Kenya

Greed

Star
Registered
Part I: How to Persuade 100 Thousand Poor People to Plant Trees

Kenya has offered the world a new model for what an environmental movement can be, one that harnesses the power of thousands of hands. Even the hands of people with little means. In 2004 the Norwegian Nobel Committee recognized this new model and its founder, Kenyan scientist and environmentalist Wangari Maathai. In the first part of this special edition of Living on Earth, Ingrid Lobet introduces us to the basic mechanics of the Green Belt tree planting movement and its Nobel Prize winning founder. 12 min 30 sec

http://www.loe.org/shows/shows.htm?programID=05-P13-00026#feature2
 
Part II: It's More Than a Tree Planting Movement

Part II: It's More Than a Tree Planting Movement

As tree planters in Kenya's central highlands have reforested their region, they've seen a change in fuel availability, the food they can cook and the vegetables they can grow. And the organization they've built to plant trees gives them a way to address other problems, including government. Green Belt has been at the center of conflict to create a more democratic Kenya. But many village members, especially women, say the most important change is in their sense of self worth. 18 min
 
Part III: Soldier Planters, River-Keeping Children and Green Belt's Future

Part III: Soldier Planters, River-Keeping Children and Green Belt's Future

Wangari Maathai's Green Belt Movement continues to forge its own path, trying to bring planting to dry regions, creating revolving loans for livestock that are paid back with seedlings instead of money, and planting trees in the national forests. Now the movement faces unprecedented demand from Kenyans inspired by their Peace Prize winner. The movement entertains possible offers from the new climate change markets as it tries to find new sources of funding to meet growing demand. 18 min
 
US moves to bar entry to Kenya minister

US moves to bar entry to Kenya minister
Wed Oct 26, 2:48 AM ET

NAIROBI (Reuters) - A key ally of Kenya's president, Transport Minister Chris Murungaru, has been barred from entering the United States for alleged graft, three months after Britain also denied him entry, the minister said on Wednesday.

Murungaru said in a statement the step was an attempt to subject the east African country to British and U.S. dominance and he would seek to challenge it in the U.S. courts. He denied any wrongdoing.

"The action taken by the American government denying me entry into the U.S. does not in the least come as a surprise to me," said Murungaru, a close friend of President Mwai Kibaki.

"I am being made a sacrificial lamb because the regime in power (in Kenya) must be made to dance to the British and American tunes."

A U.S. embassy spokesman said Murungaru had not applied for a visa and he could not comment on individual cases.

But he said "we do not deny" Kenyan media reports the embassy informed the Kenyan government last week that Murungaru would be barred entry if he sought to travel to the United States.

The spokesman noted without elaborating that U.S. immigration law enabled the U.S. authorities to bar entry to anyone believed to have benefited from corruption.

Murungaru said: "It is curious that the law cited by America talks of corruption ... yet despite my challenge to anyone with any evidence of wrongdoing on my part to make such evidence public, no one has done so."

In July, Britain revoked a visa that had been granted to Murungaru, citing laws that block the arrival of individuals accused of corruption. It has not detailed any case against Murungaru and the minister has started legal action to try to overturn the British ban.

The affair worsened tense relations between Nairobi and its former colonial master, already strained by a series of strong attacks by a former British envoy to Kenya, who accused Kibaki's government of corruption, greed and arrogance.

Western nations are putting pressure on Africa to improve its governance record in exchange for aid and debt relief.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051026/ts_nm/kenya_usa_dc_1
 
<font size="6"><center>Famine Declared National Disaster</font size></center>

The Nation (Nairobi)
January 1, 2006
Posted to the web January 1, 2006

Sunday Nation Reporter
Nairobi

President Kibaki yesterday declared the famine ravaging parts of the country a national disaster and called for national and international efforts to raise about Sh11 billion to tackle the emergency.

He said famine relief was needed for the 2.5 million Kenyans at risk - almost 10 per cent of the population - over the next six months.

"To ensure that we have adequate interventions on the ground, I am declaring the famine a national disaster," President Kibaki said in his New Year message delivered from State House, Mombasa.

The Head of State addressed wide-ranging issues, among them the constitution review, the economy, corruption, diligence in the management of the Constituency Development Fund and the empowerment of youth and women.

He said crop failure and depletion of livestock herds due to prolonged drought had led to the current famine in the arid areas.

"Food is a basic right of every Kenyan. My Government will, therefore, spare no effort in ensuring that all Kenyans have access to this basic necessity," the President said.

He said in addition to the Sh11 billion, more assistance was needed to address other problems arising from the famine such as provision of water for both people and animals, education, healthcare, restocking of livestock and provision of seeds to farmers in preparation for the next crop season.

