live together in Kiambaa again, Mburu thought for a moment.

"It will require the intervention of God," he said. "I can forgive (the attackers), but it will be hard for people to forget what happened."

On Monday, 60-year-old Godfrey Karanja Ndungu helped Mburu's wife cart away their furniture from a nearby building that survived the attack.

At the church's gate, a red jacket covered with dried blood lay in the grass. Inside a stick-walled compound, a few discarded clubs, arrows and machetes lay in the black patch of scarred earth where the church once stood.

"It's hatred," Ndungu said. "Kikuyu are hard workers. These Kalenjin are just jealous. They just want our land."

Kiambaa was home to several thousand Kikuyu and a few dozen Kalenjins. But the only people left now are those who have come to retrieve belongings or identify dead relatives whose bodies are scattered around the fields.

Even Kiambaa's tiny Kalenjin minority has fled, fearing reprisal attacks, but they plan to return.

As for the Kikuyu, "We don't need them here," said Biwot, the Kalenjin farmer. "They've controlled too much of Kenya for too long. It's our turn now."

Print Story: Land at heart of Kenyan violence on Yahoo! News

By TODD PITMAN, Associated Press WriterWed Jan 9, 4:29 PM ET

 

Why the Silence About the Ethnic Cleansing?

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PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has congratulated President Mwai Kibaki because Kibaki was declared the winner of the Kenya election. Prominent among the critics are Ogenga Latigo and Reagan Okumu. No level is too low for them not to sink. The lowest depth they have now sank is to allege that Museveni helped Kibaki to rig the election and is therefore a party to the so-called Kibaki's fraudulent victory.

Fourteen years ago there was genocide in Rwanda when the Tutsis were massacred because they were Tutsis. Today we see a repeat of the same in Kenya though on a smaller scale. I find it extremely appalling because of the dead silence and and lack of condemnation of the systemic and premeditated ethnic cleansing by well-organised killers in various parts of Kenya.

The international media reported that the killer weapons were acquired in advance, which suggests a premeditated plan. It is terrible that people were being asked whether they were Kikuyu and those who were identified as such were brutally murdered. Others were asked to speak a few words so as to be condemned to death by their accents.

The absence of condemnation of such barbaric ethnic cleansing of women and children even is a despicable shame even on the BBC and a frightening reminder of what happened in Rwanda. BBC reporters were busy running around talking about stolen votes. The burning to death in a church of innocent children was of secondary interest!

Assuming the votes had been stolen, must you commit genocide; burn children and women in order to reach the top? In Rwanda, even those who ran to churches as sanctuaries were not spared. The poor innocents of Kenya, some of whom did not even vote or understand what elections were about ran to the church, thinking that they would be safe.

How can the East Africa of the 21st Century condone the turning of its citizens into refugees in their own country? Africa should not tolerate a leader who incites and champions ethnic cleansing as a means of getting to the top. In Uganda, I am worried by what I am hearing in the media. On january 3, on WBS TV, there were three commentators on the Kenya elections. One of the speakers warned Ugandans that genocide was awaiting us. Whom or what ethnic groups are being targeted for cleansing? On January 5 on the Kimeza, a female participant went further and told Ugandans that even if millions of people were butchered for alleged vote stealing she will congratulate those who defend their votes.

Obviously, these two speakers are openly inciting ethnic hatred and violence. Such incitement should not be tolerated. In Rwanda, genocide was fueled by radio. Uganda should stop these tendencies immediately.

Today President Museveni is allegedly in power because he stole Dr Kizza Besigye's votes. I get flabbergasted by the mindset of even the so-called election observers. According to them, it is only incumbent governments which rig elections and violence and intimidation are the monopolies of incumbent parties.

For these glorified observers, the opposition party leaders are innocent and are assumed to be incapable of rigging elections!

Experience has shown us that media houses tend to build the opposition to gigantic proportions and inflate their often non-existing electoral strength. I must say that to believe that is a demonstration of gross naivety.

The purpose of course is to stage-manage the outcome. When they lose, the loss must be because their votes were stolen. The winner is labelled a vote stealer. Yet any independent election study will always expose the shallow way of reasoning. I have participated in three presidential elections in Uganda by actually being on the ground. During the 2006 presidential elections, the Weekly Observer published seven days before the election poll, projections which gave Besigye a clean sweep in Buganda. But these projections were the most scandalous because they were lies. Both The Observer and besigye knew it.

I challenged the editor to come to the ground and show the country those districts and counties where Besigye was poised for a clean sweep. I knew how weak Besigye was in Buganda. But that was not the issue for the Observer. The issue was to stage-manage Besigye's heavy losses and attribute them to Museveni's 'vote stealing'.

Today the opposition still claims that Museveni's victory was fraudulent and this is still touted because the newspapers had created that impression. The following observations should be considered by any unbiased analyst. There were three polling companies. Two consistently showed the opposition in the lead. The third polled otherwise. The question is how accurate were these pollsters to the last day?

