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.

Update on 2007 Post Election violence in Kenya

Former UN chief to lead Kenya mediation

AP - Thu Jan 10, 2:36 PM ET

NAIROBI, Kenya - Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan agreed Thursday to take over talks to end the deadly turmoil linked to Kenya's presidential election, after days of international pressure resulted in nothing more than a fresh round of accusations from both sides.

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fresh Kenya violence expected

 

Call for fresh Kenya protests sparks violence fear

Raila Ondinga

Orange Democratic Movement leader Raila Ondinga

 

Kenya took a step towards fresh anarchy today when the opposition called three days of nation-wide protests against the Government next week.

Following the breakdown of peace talks, Raila Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) said new demonstrations would take place on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday in 30 towns across the country.

The party also issued a statement calling for international sanctions against President Mwai Kibaki, who it accuses of rigging last month's election.

Anyang’ Nyong’o, the ODM's secretary general, said: "We are asking our countrymen and women with whom we feel such great sadness and solidarity to join us in demonstrations countrywide on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of next week."

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After the announcement police immediately declared the protests would be illegal raising fears of violent confrontations. Some 600 people were killed in the chaos that followed the disputed election

The police issued a statement confirming that all protests remained banned and that it would monitor radio stations carefully to ensure no violence was being planned.

"Police think it is not appropriate at this time," said Major General Mohamed Hussein Ali, the country's police commissioner.

"The restrictions that we have had on post-election rallies are still in place.

"We in the police will monitor FM radio stations, particularly the vernacular ones, to see if they are being used to incite violence.

"Tribalism and ethnic bigotry that was used [to incite violence] has no place in this country."

The Government later issued a threat to anyone using violence that they faced losing their jobs, as a spokesman urged Kenyans to ignore the call to demonstrate.

"The leaders calling on you to take to the streets to burn shops and destroy property will not be with you or your family when you have no job anymore," a spokesman said.

Bodies from the violence that followed the December election are still being discovered in some remote areas.

The unrest has tarnished Kenya’s democratic credentials, damaged East Africa’s largest economy, hit tourism and rattled Western donors.

The all for protests comes a day after John Kufuor, the Ghanaian President and head of the African Union who had attempted to mediate between the parties, left the country reporting that no breakthrough had taken place.

Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary general, will now lead a group of eminent African mediators in a new push to resolve the crisis.

Mr Annan urged both sides on Friday to work with his panel, which includes Graca Machel, the wife of Nelson Mandela, and former Tanzanian leader Ben Mkapa.

"We are not going to impose solutions but work together with [Mr Kibaki and Mr Odinga] to arrive at viable and long-lasting solutions to the problem," he said.

Call for fresh Kenya protests sparks violence fear - Times Online

David Byers, and agencies in Nairobi

 

AP

Kenya's violence strikes at its runners

By TODD PITMAN, Associated Press Writer 58 minutes ago

KUINET, Kenya - When world marathon champion Luke Kibet goes running, he likes to focus on finishing first. But on one run during Kenya's postelection upheaval, the 25-year-old star had something else on his mind: staying alive.

Kibet was knocked to the ground by a large rock that struck his head on New Year's Eve as violence swept the country after the disputed Dec. 27 presidential vote. Regaining his senses with blood oozing from his skull, he looked up to see a mob of machete-wielding men approaching.

He got up and started running — this time for his life.

"I was thinking about my family. I was thinking I might die there," said the married father of two, recalling the attack near his home in the western Rift Valley village of Kimumu.

Though unrest has calmed in recent days, the mayhem has left indelible scars on this East African nation, which previously had been best known as a stable tourist haven that also has consistently produced some of the best distance runners on the planet.

Hundreds of people have been killed and hundreds of thousands forced to flee their homes. Among the dead: former Olympic runner Lucas Sang, who was hacked to death the same day Kibet was attacked. He was buried Thursday in Kuinet, a funeral that drew Kibet and hundreds of other athletes and mourners.