The famine has so far claimed more than 30 lives mainly in northern Kenya. The districts affected include Marsbait, Mandera and those far south such as Kajiado, Laikipia, and parts of Eastern Province.

On constitution-making, the President said he would "in the next few days" announce steps to fast-track the process towards a new constitution "through an all-inclusive and participatory process".

He praised the surge in economic growth to five per cent last year, and told Kenyans to work hard to realise the target GDP growth rate of seven per cent this year.

President Kibaki highlighted the contribution to development achieved through the CDF initiative. However, he stressed the need for transparency and accountability in the management of the funds allocated to each constituency.

"I am directing that the CDF accounts of each constituency be regularly audited, and the audit reports made public and accessible to wananchi," President Kibaki said.

The Head of State said legal, regulatory and institutional reforms would be undertaken as part of a national policy on gender development that would involve women more in decision-making.

The war against corruption would be sustained through the sector-wide strategies, laws and institutions put in place to deal with the vice.

He told Kenyans to thank God for the achievements of individuals and the nation in 2005. The November 21 referendum in which Kenyans rejected the proposed constitution "showed that Kenyans are patriotic and peaceful people, committed to the well-being and unity of the country".

And across the country, politicians, clergy, the business community and ordinary Kenyans - including those who never saw eye to eye in the eventful year - were yesterday united that the lessons of 2005 should shape the country's life for the better in the New Year.

Vice-President Moody Awori set the tone in his New Year message yesterday, urging politicians to tone down their bickering and commit to giving a fresh kick to the economy and reinforce the ethos of nationhood among all Kenyans.

The emotions and political heat of the November 21 referendum, said the VP, should be cast aside this year to give room to dialogue, reconciliation and national unity.

"Our nationhood and ability to stay together as a people were put to test as the country was deeply polarised between those for and those against the proposed constitution," he said.

Local Government minister Musikari Kombo is also upbeat about the country and its people this year. "The year 2005 was a defining moment for political democracy and Kenyans showed they are mature politically. They showed that you can differ but still live side by side," he said in his message.

But he faulted politicians for allowing personal interests to undermine their commitment to promoting national goals.

Former Roads minister Raila Odinga and Kanu's William Ruto described the ended year as one marked by betrayal, sadness and positive public awareness.

Mr Odinga, who was left out of Government for leading the country in rejecting the proposed new Constitution at the referendum, said 2005 saw the return of executive dictatorship, which Kenyans thought died after the December 2002 General Election.

Mr Ruto, the Kanu secretary general, said 2005 was a year of firsts, sadness and historical events. He said it was the year when, for the first time, the entire cabinet was sacked, 20 MPs rejected ministerial appointments and the President was bullied into expanding the Government.

The referendum, at which Kenyans rejected the Wako Draft, he said, was a political landmark which will remain etched in the political history of the country.

But the Eldoret MP said there was sadness, too: "It was a sad year that saw Kenyans losing their loved ones due to famine. Not because of shortage of food, but due the lack of vision and planning."

Turning his gaze to 2006, Mr Ruto urged politicians to put aside their parochial differences and deliver a new constitution to Kenyans "as they said during the referendum."

He said the New Year should see a united, prosperous and progressive generation of leaders coming up to guide the nation. He accused the Government of engendering tribalism and failing to deliver services to the people.

The National Council of Churches of Kenya (NCCK) secretary general, the Rev Mutava Musyimi said the new constitution should be professional and all-inclusive.

"The professional and ownership side never jelled in 2005. We must now find a healthy bond between the two and give Kenyans a new constitution," he said.

Rev Musyimi said leaders should commit afresh to the nation-state as they differ on issues of political party interests.

The Supreme Council of Kenya Muslims (Supkem) secretary-general, Alhaj Adan Wachu described the year 2005 as a turbulent period which was riddled with acrimony and mistrust.

"The Constitution process which cost Sh10 billion was a waste of time, the referendum polarised Kenyans and the economy is now in the hands of one class," he said.

The stinging famine in Northern Kenya, he said, was the worst occurrence and questioned the Government's commitment to serving its citizens in the region.

The business community was more optimistic. The Kenya Private Sector Alliance (Kepsa) chairman, Mr Lee Karuri, described the year 2005 as a period which recorded business improvement in both the small and large scale areas.

But he said the November 21 referendum slowed down the growth rate which at the end of the year stood at five per cent.

