76 dead(22children) in Kenya massacre- many children hacked and stabbed to death

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Thousands gather in Kenyan capital for final push ahead of referendum

Thousands gather in Kenyan capital for final push ahead of referendum
Sat Nov 19,12:12 PM ET

NAIROBI (AFP) - Tens of thousands, attending two separate rallies, gathered in the Kenyan capital as rival camps made a last-minute push ahead of next week's landmark referendum on the new constitution amid increased security in Nairobi.

Some 11.6 million voters are eligible to cast ballots on Monday to approve or reject the draft constitution, which has split President Mwai Kibaki's government and sparked passionate campaigns across the east African nation.

At least eight people have been killed in campaign-related violence.

Kibaki, who heads the campaign for the document's approval and insists it addresses the concerns of all Kenyans, failed to attend the final rally in the capital's independence square, drawing nearly 10,000 supporters.

In a separate rally to oppose the new constitution, the first-ever overhaul of the country's independence document, nearly 20,000 people converged in the Nyayo Stadium, southeast of the capital, according to AFP correspondents Saturday.

The colour of an orange, the symbol for a "no" vote, and a banana that represents a "yes" vote were on show in the capital, where businesses remained closed and police were stationed at strategic points to prevent possible riots.

The proposed constitution, which creates a post of prime minister but retains strong presidential powers, has deeply divided both Kenyan society and the government.

During the rally of supporters of the proposed constitution, tricksters wooed the crowd with a vaudevillian comedy routine pronouncing, "A good husband always gives his wife a banana."

Advocates gathered in the Uhuru Park independence gardens in the centre of Nairobi for another rally to press for the approval of the draft amid massive security in Nairobi, which was convulsed by constitutional riots in July, leaving one person dead.

"We are a way ahead of them, we are confident. There is no way the orange people are going to beat us," said Norman Nyaga, a lawmaker who supports the document.

The proposed constitution, which creates a post of weak prime minister but retains strong presidential powers, has deeply divided both Kenyan society and the government.

Influential Roads Minister Raila Odinga led the anti-constitution team, pouring indignation on the new draft, which took about 50 million dollars to prepare. An additional 39 million dollars will be spent in the plebiscite.

"This constitution is dangerous to our generation, it is upon you to make the right decision," said retired lawmaker Martin Shikuku, one of the few surviving politicians who participated in the Lancaster House talks in London in 1963 in which the current charter was created.

According to Odinga's team, Kibaki short-changed Kenyans, who had massively demanded that presidential powers be reduced.

"Kenyans have a reason, a will and intention to reject the proposed draft," Odinga added.

"This draft has several mistakes ... the only way is to reject it," said Chris Okemo of the opposition Kenya African National Union party.

The political opposition, led by the son of Kenya's founding president Jomo Kenyatta and including members of Kibaki's coalition government, says it provides for nearly absolute presidential powers contrary to the wishes of the majority.

But Education Minister George Saitoti said politicians opposing the draft only wanted to illegitimately grab power.

"They are greedy leaders who wanted to be (Kenya's) chief executives without being elected by the people," said Saitoti.

Saitoti, Kenya's former vice president under the regime of retired president Daniel arap Moi, was referring to Odinga who was touted to be the prime minister.

"This is a good constitution for Kenyan society, there is no reason why some leaders are rejecting it," added Local Government Minister Musikari Kombo.

Scores started trickling out of the "banana" rally, forcing it to close early.

Newspapers called for stability in the rallies amid a threat of violence.

"Today's rallies will be the ultimate test for Kenya's political tolerance," the Standard said in an editorial, under the headline "Let twin rallies be a happy ending."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2005111...KqFOrgF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
Kenyan president concedes defeat in constitution referendum

Kenyan president concedes defeat in constitution referendum
42 minutes ago

NAIROBI, Nov 22 (AFP) - Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki conceded defeat in a landmark referendum on a proposed new constitution soundly rejected by voters this week in a blow to his political fortunes ahead of elections in 2007.