Kenya's running world has suffered in other ways. Sports officials have canceled two Kenya Federation cross-country races scheduled for January. Some runners have been unable to go to competitions abroad, including 13 Kenyans who failed to show up for the Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Marathon and Half Marathon scheduled Sunday in Phoenix.

"Every runner has a story about seeing homes burning and people running about with bows and arrows, it's pretty unnerving stuff," said Toby Tanser, the New York-based founder of the charity Shoe-4-Africa, who is on a monthlong visit here. "Running really did grind to a halt in Kenya."

Slowly, it is picking up.

Running camps sponsored by retired Kenyan stars and the likes of shoe giants Nike and Adidas that were closed for several days because it was too dangerous for people to venture outside began reopening over the last week as athletes trickled back.

On Friday in Iten, a town perched on the edge of a formidable escarpment 8,000 feet above sea level, small groups of lanky runners in tight spandex pants and brightly colored jackets emerged at dawn for the first of three daily runs.

The rising sun mantled Kenya's western highlands in soft golden light while they glided along powdery paths of brick-red dirt lined with cypress and eucalyptus trees swaying in the chilly morning wind.

As a dozen young athletes stretched on the grassy grounds of St. Patrick's High School, their coach, retired headmaster Colm O'Connell, said the violence's impact on runners "has been more mental than physical."

"They've been worried about their families, and some of them have seen horrible things. That affects performance," said O'Connell, whose school has nurtured more than 100 world-class athletes since he began teaching there in 1976.

Iten appears to have been spared the worst of the bloodshed that wracked other parts of the Rift Valley, but dozens of burned houses and shops flattened to ashen rectangles line the road to the provincial capital, Eldoret. On Friday, electricity poles and rocks still partially blocked the road.

Tanser said more than 80 percent of Kenya's top runners are Kalenjins, an ethnic group that largely gave its election backing to opposition leader Raila Odinga, a Luo, against President Mwai Kibaki, a Kikuyu.

The election commission declared Kibaki a narrow winner, drawing charges of ballot stealing from Odinga and others and setting of ethnic clashes. Kikuyus fled the Rift Valley en masse, chased from their farms by rioting Kalenjins and allied tribes.

Kibet, a Kalenjin, said four Kikuyus who had been part of his 20-member running group at another camp in Iten had left the region. He hopes they will come back.

"We've always trained together with many tribes, including Kikuyus," Kibet said. "And we've gotten along fine."

Though he won the Vienna Marathon last April, Kibet was virtually unknown until he scored a gold medal at the world marathon championships in Osaka, Japan, in August.

On Dec. 31, Kibet said he emerged from his home in Kimumu with several other athletes to gather food for their families after a night of violence. Some homes were in flames. In the distance, they could see Kalenjin and Kikuyu mobs brawling in the streets with machetes, arrows and rocks.

Without warning, a large stone struck Kibet in the back of his head, knocking him down and leaving him stunned. He regained his wits to find himself alone — his friends had fled.

Seeing a mob moving in his direction, Kibet began running. About 80 yards down the road, he flagged down a police car and was driven to safety.

"It was a different kind of run," Kibet said, a nervous smile broadening his face. "I was driven by fear."

Hours later, Sang was killed in the same town. His body was found two days later with gashes in the back of the head and severe burns, said close friend Moses Tanui, who won the Boston Marathon twice in the 1990s. Sang was a 400-meter runner on Kenya's team at the 1988 Olympics in South Korea.

Kibet, who works as a prison guard when he is not training, said Kenya's leaders must negotiate an end to the political conflict. "While they argue, people are dying," he said.

Kibet said doctors ordered him to stay home for two weeks after his injury.

He hopes to begin running again Monday.

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Kenyan world marathon champion Luke Kibet, 25, who was hit on the head by a rock and had to run from an angry mob during New Year's Eve post-election violence, attends the funeral Thursday, Jan. 10, 2008 of colleague and Kenyan Olympic athlete Lucas Kipkemboi Sang who was killed the same day in post-election violence, in the village of Kuinet, near the town of Eldoret, in Kenya. Though violence has eased in recent days, the mayhem has left indelible scars across Kenya which has consistently produced some of the best distance runners on the planet. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

AP Photo: Kenyan world marathon champion Luke Kibet, 25, who was hit on the head by a...