"There was improvement in the economy where all businesses across the board recorded profit. The pattern increased from January, was slowed down by referendum campaigns and the aftermath but picked up at the end of the year," he said.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200601010004.html
 
<font size="5"><center>Kenya Has Lots of Resources,
But We Lack the Inspiration</font size></center>


The Nation (Nairobi)

OPINION
January 1, 2006
Posted to the web January 1, 2006

X.N. Iraki
Nairobi

Water in California is brought from the north to the thirsty south through aqueducts, one of which runs for 444 miles. The water irrigates the orchards and vegetable farms which break the desert's monotony.

More water is brought from the Colorado river before it empties into the Pacific Ocean, already "tamed into total submission" as suggested by some poets.

A drive through California leaves no doubt in one's mind that man can tame nature, subdue it and enslave it - if only inspired. Farms are generating power from the wind in California.

In Kenya, we have failed to tame nature; she has enslaved us, and we are paying the price through hunger. The deserts in California are no less forbidding than Kenya's. But after gold ran out, Californians did not start whining; they were inspired to tame nature.

Water shortage is not a problem in Kenya; it is only its distribution. We let too much of it flow into the oceans where no one needs it. Some areas have too much rain, while others have too little.

But some dry areas are endowed with fertile soil, like the Laikipia plains. What is lacking is the will, the inspiration to bring water to such areas. Technology is there, so is labour. An uninspired nation cannot solve its problems - even the most basic such as feeding itself.

Why are we uninspired to tame our rivers, subdue nature and enslave it? Why is agriculture one of the least popular choices for Form Four graduates aspiring to go to university?

We even joke about agriculture. In one public university renowned for its science and technology orientation, students who major in horticulture are considered as not "tough enough" and are subjects of silly jokes.

Why have agricultural extension services been neglected? Why are we railing against genetically modified crops?

Yet in other countries, most agricultural extension work is centred at universities. The new methods, ideas and discoveries in agriculture find their way to farmers as soon as possible, the way new potato varieties used to reach farmers from the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute.

We still look down upon agriculture, yet in other countries, governments give farmers subsidies even when other countries complain. They know that a country that cannot feed itself has little respect.

An uninspired country will not aspire to achieving high goals like feeding itself. We spend a lot of time talking about abstract issues like the Constitution at the expense of real issues like food and water. In Kenya, we know our problems, but no one wants to solve them; no-one is inspired to solve them. It is not the first time the country is starving. But we seem to learn nothing. We appeal for food aid and receive it, and as soon as the rain comes, life goes on.

We expect other people to solve our problems, yet they have theirs to think about. Must we have hunger and images of dying children to act? Yet signs of our lack of inspiration to confront imminent problems are everywhere - always with us. What can we do about hunger? Why should we fail in one of mankind's greatest discoveries - agriculture?

Let us have inspirational leaders who do more and talk less. The Government, through extension officers, should introduce new and modern farming practices that leave the river banks intact. The policy makers must make it clear that water is a strategic natural resource and feeding ourselves is a national priority.

The writer, a lecturer at the University of Nairobi's faculty of commerce, is currently a Fulbright scholar in Mississippi, USA.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200601010005.html
 
Inmates Skip Lunch to Feed Fellow Kenyans

Staff and agencies
01 January, 2006





By RODRIQUE NGOWI, Sun Jan 1, 4:48 PM ET

NAIROBI, Kenya - Thousands of prisoners skipped lunch Sunday to send food to fellow Kenyans affected by food shortages, a senior prison official said.

"In the next six months, up to 2.5 million of our people will be in need of famine relief. This represents close to 10 percent of the country‘s population," Kibaki said during New Year‘s celebrations.

"As human beings, they also feel like other Kenyans ... They asked themselves, can they forgo one meal in a lifetime for the sake of other Kenyans? The answer was that will not even affect their health," Odongo said.

Convicts at the Naivasha Maximum Security Prison said the food shortage has been harming their relatives.

Drought has also triggered food shortages in neighboring Ethiopia and Somalia.

In anarchic Somalia, about 2 million people need humanitarian aid and drought has affected its southern region.

Anthony Gitonga contributed to this report from Naivasha, Kenya.

http://www.heraldnewsdaily.com/stories/news-00119116.html
 
US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

US offers scholarships to Maasai youth
By Richard Chesos

The US Government has given 14 secondary school scholarships to Maasai youth in appreciation of a rare donation four years ago when a village gave 14 cows to console families and friends of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The scholarships will be awarded to seven girls and seven boys. On June 2, 2002, Maasai elders from Enoosaen village gave the US Government cows to empathise with the families of the attacks.

More than 3,000 people were killed in the attacks blamed on Al Qaeda – a group of extremists led by Saudi-born dissident, Osama bin Laden.