The second observation is what we call tactical or split ticket voting. In Kenya, because many ministers lost their seats, their losses were automatically translated into Kibaki losses by uncritical and ill-informed analysts.

In many countries, and this certainly happened in the Kenya election, there was split voting. Why have the political experts ignored this trend. Did it happen or did it not?

The third observation is what the newspapers reported on December 29, 2007. It was reported that the votes from Central and Northeast were not yet in. The papers went further and added that the majority of those votes were likely to go to Kibaki.

The question is if these votes were numerous enough, did that not mean they enabled Kibaki to overhaul the opposition? I ask again why has this possibility been ignored by the so-called expert analysts? These are pertinent questions which must be answered when considering a verdict on the election outcome.

The fourth observation is that during the night of Saturday, the Kibaki and the opposition groups at the Electoral Commission went over the tallies of nearly 200 constituencies. This was stated by the High Commissioner of Kenya to the UK, Mr. Joe Muchemi when he was interviewed by the BBC. If this claim is true, what was the outcome of the scrutiny of all these constituencies?

This question must be answered by the Chairman of the Electoral Commission. On Saturday evening, the reports were that the opposition was leading by 40,000 votes. If the opposition had won by a margin of 40,000 votes, would the international media have alleged that Kibaki was cheated?

I am asking these questions as an independent analyst who wants to establish a logical approach to the investigation so that sanity can return to Kenya. My final observation concerns the behaviour of the Electoral Commission.

Asked by the BBC why President Kibaki was sworn in with indecent haste, the Minister of Justice alleged that there was a strategy not to announce the winner before the expiry of the tenure of the Government on Sunday midnight. The implication of that statement is that the Electoral Commission was deliberately withholding the verdict of the poll and wait for the expiry of the government. If the allegation by the Minister of Justice is true, the ECK must be asked whose strategy it was implementing for not announcing the results? Was it, for Kibaki or for the Opposition?

In the former Yugoslavia, those who engaged in acts of ethnic cleansing have been and are being hunted to be brought before the ICC for prosecution. Will those who burnt innocent children and women in Kenya be prosecuted? This is the question which Africa and the International Community cannot be allowed to ignore. The politics of ethnic cleansing must be condemned and outlawed.

The writer is the minister of state for finance in charge of investment

New Vision (Kampala)

OPINION
9 January 2008
Posted to the web 9 January 2008
By Ssemakula Kiwamuka
Kampala

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Odinga Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet

Kenya’s main opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has described as unfortunate and illegal President Mwai Kibaki’s announcement of members of his cabinet. Kibaki’s announcement comes as Ghana’s President and African Union chairman John Kufuor is expected today (Wednesday) to chair talks between the opposition and the government. The talks are aimed at resolving the ongoing political impasse and also to address the escalating violence, which is threatening Kenya’s young democracy.

Political observers say Kibaki’s announcement would not only embarrass President Kufuor, but could potentially undermine the chance to resolve the country’s political crisis. William Ruto is a leading member of the opposition ODM. He tells reporter Peter Clottey from the Kenyan capital, that Kibaki’s announcement is disappointing.

“Mr. Kibaki is behaving true to his colors. We had agreed with him that he was not going to make any move, and that is the reason why we postponed our rallies, which were meant to happen today to give negotiations a chance. Our position is that Mwai Kibaki is not the president of Kenya because he lost the election and any purported announcement of anybody into something called a cabinet is a farce,” Ruto noted.

He said President Kibaki’s cabinet appointment is a calculated attempt to refuse to address the problems that followed the controversial December 27th election.

“Mwai Kibaki is trying to divert attention from the crisis our country faces. We are due for negotiations under the mediation of the president of Ghana John Kufuor, and he is trying to run away from the discussion because he is ashamed and because he stole from the people of Kenya and he does not want that subject discussed. He believes that he can run this country the way Mugabe (Zimbabwe’s President) is running Zimbabwe. We want to tell him this is Kenya, this is not Zimbabwe, he is not going to get away with it,” he said.

Ruto described as unfortunate reports that leading members of President Kibaki’s new team are downplaying the role of Ghana’s president who is expected to jumpstart today’s talks between Kenya’s government and the opposition.

“It is the understanding of ODM, it is the understanding of many leaders in Africa, and it is the understanding of many leaders across the world that President Kufuor is coming here to mediate so that we can end the crisis in our country. Gordon Brown  (British Prime minister) had made a statement on this, George Bush of the U. S. made a statement today on this, and he was very categorical that John Kufuor was coming here to mediate on the situation we have here in this country,” Ruto pointed out.

He denied the situation on the ground may not favor the opposition ODM party.