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Kenya opposition resume protests

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Kenya opposition to resume protests

African Union mediation fails to end country’s post-election crisis

Reuters

updated 7:20 a.m. CT, Fri., Jan. 11, 2008

NAIROBI , Kenya - Kenya’s opposition said on Friday it would restart nationwide protests against President Mwai Kibaki’s disputed re-election after African Union mediation failed to end the country’s political crisis.

Leaders of Raila Odinga’s opposition Orange Democratic Movement said they would hold a mass demonstration in a central Nairobi park next Wednesday.

“Due to the large number of people expected we request the police to provide us with security,” the Orange Democratic Movement said in a statement.

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Previous protests have led to riots and vicious clashes between Odinga’s supporters and the security forces, adding to a total death toll of around 500 since the Dec. 27 vote.

The government has said it will not allow more protests, and police in riot gear patrolled parts of the capital on Friday.

“Dialogue is not engaged in the streets. Dialogue suggests that people resolve their differences peacefully, over a table, not through destroying property and killing innocent Kenyans,” Local Government Minister Uhuru Kenyatta told reporters.

The unrest has tarnished Kenya’s democratic credentials, damaged east Africa’s largest and previously booming economy, hit supplies to neighbors, and unnerved Western donors.

An opposition source told Reuters that Orange Democratic Movement leaders would march to a Nairobi police station later Friday to hand over notice of their plans for nationwide demonstrations starting on Wednesday.

'Very dark period'
“We are going to go through a very dark period in this country’s history,” the source told Reuters.

This week’s failure of African Union head and Ghanaian President John Kufuor to broker a deal has depressed Kenyans living through one of the worst chapters of their nation’s post-independence history.

Kufuor flew out empty-handed late on Thursday, but said former U.N. head Kofi Annan, another Ghanaian, would lead a group of eminent Africans in another push to resolve the crisis.

The Orange Democratic Movement said Annan told Odinga — who says Kibaki robbed him of victory by rigging — that he would fly in on Tuesday.

Analysts say Odinga has lost momentum in recent days as Kibaki entrenches himself by appointing the core of a new cabinet, carrying out state functions and recalling parliament.

'Mortal combat'
Aides to the 76-year-old president, a veteran of Kenyan politics and member of the nation’s largest and most powerful Kikuyu tribe, say the opposition’s refusal to meet Kibaki face-to-face shows it is not interested in dialogue.

The Orange Democratic Movement says it will only meet if an international mediator is present.

Kibaki and Odinga, a 63-year-old former political prisoner and wealthy businessman, have not met since the vote, even though they have had close ties in the past including when the opposition leader sat in Kibaki’s Cabinet from 2002-05.

Around Kenya, there is widespread frustration that the poor have largely paid the price of the unrest while the political elite have stayed in comfortable and well-guarded compounds.

As well as the death toll, which aid groups say will rise to well over 500 and Odinga told Reuters was already nearing 1,000, more than a quarter of a million Kenyans are homeless from ethnic clashes since Kibaki’s Dec. 30 swearing in.

“Our leaders are stuck in mortal combat, unable to rise above their ambitions and put the interests of the country and the people first,” wrote Daily Nation columnist Lucy Oriang.

The West, including the United States and Kenya’s former colonial ruler Britain, has expressed displeasure at irregularities in the presidential vote count, and has been pressing for some sort of power-sharing agreement.

Kibaki has said he will consider a coalition, while Odinga would prefer a re-run of the election.

In the latest statement from abroad, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband urged both sides “to engage without any pre-conditions” and “agree on a way to share power so as to reflect the clear democratic will of the Kenyan people.”

With key sectors like tourism and commodities hit by the crisis, analysts say the full impact on one of Africa’s brightest economies depends wholly on how long it lasts.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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Kenya opposition to resume protests - Africa - msnbc.com

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.

art.odinga.gi.jpg

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



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