While presenting the cattle to the then acting US ambassador, Mr William Brencick, the elders said: "To the people of America, we give these cows to help you".

Among the Maasai, cattle are the most precious possession.

Signed an agreement

The ceremonial transfer of the cattle was arranged by Mr Wilson Kimeli Naiyomah, a Stanford University undergraduate student, who was on a visit to New York on the day the towers came tumbling down.

Naiyomah later returned to Enoosaen and explained to elders what had happened. The elders agreed to give the cattle as consolation. Naiyomah is now a master’s student in biological sciences.

On Sunday, the US ambassador, Mr Michael Ranneberger,

visited the village and signed an agreement with the elders which states that the animals would neither be slaughtered nor sold.

The ceremony, dubbed September 11, 2001 Remembrance Ceremony, was marked with song and dance.

Immigration minister Mr Gideon Konchella accompanied the ambassador, who gave out the scholarships.

Humble background

Mr Murero ole Yamboi and Naiyomah signed the agreement on behalf of Enoosaen people.

According to the agreement, the Maasai would tend the animals, while the US Government would offer scholarships to Maasai youth.

The US would also make a four-year donation of 10 secondary schools scholarships for needy Maasai youths.

Naiyomah, who jetted in the country on Saturday, moved the crowd when he said his humble background made him cherish Maasai support.

He narrated how his mother, Ms Susan Naiyomah, fed him on leftovers when he was a small boy. Naiyomah worked as a cleaner at a local butchery.

"She brought left-over beef stew in the evening. When she was given a soda, she kept it for me," he said, as his mother nodded in the affirmative.

He recalled that while at Stanford, kind residents gave him food and money.

http://www.eastandard.net/hm_news/news.php?articleid=1143958117
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="5"><center>Kenyans Vote in Test of Democracy </font size></center>


2007-12-26-kenya1.jpg

Supporters of presidential candidate Raila
Odinga tear down and burn a billboard of
opposition presidential candidate and Kenyan
President Mwai Kibaki in Nairobi, Kenya,
December 24 2007. (Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/
Getty Images)


ap_kenya_odinga_vote_27dec07_eng_195.jpg

Raila Odinga casts his vote
in Kiber, Nairobi, 27 Dec 2007


kibaki2003.jpg

Mwai Kibaki, President of the Republic of Kenya



The New York Times
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: December 28, 2007

NAIROBI, Kenya — The lines started to form at dawn on Thursday and some were literally miles long.

Millions of Kenyans waited in the muggy darkness for the polls to open and for a chance to scratch their Xs in an election that is predicted to be the tightest race in the country’s history — and the greatest test yet of Kenya’s young, multi-party democracy.

The contest pits the incumbent president, Mwai Kibaki, a man who has a reputation as a courtly gentleman, an economics whiz but also as a tribal politician, against Raila Odinga, a rich, flamboyant businessman who rides around in a bright red $100,000 Hummer and is running as a champion of the poor.

The polls were packed with young women carrying babies on their backs, students chatting on cell phones, wrinkled old men teetering on canes and muscled youth smelling like they just tumbled out of a bar. Security was tight. Truckloads of helmeted soldiers prowled the slums. Policemen swung canes beat to back throngs of voters trying to squeeze into polling booths. So many people were eager to vote. One woman outside a school in Nairobi even fainted.

“We want change!” yelled Abdi Mubarak, who works in a mosque and said he voted for Mr. Odinga.

That change may come. Most polls in the past several months have forecast that Mr. Odinga would win the election, and the heavy turnout on Thursday was predicted to work his favor. It seems that he has tapped into frustrations percolating for some in Kenya, which enjoys one of the strongest and most stable economies in Africa but at the same time is split by deep tribal divisions. Mr. Odinga has built a coalition of the Luo, the Luhya, the Maasai, the Somali and many other tribes who that feel that the Kikuyu, Kenya’s biggest tribe though it is less than a quarter of the population, has been politically dominant for too long.

On Thursday, this played out behind the cardboard booths where voters hunched over their ballots. Of more than a dozen people interviewed, not one crossed tribal lines when voting. Mr. Odinga, 63, is a Luo. Mr. Kibaki, 76, is a Kikuyu. And the third notable politician in the presidential race, Kalonzo Musyoka, 54, is a Kamba.

“I’m for the president,” said David Ndagwa, a stocky vendor of vegetables who said he was a Kikuyu. “He’s brought progress.”

Tribes aside, there are some genuine issues in this race. Mr. Odinga wants to devolve power from the center of the country and grant Kenya’s rural areas more autonomy. Mr. Kibaki has been running strong on education and has already delivered on his promise of free primary school for all Kenyans. Mr. Musyoka is a former foreign minister and has said he is the one to expand Kenya’s links to the wider world. He has been ranked a distant third.