“I think things are going the way we wanted. We had proposed right from the beginning that we need negotiations under international mediation. The international community has pressed and in our country yesterday evening President Kufuor arrived and we have prepared ourselves for discussions this morning. Anything about appointing a cabinet is a diversionary tactic and we are not going to buy into that. We are walking straight into the talks, and we want to resolve the issues on the table so that we can move this country forward,” he said.

Meanwhile, partisans of the opposition ODM reportedly rioted in the western city of Kisumu upon hearing that embattled President Mwai Kibaki had named several members of a new cabinet.

VOA News - Kenya’s Opposition ODM Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet Appointment

Kenya’s Opposition ODM Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet Appointment

By Peter Clottey
Washington, D.C.
09 January 2008

Clottey Interview With ODM's William Ruto audio clip
Listen to Clottey Interview With ODM's William Ruto audio clip

ODM Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet

 

Kenya’s main opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has described as unfortunate and illegal President Mwai Kibaki’s announcement of members of his cabinet. Kibaki’s announcement comes as Ghana’s President and African Union chairman John Kufuor is expected today (Wednesday) to chair talks between the opposition and the government. The talks are aimed at resolving the ongoing political impasse and also to address the escalating violence, which is threatening Kenya’s young democracy.

Political observers say Kibaki’s announcement would not only embarrass President Kufuor, but could potentially undermine the chance to resolve the country’s political crisis. William Ruto is a leading member of the opposition ODM. He tells reporter Peter Clottey from the Kenyan capital, that Kibaki’s announcement is disappointing.

“Mr. Kibaki is behaving true to his colors. We had agreed with him that he was not going to make any move, and that is the reason why we postponed our rallies, which were meant to happen today to give negotiations a chance. Our position is that Mwai Kibaki is not the president of Kenya because he lost the election and any purported announcement of anybody into something called a cabinet is a farce,” Ruto noted.

He said President Kibaki’s cabinet appointment is a calculated attempt to refuse to address the problems that followed the controversial December 27th election.

“Mwai Kibaki is trying to divert attention from the crisis our country faces. We are due for negotiations under the mediation of the president of Ghana John Kufuor, and he is trying to run away from the discussion because he is ashamed and because he stole from the people of Kenya and he does not want that subject discussed. He believes that he can run this country the way Mugabe (Zimbabwe’s President) is running Zimbabwe. We want to tell him this is Kenya, this is not Zimbabwe, he is not going to get away with it,” he said.

Ruto described as unfortunate reports that leading members of President Kibaki’s new team are downplaying the role of Ghana’s president who is expected to jumpstart today’s talks between Kenya’s government and the opposition.

“It is the understanding of ODM, it is the understanding of many leaders in Africa, and it is the understanding of many leaders across the world that President Kufuor is coming here to mediate so that we can end the crisis in our country. Gordon Brown  (British Prime minister) had made a statement on this, George Bush of the U. S. made a statement today on this, and he was very categorical that John Kufuor was coming here to mediate on the situation we have here in this country,” Ruto pointed out.

He denied the situation on the ground may not favor the opposition ODM party.

“I think things are going the way we wanted. We had proposed right from the beginning that we need negotiations under international mediation. The international community has pressed and in our country yesterday evening President Kufuor arrived and we have prepared ourselves for discussions this morning. Anything about appointing a cabinet is a diversionary tactic and we are not going to buy into that. We are walking straight into the talks, and we want to resolve the issues on the table so that we can move this country forward,” he said.

Meanwhile, partisans of the opposition ODM reportedly rioted in the western city of Kisumu upon hearing that embattled President Mwai Kibaki had named several members of a new cabinet.

VOA News - Kenya’s Opposition ODM Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet Appointment

Kenya’s Opposition ODM Dismisses Kibaki’s Cabinet Appointment

By Peter Clottey
Washington, D.C.
09 January 2008

Clottey Interview With ODM's William Ruto audio clip
Listen to Clottey Interview With ODM's William Ruto audio clip

Kenyan rivals moving toward talks

 

Family

Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times,A homeless family in Kenya wakes to another day in a park.

 

More than 250,000 people so far have been left homeless by the violence and many are living in shelters or in public parks.

The president and the opponent accusing him of stealing the election may meet, bringing hope for an end to their power struggle and the deadly violence it has spurred.

By Robyn Dixon, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 8, 2008

NAIROBI, KENYA -- Three days of shuttle diplomacy by the top U.S. diplomat on African issues had failed Monday to get the two rivals for the Kenyan presidency to the negotiation table, but there were signs that they were inching toward talks.
Opposition leader Raila Odinga, who has accused President Mwai Kibaki of stealing the election, called off a protest rally of his supporters planned for today in order to allow mediation of the crisis by the African Union.