In a live televised address to the nation, a somber Kibaki said it was clear the draft charter he backed had been voted down in Monday's plebiscite but he urged Kenyans to remain united and not fall prey to divisions that dogged the campaign.

"Kenyans have made their decision," he said in the brief speech.

"My government will respect the will of the people that has been done," Kibaki said. "This is a big step in the democracy of our nation. I would like to congratulate you for participating peacefully in this historic occasion."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2005112...QqFOrgF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
Re: Kenyan president concedes defeat in constitution referendum

<font size="3">Thousands gather in Kenyan capital for final push ahead of referendum

Sat Nov 19, 2005</font size>


NAIROBI (AFP) - Tens of thousands, attending two separate rallies, gathered in the Kenyan capital as rival camps made a last-minute push ahead of next week's landmark referendum on the new constitution amid increased security in Nairobi.

Some 11.6 million voters are eligible to cast ballots on Monday to approve or reject the draft constitution, which has split President Mwai Kibaki's government and sparked passionate campaigns across the east African nation.



<font size="3">Kenyan president concedes defeat in constitution referendum

NAIROBI, Nov 22, 2005</font size>


(AFP) - Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki conceded defeat in a landmark referendum on a proposed new constitution soundly rejected by voters this week in a blow to his political fortunes ahead of elections in 2007.


<font size="5"><center>
2010
Kenya sees big turnout in new vote
on a new constitution</font size>
<font size="4">

A new constitution that could spell a new era for Kenya — curtailing
the president's enormous powers and giving citizens a bill of rights
.</font size></center>


ALBERT_KENYA_VOTE_156548e.jpg

Kenyans queue in numbers at a poling station in
the Rift Valley town of Nakuru, Kenya, on Wed-
nesday. Photo: AP

ALBERT__KENYA_VOTE_156558a.jpg

FIRST LADY LUCY KIBAKI VOTES: Kenyan First Lady Lucy Kibaki casts her vote at Munaini
Primary School in Othaya constituency. Photo: AP.


ALBERT_KENYA_VOTE_1_156551a.jpg

POLICE PATROLVOLATILE RIFT VALLEY VILLAGE: Kenyan police patrol the volatile Rift Valley village of
Nyakio, Kenya, where at least 200 people had already fled their homes before the vote, fearing a flare-up.
Photo: AP.


Associated Press
By KATHARINE HOURELD
and TOM ODULA
August 4, 2010


TIMBOROA, Kenya — Enthusiastic voters, many wrapped in colorful traditional blankets, waited for hours Wednesday to cast ballots on a new constitution that could spell a new era for Kenya — curtailing the president's enormous powers and giving citizens a bill of rights.

With memories fresh of the ethnically charged violence that left more than 1,000 people dead following the disputed 2007 election, police were deployed en masse across the country.

Voters overwhelmed polling stations in some locations, and one Nairobi site saw dozens of Kenyans who had not yet voted force their way in after authorities tried to shut it down at the official 5 p.m. closing time.

Despite that after-hours push, officials reported few problems and no violence countrywide.

Enthusiasm for the new constitution appeared high. In the Nairobi slum of Kibera, lines formed as early as 3 a.m., while voters at some Rift Valley sites waited five hours or more.


<font size="3"><center>"Since we got independence from Britain our country has
not run smoothly. The current constitution has not been
used well, but we didn't write that one, and we are writing
this one," declared Paul Wahome, a 23-year-old student
who waited six hours to vote in the Rift Valley town of Nakuru.</font size></center>


Returns from about 30 percent of the polling stations showed the "yes" camp taking an early lead: About 64 percent of the votes cast, compared to 36 percent for the "no" camp, according to Kenya's election commissioner Ahmed Issack Hassan.

Pre-vote polls had showed the referendum would likely pass, and Associated Press reporters had difficulty finding Kenyans who said they voted against it.