However, Kenyan law necessitates that to become president, a candidate must win a seat in parliament and secure at least 25 percent of the votes in five out of eight of the country’s provinces. This electoral fine print may mean that even if there is a clear winner in the popular vote, there could be a run-off. The president’s party has been running a spirited campaign against Mr. Odinga in his home turf of Kibera, a sprawling shantytown on the outskirts of Nairobi that is known as Africa’s largest slum, in an attempt to block him from the presidency. At the same time, Mr. Kibaki’s support is concentrated in a few provinces and there is a real chance he might not clear the five-out-of-eight rule. Either scenario could produce an inconclusive election result and possible turbulence.

There are 14.2 million registered voters in Kenya and election officials said the turnout on Thursday seemed substantially higher than the 57 percent who voted in the last presidential race in 2002.

There were problems, though. Many voter lists were incomplete. Even Mr. Odinga did not find his name on the voting list in Kibera, when he tried to vote in the morning. Apparently, many people with last names starting with “O”, “A” and “R” had difficulty finding the right line where they should vote. But after Mr. Odinga complained to election officials, he was allowed to cast a vote, along with others who produced a valid voting card

Election observers said that although many polling places were a bit chaotic, the vote seemed to be free and fair.

“We haven’t seen any corruption,” said Rhoda Mackenzi, a Kenyan observer. “And we’ve been looking, for sure.”


http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/28/world/africa/27cnd-kenya.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
 
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Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="5"><center>
Kenyans riot as vote count drags on</font size></center>



34475815.jpg

TAKING COVER: Kenyan security forces who fired tear gas and live rounds in
response to the stoning of a vote center in Ngong Town, south of Nairobi, by
an angry crowd seek protection near ballot boxes. Political parties criticized
the slow pace of the count nationally.

By Nicholas Soi and Robyn Dixon,
Special to the Los Angeles Times
6:18 AM PST, December 29, 2007

NAIROBI, Kenya — Ethnic riots exploded across Kenya today as the official vote count in the country's presidential election dragged on, prompting new accusations of fraud.

Opposition supporters, mainly from the Luo tribe, waved machetes, looted businesses and set fire to shops and houses belonging to Kikuyus, the tribe associated with Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki.

Kiosks along the road were burning in the Kibera slum area, stronghold of the opposition presidential candidate, Raila Odinga, as furious crowds of young men rioted and chanted anti-Kikuyu slogans.

With no official result, the opposition Orange Democratic Movement declared its leader, Raila Odinga, the winner and called on Kibaki to concede defeat in order to halt the violence in many areas.

"In view of the growing anxiety and restlessness in the country over the extended delay ... we now call upon the outgoing president to acknowledge and respect the will of the Kenyan people and concede defeat," said Musalia Mudavadi, the ODM candidate for vice president.

Tensions rose when Kibaki began to gain on Odinga's lead as Friday's count dragged on, fueling opposition suspicions that the vote was being rigged.

If Kibaki loses, it will be the first time an incumbent president has been voted out in Kenya, and one of only a few cases in sub-Saharan Africa.

Tempers flared at the Electoral Commission of Kenya briefings as party agents demanded to know why the count was taking so long. The fact local TV stations were releasing figures much faster than the commission fueled the anger.

Both Kibaki's Party of National Unity and the ODM called on the commission to speed its count, panel chief Samuel Kivuitu said. When officials called outlying provinces to find out when figures would be available, no one answered the phones.

The latest official figures had Odinga ahead with 3.73 million votes, or 49%, and Kibaki with 3.42 million votes, or 45%, and 159 of the 210 constituencies counted.

There was no indication when a final tally would be available.

Fourteen million in this nation of 37 million were eligible to vote. The turnout was reported at 70%, the highest since the reintroduction of multiparty elections 15 years ago.

The results of parliamentary elections, also run Thursday, were known, with 16 ministers in Kibaki's Cabinet losing their seats.

The opposition, which was narrowly ahead in opinion polls going into the election, accused the government on election eve of planning to rig the voting, but Kibaki strongly denied the claims.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-kenya30dec30,0,2284860.story?coll=la-home-center
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="5"><center>
Tribal Rivalry Boils Over After Kenyan Election</font size></center>



31kenya.xlarge1.jpg

Soldiers fought supporters of the opposition leader Raila Odinga in Mathare, a Nairobi slum. Boniface Mwangi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

New York Times
By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: December 31, 2007

NAIROBI, Kenya — It took all of about 15 minutes on Sunday, after Kenya’s president was declared the winner of a deeply controversial election, for the country to explode.