Unrest in Kenya

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Unrest in Kenya

Later Monday, Kibaki, who was sworn in to a second term on Dec. 30 after the disputed elections, invited Odinga to meet with religious leaders on how to stop postelection violence and forge reconciliation. An aide to the opposition leader later told the Associated Press that Odinga would be willing to attend the Friday meeting, but only as part of the African Union mediation.
In the last week, demonstrations by Odinga's supporters have been accompanied by looting, violence and the burning of churches. The postelection protests also have brought an increase in tribal killings.
Kenya faces what one newspaper headline Monday called the country's "darkest week" as Kibaki and Odinga struggle for control. Their impasse has fed the violence and instability in a nation that had been a success story in a volatile region of Africa.
Jendayi Frazer, the U.S. diplomat, said Monday that the deep distrust between Kibaki and Odinga was one of the main barriers to reaching a political solution to their dispute.
"What we have said is that dialogue is necessary. . . . I think both are prepared to talk. I think what they both need is some confidence," said the U.S. assistant secretary of State. "They don't trust each other very much. They're not certain."
Frazer said Kenyan electoral and political institutions needed to be reformed.
Kenyans "have been cheated by the leadership of Kenya and their institutions," Frazer said. "The political leaders have to stop the violence, and they have to reform the institutions."
African Union Chairman John Kufuor, the president of Ghana, was scheduled to fly to Kenya today to broker negotiations.
"We want the mediation to take place in a peaceful environment -- that is why the rallies have been canceled," Odinga told journalists Monday.
The dispute has pitted Luos and other tribes that support Odinga against Kibaki's dominant Kikuyu tribe, seen by others as having enjoyed the fruits of power too long.
The government said Monday that nearly 500 people had died in tribal violence over the disputed Dec. 27 election, and 255,000 had fled their homes. But Odinga said the death toll could be 1,000.
In the streets of Odinga's stronghold in the Nairobi slum district of Kibera, there was confusion among his supporters Monday as news broke that today's protest rally had been canceled.
"We know that if he says there is no rally, there must be a reason," said Edward Oloo, 32, who lives deep in the slum district.
Odinga has called repeated protests to pressure Kibaki. The demonstrators were stopped from rallying in a Nairobi park by riot police firing tear gas, water cannons and, at times, bullets.
But the protests make a volatile tool: Odinga's supporters in Kibera said the clashes with police and the lack of a political compromise from Kibaki left them angrier than they were a week ago.
"We are being trampled, and we don't like it," said John Lallo, 62, who added that he has never had a job. "We are more angry than we were. We're worried about our security and the future of our children."
"It's just like a cold war now," said another Odinga supporter, George Modigo, 35, also unemployed. "There's nothing going on; there are no jobs. We are not earning any money."
The Luo men sleep outside in the streets in fear of attacks by Kikuyus, who live in a neighboring part of Kibera.
But the lanes in Oloo's area were calm Monday: Women sold fish, vegetables and charcoal by the road, and small stalls were open.
Odinga's supporters echo the distrust their leader has of Kibaki, and their sense that a power-sharing deal would just be a way to cheat Odinga out of power.
Kibaki "is not trustworthy," Modigo said. "You make a deal with him, and he just changes it."
Charles Abanga, 37, another unemployed supporter of Odinga, said: "It's a political issue, and if it can't be solved amicably, there will be war."
robyn.dixon@latimes.com

Kenyan rivals inching toward talks - Los Angeles Times

Monday, January 7, 2008

Rivals make concessions

some hope?

NAIROBI, Kenya - Kenya's president and his chief rival made key concessions Monday to end their election dispute, calling off protests and agreeing to talks under pressure from the United States as the death toll from a week of violence neared 500.

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The top American envoy to Africa said the vote count at the heart of the dispute was tampered with and both sides could have been involved.

The Dec. 27 election returned President Mwai Kibaki to power for another five-year term, with his rabble-rousing opponent, Raila Odinga, coming in a close second. But even Kenyan electoral commission chairman Samuel Kivuiti, who declared Kibaki the winner, subsequently said he is not sure Kibaki won.

"Yes, there was rigging," the U.S. envoy, Jendayi Frazer, told The Associated Press in an interview in Nairobi, where she has been meeting with Kibaki and Odinga for the past three days. "I mean there were problems with the vote counting process," she added. "Both the parties could have rigged."

She said she did not want to blame either Kibaki or Odinga.

Kenya is crucial to the United States' war on terrorism. It has turned over dozens of people to the U.S. and Ethiopia as suspected terrorists, allows American forces to operate from Kenyan bases and conducts joint exercises with U.S. troops in the region.

The U.S. also is a major donor to Kenya, long seen as a stable democracy in a region that includes war-ravaged Somalia and Sudan. Aid amounts to roughly $1 billion a year, said embassy spokesman T.J. Dowling.

Frazer said the violence "hasn't shaken our confidence in Kenya as a regional hub."

U.S. intervention appears to be having an effect on the crisis, with both sides softening their tones since Frazer's arrival over the weekend.

On Monday, Kibaki invited Odinga to a meeting at his official residence Friday to discuss how to end the turmoil, the president's news service said. Just hours earlier, Odinga called off nationwide rallies amid fears they would spark new bloodshed.

