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

 

Related Topics

 

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)

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

Kenyan refugees await aid

  NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenyans across the political divide prayed for peace on Sunday while aid workers sought to bring relief to an estimated 250,000 refugees from post-election violence that has also killed hundreds.

"Our leaders have failed us. They have brought this catastrophe upon us. So now we are turning to the Almighty to save Kenya," said Jane Riungu, leading her five children in their best clothes to a hilltop church outside Nairobi.

One week after the announcement of President Mwai Kibaki's re-election ignited protests, riots and looting around the east African nation, there was little sign of him meeting opposition rival Raila Odinga to sort out the crisis directly.

Would-be mediators, including Washington's top Africa diplomat Jendayi Frazer and South Africa's Nobel laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, shuttled between both camps.

And Ghanaian President John Kufuor was due to visit in coming days in his capacity as chairman of the African Union.

But a statement from Kibaki that he was ready to form "a government of national unity" was met with scepticism by the opposition. It says he stole the Dec. 27 vote by fraud and is now occupying the president's seat illegitimately.

Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) wants Kibaki, 76, to quit and an international mediator to broker talks prior to a fresh election in three to six months. ODM was also accused of vote-rigging in its stronghold areas.

"We are not interested in Kibaki's solution to this problem ... He has nothing to offer as he did not win the election," Odinga said at his Orange House headquarters in Nairobi.

"It is an insult to the people of Kenya. I should be the one offering him the option of a coalition government ... We want a properly-negotiated settlement through an international mediator that will give a lasting solution to this crisis."

On the street, most Kenyans were preoccupied with getting their lives back to normal, amid scepticism about politicians whom they see as viewing power as a means of acquiring wealth rather than improving the lot of ordinary people.

At least 300 people have died, some in battles between police and protesters, others in ethnic violence.

Looting and criminality have also flared during the chaos, claiming yet more lives in a nation that had been seen as a relatively stable democracy and flourishing economy.

Violence simmered around the country, with 20 metres of train-track lifted up overnight in Nairobi's Kibera slum.

"FORGIVE US!"

"Mere resolution of the presidential election dispute is not going to erase the ugly ethnic hatred that has finally been exposed," wrote commentator Gitau Warigi in the Sunday Nation.

"The facade of a peaceful Kenya has always been intended to obscure from view the deep fissures in the country. Sadly, it might take a generation or more to heal the fresh wounds generated by this disputed election."

In Protestant, Catholic and other churches around deeply religious Kenya, there were special prayers for peace and moments of silence for the dead on Sunday.

"Forgive us, oh Lord, for the innocent bloodshed in this nation," prayed Pastor Janet Mutinda at a Nairobi chapel which flew several Kenyan flags at half-mast.

"Forgive us for taking our peace for granted."

The Media Council of Kenya announced an hour-long "Prayers for Peace" broadcast on all major channels for Sunday evening.

One of the worst-hit areas was the ethnically mixed town of Eldoret and its environs, where 30 people -- mainly of Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe -- were burned to death after taking refuge from mobs of local Kalenjins furious at the election result.

Tens of thousands of refugees were camping out at churches, police stations and grassy fields around Eldoret, many left with nothing after their homes were torched. Others carried the few possessions they had salvaged -- clothes, mattresses, goats, grain, in some cases whole sets of wooden furniture.

Odinga, 62, had looked on course to win Kenya's vote until Kibaki was handed a narrow victory last Sunday.

International observers say the election fell short of democratic standards, and France accused Kibaki's government directly of rigging the result. 

© Reuters 2007. All Rights Reserved.  |  Learn more about Reuters

News | Africa - Reuters.com Sun 6 Jan 2008, 10:41 GMT By Andrew Cawthorne and Wangui Kanina



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