"It's a struggle between the haves and the have-nots in this country, and the haves are trying to maintain the status quo," said James Otumba, a 43-year-old teacher who was shot in the chest during the 2007-08 violence.

"This is a revolution taking place in this country ... This constitution is one thing that can actually reconcile the nation," he said.

The international community, and particularly the U.S., has urged Kenyans to pass the constitution, even as the draft raised emotions over land rights, abortion and Muslim family courts. Kenya's current constitution, drawn up in the lead-up to Kenya's 1963 independence from Britain, grants the president sweeping powers.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley told reporters Wednesday the Obama administration was gratified that a large number of Kenyans voted and that the vote was generally peaceful.

"This is an important step toward strengthening democratic institutions in Kenya," Crowley said.

If passed, the new constitution will dramatically cut back the president's powers by setting up an American-style system of checks and balances and paving the way for much-needed land reform. Kenyan presidents have long favored their own ethnic tribes in the distribution of resources, a tremendous source of tension here.

This time around, the government changed voting procedures to avoid the charges of fraud that sullied the 2007 vote. Preliminary ballot results, for instance, were sent in to Nairobi by cell phones, and the tallying center was moved to a more isolated location to better control who has access to it.

The referendum was one of the conditions of the power-sharing agreement between President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minster Raila Odinga that ended the 2007-08 violence. Both back the new constitution, and both appealed to Kenyans to vote peacefully.

"From the reports I have received, it is peaceful all over the country and we want this to remain that way so that Kenyans can peacefully decide their future," Odinga said after casting his ballot in Kibera, where excited crowds pushed to get close to him.

"I have no doubt in my mind that the 'yes' will win resoundingly," he said.

The "no" camp is backed by most of Kenya's church community, which objects to a clause that says abortion is permitted if the life or health of the mother is in danger according to the opinion of a "trained health professional." The draft also has stirred emotions over publicly funded family courts for Muslims.

"Some in the 'yes' camp are against our Christianity," said Susan Chevet, a beautician who voted "no" because of the abortion clause.

Still, a leader of the "no" camp, Higher Education Minister William Ruto, told the AP his side would respect the outcome. Stories about tension and violence are "the work of the prophets of doom," he said.

The head of Kenya's electoral commission said vote tallying will be more transparent than during the last election, when claims of vote-rigging led to violence. The count will be broadcast live on TV and radio. Results were expected as early as Thursday.

Despite the optimism, an ethnic dispute in the Rift Valley town of Timboroa showed the two dominant tribes there — the Kalenjin and the Kikuyu — still harbor strong emotions that could come to a boil.

The episode late last week involved a Kalenjin herdsman, who attacked two Kikuyu women while they were collecting firewood in the forest.

One of the victims, 67-year-old Lucy Muthoni quoted the herdsman as saying: "Why are you people still here, why are you still bothering us?"

The herdsman hit Muthoni's friend, Grace Muthoni Maititu, with a club and a machete, splitting open her head and knocking her unconscious.

After reporting the attack to police, authorities addressed the elders of the Kalenjin community, who summoned all the herdsmen. The women picked out their attacker from a lineup, and police arrested him.

The incident prompted some Kikuyus in Timboroa to lock up their forest homes and move into town for the election. One man, refusing to give his name to a reporter, said only: "I'm afraid, I'm afraid."

Jacob Ngehia, a local government official, said some of the animosity stems from the 2007-08 violence, because court cases are being carried out and witnesses are being threatened.

"It's not over, it is a cease-fire. The root causes have not yet been addressed," Ngehia said. "We must stop the cycle of revenge."

During the 2007-08 violence, tribesmen used bows and arrows to fight each other, gangs hacked opponents to death and police were accused of shooting sprees.

With more than 63,000 police officers deployed to secure Wednesday's vote, many Kenyans expected the referendum to be peaceful. But many worry about clashes during the next presidential election in 2012 or a violent backlash if the International Criminal Court in the Hague charges leading politicians for the 2007-08 violence.