Odinga's spokesman, Salim Lone, said Odinga will meet with Kibaki as long as it is part of a mediation process with African Union chairman John Kufuor, the president of Ghana. Kufuor's trip to Kenya has been delayed repeatedly as the government rejected outside mediation. But he is now expected to begin talks in Nairobi as early as Wednesday.

Frazer had won an offer from Kibaki to form a unity government over the weekend. Odinga then said he was willing to drop demands that Kibaki resign and was willing to discuss sharing power, but only through a mediator empowered to negotiate an agreement that the international community would guarantee.

It would be nearly impossible for Kibaki to govern without opposition support. In parliamentary elections held the same day as the presidential vote, Odinga's party won 95 of 210 seats, and half of Kibaki's Cabinet lost their seats. It was a sign of people's anger over pervasive corruption and nepotism that favored Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe, long dominant in politics and the economy.

The post-election chaos has been one of the darkest times since Kenya's independence from Britain in 1963. Much of the fighting has degenerated into riots pitting other tribes against Kibaki's Kikuyu.

An official in neighboring Uganda said over the weekend, 30 fleeing Kenyans were thrown into the border river by Kenyan attackers, and were presumed drowned. Two Ugandan truck drivers carrying the group said they were stopped Saturday at a roadblock mounted by vigilantes who identified the refugees as Kikuyus and threw them into the deep, swift-flowing Kipkaren River, said Himbaza Hashaka, a Ugandan border official. The drivers said none survived, Hashaka said.

On Monday, the government put the death toll in election violence at 486 with some 255,000 people displaced from their homes. The toll, which did not include the drownings at the border, was compiled by a special committee of humanitarian services set up by the government which extensively toured areas most affected by riots.

The body of Olympian Lucas Sang was found in western Kenya New Year's Eve with a deep gash to the back of his head and severe burns, said close friend Moses Tanui, a former world 10,000-meter champion. Sang, who was in his 50s, was a 400-meter runner who made the quarter finals of the men's race in 1988 and the same year ran in the finals as a member of the 4x400m relay. Sang was a member of the Kalenjin tribe that has clashed with Kikuyus.

___

Associated Press writers Michelle Faul, Katharine Houreld, Tom Odula and Malkhadir M. Muhumed in Nairobi; Todd Pitman in Eldoret; Tom Maliti in Mombasa and Godfrey Olukya in Kampala, Uganda contributed to this report.

Kenyan rivals make concessions - Yahoo! News

By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY, Associated Press Writer Mon Jan 7, 4:02 PM ET

 

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A boy rolls a tire past a burnt out building near a camp of displaced Kenyans in the town of Burnt Forest, Kenya Monday, Jan. 7, 2008. Kenya's opposition leader on Monday canceled planned nationwide protest rallies amid fears they could ignite new bloodletting after political and ethnic violence that has already killed some 500 people. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

AP Photo: A boy rolls a tire past a burnt out building near a camp of displaced...

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Kenya Opposition Calls for More violent Rallies

Kenya's opposition leader called Sunday for more rallies across the country, raising the threat of more bloodshed, but also indicated he was willing to share power with the government he accuses of rigging the presidential vote.

More than 300 people have died in fighting since the Dec. 27 vote, bringing chaos to a country of 34 million people that had been one of East Africa's most stable democracies and revived simmering tribal resentments.

The opposition leader Raila Odinga rejected President Mwai Kibaki's offer of a "unity government" but said he was willing to consider a power-sharing agreement guaranteed by the international community. Still, his call for new protests on Tuesday despite a government ban imposed during the unrest dimmed the prospect of a quick resolution.

"This fighting is meaningless," 17-year-old Eliakim Omondi said at a Lutheran church in Nairobi's Kibera slum that was torched days ago. "I wish they would just talk and square everything so the fighting will stop."

Kibaki, re-elected by a narrow margin in a vote count that international observers say was deeply flawed, said Saturday he was willing to form a unity government after meeting with the top U.S. diplomat for Africa, Jendayi Frazer.

Odinga rejected that proposal, but his spokesman said they were open to other solutions.

"A government of national unity is not acceptable to us," said the spokesman, Salim Lone. "But there are other formulations, such as a coalition government with genuine power sharing that we are willing to discuss."

The other opposition proposal is to set up an interim government with a mandate to hold new presidential elections, he said.

It would be nearly impossible for Kibaki to govern without opposition support. In parliamentary balloting, Odinga's party won 95 of 210 legislative seats and half of Kibaki's Cabinet lost their seats.

Odinga welcomed the imminent arrival of Ghana's President John Kufuor, current chairman of the African Union, who is expected in Nairobi by Tuesday.