Thousands of young men burst out of Kibera, a shantytown of one million people, waving sticks, smashing shacks, burning tires and hurling stones. Soldiers poured into the streets to fight them. In several cities across Kenya, witnesses said, gangs went house to house, dragging out people of certain tribes and clubbing them to death.

“It’s war,” said Hudson Chate, a mechanic here. “Tribal war.”

The dubious conclusion of the most fiercely fought election in Kenya’s history has pitched the country toward chaos. The opposition rejected the results and vowed to inaugurate its leader, Raila Odinga, as “the people’s president,” which the government warned would be tantamount to a coup. As the riots spread, the government took the first steps toward martial law on Sunday night and banned all live media broadcasts.

Western observers said Kenya’s election commission ignored undeniable evidence of vote rigging to keep the government in power. Now, one of the most developed, stable nations in Africa, which has a powerhouse economy and a billion-dollar-a-year tourism industry, has plunged into intense uncertainty, losing its sheen as an exemplary democracy and quickly descending into tribal bloodletting.

With the president, Mwai Kibaki, a Kikuyu and Mr. Odinga a Luo, the election seems to have tapped into an atavistic vein of tribal tension that always lay beneath the surface in Kenya but until now had not provoked widespread mayhem.

The news media blackout made it difficult to assess the level of popular outrage. But it was clear Sunday night that the violence was spreading.

In Mathare, a slum in Nairobi, Luo gangs burned more than 100 Kikuyu homes. In Kibera, Kikuyu families loaded their belongings in cars and fled. Almost all the businesses in the country are shut. The only figures in downtown Nairobi, the capital, which is usually choked with traffic, are helmeted soldiers hunched behind plastic shields. Oily black clouds of smoke rose from the slums, smudging out the sun. At least 15 people have been killed.

“It’s a sad day for Kenya,” said Michael E. Ranneberger, the American ambassador to Kenya. “My biggest worry now is violence, which, let’s be honest, will be along tribal lines.”

Mr. Odinga’s supporters are unleashing their frustrations about the election, which was held on Thursday and initially praised as fair, against people they suspect supported the president, namely Kikuyus. The Odinga camp urged election officials to recount the votes after exposing serious discrepancies between the results announced on the night of the election versus the numbers that were later entered into a national total.

It had been predicted that the vote would be close, and the final results had Mr. Kibaki winning by a sliver, 46 percent to 44 percent. But that gap may have included thousands of invalid ballots. The European Union said its observers witnessed election officials in one constituency announce on election night that President Kibaki had won 50,145 votes. On Sunday, the election commission increased those same results to 75,261 votes.

“The presidential elections were flawed,” said Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, the chief European observer.

Koki Muli, co-chairwoman of the Kenya Election Domestic Observation Forum, said she was in the room on Sunday when the election commission was presented with dozens of suspicious tally sheets — some missing signatures, others missing stamps — and most of them were from the president’s stronghold of central Kenya. In some areas, more people voted for the president than there were registered voters. “I saw this with my own eyes,” she said.

Ms. Muli said that 75 of the 210 constituencies — meaning more than one-third of the vote — had serious question marks and that the election chairman initially agreed to investigate. But later on Sunday he changed his mind.

Kenya is a close American ally, and a team of Western diplomats, including the American ambassador, tried for hours to persuade election officials to recount the votes. One Western ambassador said they knew that if the dubious results were certified and the president declared the winner based on them, Kenya would plunge into crisis. But the commission would not budge.

“The government was determined to hold onto power,” said the ambassador, who did not want to be identified because he said he feared reprisals from the Kenyan government.

About 4 p.m., the election commission announced at its temporary headquarters in a downtown conference center that it was ready to declare a winner. The Western ambassadors filed in, looking worn out. Dozens of soldiers lined the walls, some armed with assault rifles and tear gas. Opposition leaders began shouting. The soldiers pounced and the room erupted into chaos, with men in suits fleeing, chairs getting knocked over and the election chairman making a hurried exit, with a crowd chasing him, yelling: “We want justice! Kenya has spoken!”

The commission then reconvened — in front of reporters chosen by government officials — and declared Mr. Kibaki the winner, with 4,584,721 votes compared with 4,352,993 for Mr. Odinga — a spread of about 2 percent.

There were indeed irregularities, the commissioners said, but it was not their job to deal with them. “The judicial system provides peaceable avenues to address these complaints,” said the chairman, Samuel Kivuitu.

The opposition has not indicated if it will contest the results in Kenya’s courts, which are notoriously slow and corrupt. But it announced a swearing-in ceremony for Mr. Odinga on Monday and declare him the “people’s president.”