Odula reported from Nairobi. Associated Press Writers Tom Maliti and Malkhadir M. Muhumed in Nairobi and Foster Klug in Washington contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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Re: Kenyan president concedes defeat in constitution referendum

<font size="5"><Center>
Kenya Adopts American-Style Constitution</font size></center>



KenyanPresident.jpg




By: Nsenga Burton
August 27, 2010


Kenya has adopted a constitution that models itself after the U.S. Constitution. Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki signed a new constitution into law Friday that institutes a U.S.-style system of checks and balances, which has been lauded as the most significant political event since Kenya's independence nearly 50 years ago. Kenya's new constitution is part of a reform package that leaders there committed themselves to after signing a power-sharing deal in February 2008. That deal ended violence that killed more than 1,000 people following Kenya's disputed December 2007 presidential vote. Hopefully, members of the government and National Assembly won't model American behavior by trying to change the constitution to suit partisan needs.


Kenya's president signed a new constitution into law Friday that institutes a U.S.-style system of checks and balances and has been hailed as the most significant political event since Kenya's independence nearly a half century ago.

Kenya's new constitution is part of a reform package that President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga committed themselves to after signing a power-sharing deal in February 2008. That deal ended violence that killed more than 1,000 people following Kenya's disputed December 2007 presidential vote.

"I feel honored to be your President at this moment because this is the most important day in the history of our nation since independence," said the 78-year-old Kibaki. He was a senior official of Kenya's independence party, the Kenya African National Union, when Britain handed over power in 1963 to its leader, Jomo Kenyatta.

Odinga said the new constitution was a major step in bridging Kenya's political and ethnic divisions.

"No one could have thought that out of the bitter harvest of the disputed election and the violence that pitted our people against each other just two years ago, we would be witnessing today the birth of a national unity that has eluded us for more than 40 years," Odinga said.

Friday's event comes after an overwhelming majority of Kenyan voters adopted the new constitution in an Aug. 4 referendum. Kibaki's signature formally marks the end of a decades-long struggle to cut down the massive powers of the presidency.


<font size="3">Implementation</font size>

The government and parliament now must implement the ambitious document, a process expected to take up to five years. The document requires, among other things,

  • the formation of a Supreme Court;

  • the formation of a Senate; and

  • It also demands that the country's judiciary be vetted to rid it of corrupt or incompetent judges and that parliament pass 49 new laws.

Patrick Gichuki, a street vendor, painted his body in the colors of the Kenyan national flag and the words "Kenya mpya" — new Kenya.

"We are happy to be Kenyans and we are happy that Kenya has a new constitution," said Gichuki, who hopes the new constitution will help address the many problems facing Kenyan youth.

Emmy Kosgei, who sang during the festivities and got all the VIPs dancing at the podium, said the signing of a new constitution signified a new beginning for the country and she was proud to be part of it.

"Most of us have grown up reading about such events as history," she said. "But today we are a part of history."

Joining African leaders at the festivities was Sudan's president who faces charges of genocide and crimes against humanity in connection with violence in Darfur, where U.N. officials estimate 300,000 people have died.

It is only the second time that Omar al-Bashir has risked arrest by traveling to a member state of the International Criminal Court since he was first charged in 2009. The ICC has no police force and depends on member states to enforce its orders.

Human rights groups had urged the Kenyan government to bar al-Bashir from the festivities but Kenya's foreign minister defended al-Bashir's presence.

President Barack Obama welcomed the new constitution as an important step that sets "a positive example for all of Africa and the world."

He added, however, that he was disappointed at the presence of al-Bashir, saying in a statement "we consider it important that Kenya honor its commitments to the ICC and to international justice, along with all nations that share those responsibilities."

___

Associated Press writer Tom Odula contributed to this report.


http://www.theroot.com/buzz/kenya-adopts-american-style-constitution-0

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