ABC News: Kenya Opposition Calls for More Rallies

 

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Members of the congregation pray during a mass inside a Lutheran church which was damaged by fire during riots in the slum of Kibera, Nairobi, Kenya, Sunday, Jan. 6, 2008. Kenyans prayed Sunday for peace and an end to a political deadlock that sparked a week of deadly riots, while the opposition rejected an offer from the president to form a unity government. (AP Photo/Riccardo Gangale)

Civil unrest in Kenya

Post-election conflict in Kenya


Division created by the 2007 Kenyan presidential election

 

Riots and armed clashes erupted in Kenya after incumbent Mwai Kibaki was declared winner of the country's presidential elections that took place on December 27, 2007. Supporters of Kibaki's opponent - Raila Odinga - went on a rampage in several parts of the country, burning shacks, shops and cars.

The anger stems from reports that the vote counting was rigged by the electoral commission in Kibaki's favour. Kibaki was sworn in a hastily conducted ceremony at Nairobi State House which was perceived as an attempt to pre-empt demands for a vote recount.

Reports by international observers about manipulations and admissions by members of the electoral commission that their staff obviously provided them with incorrect figures have further fuelled this anger. [1] The violence has been directed mainly against Kikuyus, belonging to the same ethnic group as Kibaki.[2]

The violence against Kikuyus occurred mainly in areas like the Nairobi Slums, Nyanza Province, the Rift Valley and the Coast where opposition against Kibaki is particularly strong.[3] The ethnically diverse Nairobi slums have also seen violence by Kikuyu dominated groups -amongst them the infamous Mungiki- against neighbours hailing from western parts of Kenya. [4]

Timeline

A BBC reporter saw 43 bodies with gunshot wounds in a mortuary in the opposition stronghold of Kisumu. A witness said armed police shot protesters at a rally. There have been running battles in the Nairobi slums. The local KTN television station says 124 have died nationwide in the first two days of unrest.[1][5]

On December 31, 2007, police reported that 40 people were killed in Nairobi and 53 in Kisumu, a major support base for Odinga. Four bodies were discovered in Mathare, in Nairobi, seven people were killed in Nakuru, and four people found dead in a village near Kapsabet.[6]

As the riots grew more and more out of control, workers refused to perform their jobs, and an official curfew has since been declared.

In the Coast Province, various Kikuyu businessmen had their business premises looted and burnt down.[citation needed]

A large rally at which millions were expected to support Odinga, who planned to proclaim himself the "people's president", was planned for January 3 but then postponed to January 8 after police dispersed crowds with tear gas.[7] On January 5th,President Kibaki made known his intention to form a government of national unity.However,the ODM presidential candidate, Raila Odinga,responded by saying that a negotiation with Kibaki as the president would mean that ODM recognised Kibaki's Government as legitimate,which is clearly not the case.

Casualties and displacement

Violent protesters on a street in Nairobi, January 2008

Violent protesters on a street in Nairobi, January 2008

Around 300 people have now died in the post-poll bloodshed. 75,000 have fled, mostly to neighboring Uganda.[8] The largest single loss of life was when a church providing shelter from the violence to 200 people was set alight by rioters, burning 35 people to death.[8] The people who were sheltering were members of President Kibaki's native tribe, the Kikuyu.

Former Olympic athlete Lucas Sang died under unknown circumstances in a riot at Eldoret on January 1.[9] Politician G.G. Njuguna Ngengi was hacked to death in Kuresoi, near Molo, on January 2.[10] On January 3rd,Nobel laureate,Archbishop Desmond Tutu held talks with President Kibaki and Raila Odinga in separate locations.A government spokesperson,Dr Alfred Mutua had initially said that the government was capable of solving its own problems and therefore did not require any foreign mediation.The Kenya government is yet to agree on meeting other foreign dignitaries who have expressed willingness to be part of the mediation process.The Kenyan government has further been criticized for refusing to meet with foreign dignitaries in order to solve the impasse which it has been unable to solve on its own since the elections ended on December 27th.

Reactions

  • A government spokesman claimed that Mr Odinga's supporters were "engaging in ethnic cleansing".[8]
  • Mr Odinga said Mr Kibaki's camp was "guilty, directly, of genocide"[8] as he called for international mediation. [11]

The kikuyus are largely outnumbered and if ethnic cleansing occurs,they will most probably bear the most brunt as most of the other tribes seem to have formed a formidable force under the political umbrella ODM.At present,approximately 200,000 Kenyans have been displaced due to the clashes and a majority of these people are mainly kikuyus who resided in the Rift Valley province.