Officials with Mr. Kibaki’s party warned that such a move could bring consequences. “If Raila does this, he will be attempting a coup and he will get what he deserves,” said Ngari Gituku, a spokesman for the Party of National Unity, Mr. Kibaki’s party.

Mr. Odinga was jailed in the 1980s for several years for plotting a coup in Kenya and was beaten and tortured.

As for the restrictions on the news media, which many journalists said were a severe setback to what had been considered one of the freest presses in the world, Mr. Gituku said: “The only thing the president wants to do is to heal this nation, and the media is not part of that process. The media has been propagating hate.”

Mr. Kibaki was sworn in almost immediately after the results were announced. In a surreal scene, as gunfire rattled in the slums, Mr. Kibaki stood serenely with a Bible in his hand. It was as if he were talking about another election.

“We have demonstrated to the world we are politically mature,” he said. He called the vote “honest, orderly and credible.”

The election did not start out ominously. Kenyans streamed to the polls in record numbers on Thursday. Some waited for hours in lines that were miles long.

The contest was seen as a test of Kenya’s young multiparty democracy, with Mr. Kibaki, 76, representing the establishment and Mr. Odinga, 62, a new brand of politics. Mr. Kibaki has been in government since independence in 1963 and was seen by many Kenyans as continuing an unfair political system that has favored the Kikuyu at the expense of Kenya’s 30-plus other ethnic groups. Mr. Odinga, a rich businessman who campaigned as a champion of the poor, added to his popularity by tapping into those frustrations and building a coalition of many tribes.

The first batch of results showed a sweeping victory for the opposition, with Mr. Odinga ahead by one million votes on Friday. But that lead evaporated overnight, and by Saturday the race was essentially a tie.

But the sudden reversal ignited suspicions, especially after many members of Parliament close to the president were voted out of office in a wave of seeming dissatisfaction with the government.

Ms. Muli, the Kenyan election observer, said it was clear the government had rigged the election. “This country has come a long way,” she said. “And now we have been set back many miles.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/31/world/africa/31kenya.html?_r=1&ref=world&oref=slogin
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

21308995.JPG

The most fiercely fought election in Kenya's history has pitched one of Africa's most stable
nations toward chaos. Thousands of Orange Democratic Supporters took to the streets of
Kibera, a shantytown of one million people, waving sticks, smashing shacks, and burning
posters of Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki after he was declared president over the opposition
candidate Raila Odinga. The election was marred by widespread allegations of rigging.
Photo: Evelyn Hockstein for The New York Times


21306849.JPG

A Kenyan riot police officer stood over a boy who
was caught looting from people fleeing burning
houses in Mathare during the riots. With Mr. Kibaki,
a Kikuyu and Mr. Odinga a Luo, the election seems
to have tapped into an atavistic vein of tribal tension
that always lay beneath the surface in Kenya.
Photo: Karel Prinsloo/Associated Press


21307261.JPG

resident of Mathare with severe cuts on his head, hands and arms. In several cities across
Kenya, gangs went house to house, dragging out people of certain tribes and clubbing them,
witnesses said. Photo: Stephen Morrison/European Pressphoto Agency


21308613.JPG

Kenyan policemen approached an injured man. As the riots spread, the government took the
first steps toward martial law on Sunday night and banned all live media broadcasts. Photo:
Yasuyoshi Chiba/Agence France-Presse -- Getty Images


21307097.JPG

Mr. Odinga's supporters demonstrated with sticks and hammers in the streets of Mathare.
The news media blackout made it difficult to assess the level of popular outrage, but it was
clear Sunday night that the violence was spreading. Photo: Roberto Schmidt/Agence France
-Presse -- Getty Images
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

21307251.JPG

woman used a pot to douse the smoldering remains of her home and business. Almost all the
businesses in the country are shut. Photo: Roberto Schmidt/Agence France-Presse -- Getty
Images


21304897.JPG

Kenyan woman held a Bible as she prayed for peace in front of riot police during the riots.
Photo: Karel Prinsloo/Associated Press


21305333.JPG

People gathered around the body of a man shot in the outskirts of Kisumu. Photo: James Akena/
Reuters


21307069.JPG

Eighty-year-old Thabita held her cat, the only possession she was able to save from a fire in
Mathare, where she lived. Photo: Roberto Schmidt/Agence France-Presse -- Getty Images
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

caption this image


031007_bush_kibaki_1.jpg




"I told you it would be easy"
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="6"><center>
Kenya On The Brink</font size></center>



kenyayasuyoshichibaafpgetty.jpg

Kenyans wave 'pangas' (a broader blade machete) as they demonstrate
after fresh violence linked to the disputed presidential poll erupted 30
December 2007 at the Kibera slum in Nairobi, during the Presidential polls
winner, Mwai Kibaki's swearing in ceremony. By Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty.)