References

  1. ^ a b "Scores Dead in Kenya Poll Clashes", BBC, 2007-12-31. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
  2. ^ Jeffrey Gettleman, "Disputed Vote Plunges Kenya Into Bloodshed", The New York Times, December 31, 2007.
  3. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7165602.stm#map
  4. ^ http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/storypage.aspx?StoryId=104196
  5. ^ "Kenya: Death and Chaos After Kibaki Win", The Nation (Nairobi), 2007-12-31. Retrieved on 2007-12-31.
  6. ^ "Election riots worsen in Kenya", Al Jazeera, December 31, 2007.
  7. ^ http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5iJwWD-VW8iTFFDvK61PEYHSPhyKA
  8. ^ a b c d http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7167363.stm
  9. ^ The Standard, January 3, 2008: Poll violence claim former athlete Sang
  10. ^ The Standard, January 3, 2008: Politician killed in ethnic clashes
  11. ^ The Standard 3.01.2008 Raila takes the lead in search for a way out

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_unrest_in_Kenya_%282007%E2%80%93present%29"

Civil unrest in Kenya (2007–present) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

5,400 Kenyans flee to Uganda

Some 5,400 Kenyans have sought refuge in Uganda following the upsurge of violence in the western parts of the country.

Displaced people from various parts of Eldoret Town and its environs camp at the Eldoret Police Station yesterday. A number of Kenyans have now fled to neighbouring Uganda. Photo/ JARED NYATAYA

The United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) reported yesterday that the Kenyans are currently staying in schools and churches in Tororo district on the eastern side of Uganda. 

The agency’s spokesman, Mr Emmanuel Nyabera, however, said that the condition of the Kenyans was unknown and that an advance inter-agency mission had been sent to the area to monitor the situation.

‘‘We are yet to get a report of their status but what we can report as at now is that they fled the country through Busia and Malaba into Uganda, due to the violence,” said Mr Nyabera at a news conference in Nairobi.

He added: “We are also aware that  a huge number of Kenyans have gone into Tanzania for the same reason. We are yet to get the exact number.”

It also emerged yesterday that some 30,000 metric tonnes of food being ferried to Uganda, Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, and Somalia may not reach its destination in time due to insecurity in the country.

The foodstuff, according to the World Food Programme Spokesman, Mr Peter Smerdon, docked at the Port of Mombasa early this week and was scheduled to be shipped out of the country to the affected areas.

“It were loaded into some 200 trucks for various destinations. 
Only a few trucks have made their way to Uganda while the others are stuck on the way,” said Mr Smerdon.

He said the effects of violence in the country were already being felt in other parts of the region, citing the biting fuel crisis in Uganda as an example.

‘‘If the insecurity situation continues in this country, then  neighbouring countries will definitely suffer. We might actually be facing a food crisis in most areas because the roads are impassable,” he added.

Mrs Sara Cameron, the United Nations Children’s Fund chief communication officer, Kenya, said women and children had been hit hard by the violence.

“Although most of the casualties in hospitals and health centres are men, it is the children who suffer. Most of them suffer from malnourishment especially in Nyanza and Western provinces,” she said.

She, however, indicated that they had enough food and medical supplies to cater for at least 100,000 internally displaced people in the country.

Elizabeth Lwanga, the United Nations Resident Coordinator, said police escort was needed to ensure that food and medical supplies reached the most affected parts of the country.

Mobilisation

She spoke in the wake of a joint meeting of about 20 non-governmental agencies and religious bodies in Nairobi whose agenda was mobilisation of resources for the humanitarian mission in the affected areas.

Mrs Lwanga said UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon had already spoken to the Kenyan Head of State, Mr Mwai Kibaki, and ODM leader Raila Odinga in a bid to bring to an end the political crisis in the country.

“The UN secretary general expressed confidence that the stalemate would come to an end to ensure that normalcy returned to the country,” she said.

Nationmedia.com | Daily Nation | NEWS | 5,400 Kenyans flee to Uganda Story by DAVE OPIYO Publication Date: 1/6/2008

 

ECK could go to court soon

The Electoral Commission of Kenya may go to court this week to have an independent audit of the December 27 presidential ballots set up, the Sunday Nation has learnt.

Samuel Kivuitu, the chairman of the Electoral Commission of Kenya, addresses a press conference in his office in Nairobi. Photo/STEPHEN MUDIARI.

An official of the beleaguered elections body confirmed that some of the 22 commissioners had agreed to seek the intervention of the High Court in setting up a team to carry out an audit of the presidential elections whose results has triggered violence, resulting into death and destruction of property.

Last Monday, four of the ECK commissioners called a press conference at which they suggested that a way be found to set up an independent audit of the presidential votes to determine who between President Kibaki and ODM leader Raila Odinga won the election.

Disputed polls

However, none of the parties in the disputed poll has taken up the matter, leaving  ECK to try and salvage whatever good it can from a general elections judged by a majority of the observers as flawed.

The move comes amid fears that some of the commissioners had contemplated quitting following pressure from members of their various communities.

At least two of the commissioners had their houses in their rural areas razed after last Sunday’s release of the presidential election results and the swearing-in of President Kibaki.

The decision to go to court, if implemented, would open another front to the already raging dispute between Mr Odinga’s ODM and President Kibaki’s Party of National Unity.

But an assistant minister for foreign affairs and MP-elect for Sirisia Mr Moses Wetangula wondered how the ECK could originate such a motion on its own yet it is not one of the aggrieved parties.

“Once the ECK named the winner and losers in the poll they became functus officio(no longer seized of the matter). Their business was done”, the assistant minister who is also a lawyer added.

The Commission can only be enjoined in a suit filed by one of the aggrieved parties or appear as a witness, he said.

ODM is on record as having said that it was no longer interested in the re-tallying of the presidential votes claiming that key documents may have already been “doctored”.

The Law Society of Kenya last week said it would go to court this week to have the presidential poll probed by an independent body.

One of the 22 commissioners who spoke to the Sunday Nation on condition of anonymity said their petition will hinge on sections 84 and 123(8) of the Constitution.

According to Section 84 of the constitution, any Kenyan who feels that their fundamental rights have been violated can go to the High Court to seek redress.

The fundamental rights include liberty and security of persons, freedom of association, expression and the right to live and work anywhere in the country.

And section 123(8) empowers the courts to hear any matter brought before it as long as it does not contravene the country’s supreme law.

While the ECK may not have jurisdiction to originate a motion to have its own conduct examined, the elections body has found itself in an awkward situation where neither the loser nor the winner wants to go to court.

It also risks becoming irrelevant following a disastrous performance and conflicting information from its chairman, Mr Samuel Mutua Kivuitu.

The move by the ECK commissioners follows the rejection of the presidential elections polls results announced by the Mr Kivuitu last Sunday in which he named the incumbent President Mwai Kibaki as the winner.

Serious challenger

Mr Odinga, the President’s most serious challenger, has however contested the results saying he was robbed of victory. But he has refused to go to court maintaining that they are not independent.

Already the ECK is consulting South African and Ugandan poll officials on how to get out of the fix.

South African elections officials were expected in the country last Thursday on the same flight as the Nobel Peace Prize laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

Also to be consulted by the ECK are judges from South Africa and Uganda who were expected to arrive in Nairobi this weekend. The judges failed to get flight connections to Nairobi due to the heavy travel during the Christmas and New year festivities.

A long-serving ECK commissioner Mr Jack Tumwa said none of the delegations from South Africa and Uganda had arrived in the country by Friday evening.

Mr Tumwa was one of the four commissioners who held a Press conference last week suggesting that a way be found to set up an independent audit team for the presidential ballots.

Sources at ECK headquarters informed the Sunday Nation that an observer mission from South Africa-The Election Institute of South Africa-had offered their proposal on the way out of the rigmarole that has become of the Kenyan election.

Story by DAVID OKWEMBAH Publication Date: 1/6/2008

Kenya uneasily calms down


Soldiers help clear Nakuru-Eldoret highway that had been blocked to give room for a convoy of cars carrying displaced persons from Eldoret, on Saturday. Picture: Peter Ochieng

Kalonzo’s arbitration efforts betray raw ambitions
Except for his suspect impatience to have the presidential poll impasse ironed out "without any further delay", ODM-Kenya leader Kalonzo Musyoka’s march to new political heights is on. [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Institutions fail credibility test
As the events of December 27 continue to generate violence countrywide, a number of reputable institutions have equally been left bleeding. [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Picture gallery
[Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Protests continue to rock Mombasa for second day
ODM supporters engaged anti-riot police in running battles for the second day in Mombasa. This wa [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Police sent to Thika to curb poll violence
Police have been deployed in some parts of Thika District after it emerged that the post-election sk [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Hundreds evacuated from Eldoret
Evacuation of hundreds of victims of post-election violence in Eldoret by both road and air continue [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Jirongo diverts youth on revenge mission
Lugari MP-elect Mr Cyrus Jirongo intervened to avert bloodshed in his constituency. He dissuaded [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

KPA moves to contain cargo pile up
The transport crisis being experienced between the Mombasa port and up-country destinations is affec [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Leaders launch peace initiative
A new initiative, involving prominent politicians and other leaders has been launched to end the vio [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Lawyers tell Kibaki to delay naming Cabinet
Lawyers want President Kibaki to hold on the formation of a Cabinet. The East Africa Law Society [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Leaders appeal for peace
A cross-section of leaders that included those from religious and academic backgrounds have appealed [Updated on January 6, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Picture Gallery
Picture Gallery [Updated on January 5, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

Leaders in plea for amicable solution
Leaders have urged Kenyans to ensure peace prevails. Prof Ali Mazrui called for reconciliation an [Updated on January 5, 2008, 12:00 am ] ... Read more

from The Standard Online Edition

 

Kibera residents queue for food outside the DO's office, yesterday

A protester expresses his anger on the streets of Mombasa yesterday

 

ODM supporters, protesting in Mombasa, return a tear gas canister thrown at them as GSU afficers close in on them

Families scrambe for transport at the Kisumu bus terminus following crisis that has hit the town due to violent protests