The Atlantic
By Andrew Sullivan
(The Daily Dish)
December 31, 2007

Maybe the State Department was on vacation:


The American State Department, having first congratulated Mr Kibaki on his victory, hastily withdrew this accolade and said: "We do have serious concerns, as I know others do, about irregularities in the vote count."​
My italics. Meanwhile the country explodes. Kenya's bloggers are busy countering the government's media blackout. Kenyan Pundit, Ory, writes:


This is now officially a police state.​
Menacingly, the Kibaki government's patent election-rigging has split the military, opening up the prospect of civil war:


Planning an alternative inauguration can be interpreted as treason which would explain the security forces heavy approach (if this is true). During the press conference Raila introduced an army Major who stated that the armed forces are behind Raila. Our military is divided.​

But the US sent congrats to the the men who stole a democratic election. However unqualified some of the candidates in this election, could any of them be more incompetent in foreign affairs than the Bush administration?


http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2007/12/kenya-on-the-br.html
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

bbc_logo.gif


<font size="5">Q&A: poll violence </font size>

Monday, 31 December 2007

Scores of people have been killed in violent clashes across Kenya, following disputed presidential elections.

The election commission says President Mwai Kibaki was re-elected but his challenger Raila Odinga says he was cheated of victory.


How does this election compare with previous Kenyan polls?

Mwai Kibaki was elected in 2002, promising to clean up Kenya after 40 years of rule by two men from the same party, Kanu.

The 2002 election was widely praised after previous polls were marred by allegations of irregularities and ethnic violence.

President Daniel arap Moi agreed to step down after 24 years in power and his preferred candidate accepted defeat.

Now, it seems as though Kenya has taken a step backwards.

European Union election observers have criticised this poll - saying some of the results read out in Nairobi were different from the figures released at constituency level.

Voter turnout in one area has been recorded as 115%.


What role has ethnicity played?

Kenyan's politics has always been strongly affected by ethnicity.

Members of Mr Odinga's Luo community - in the west and Nairobi slums - mostly favour "their" man, while the Kikuyus in central Kenya have mostly backed Mr Kibaki.

With patronage and corruption still common, many Kenyans believe that if one of their relatives is in power, they will benefit directly, for example through a relative getting a civil service job.

In some areas, Luos have been clashing with Kikuyus and Kikuyu-owned shops targeted in opposition areas.

In the 1990s, Kanu was accused of stirring up ethnic tensions in order to be able to play off rival groups against each other and stay in power.


What is life like in Kenya?


Kenya has East Africa's most developed economy.

It borders some of the world's worst places to live - like Somalia, Sudan and Ethiopia.

Many foreigners will only know Kenya for its game reserves and Indian Ocean beaches.

And under Mr Kibaki's presidency the economy has been growing steadily.

But most Kenyans have not yet felt the benefits of this.

In the overcrowded slums around Nairobi, residents have to cope with violent gangs, no sewers (people use plastic bags as toilets and throw them out of the window) and intermittent electricity.

These are some of the people who have been hoping for change under Mr Odinga.

They say that Mr Kibaki has not kept his promises to tackle the corruption which has long held Kenya back.


So what happens next?

Mr Odinga has called for a mass rally in Nairobi on Thursday, 3 January.

He and supporters of his Orange Democratic Movement will no doubt be hoping for a second "Orange Revolution", sweeping him to power on the back of mass street protests.

But the authorities will be aware of this and are likely to impose tight security on the capital.

In this case, it would all depend on how many people turn out to support Mr Odinga - and whether the police are prepared to continuing shooting at them.

Mr Odinga also has the opportunity to lodge a legal appeal. But Mr Kibaki was sworn in straight after the results were announced, so that avenue appears to hold little hope for him.


What about the international community?


International pressure was key in getting former President Moi to step down before the last election.

The IMF had cut off aid because of concerns over corruption.

The UK and EU have criticised the conduct of the poll but the US has been less forceful.

The Kenyan government has occasionally helped the US in its fight against Islamists in neighbouring Somalia.

International pressure would only work on Kenya if the major world powers were united and determined to take action.

Earlier this year, there was widespread rigging and violence in Nigeria's elections but after a few words of condemnation, the world powers soon moved on.

_44328153_kenya_elections416.gif


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7165962.stm
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

Glad Bush supports democracy :eek:

when that bullshit gets sorted out Im sure the Bushies will have bought us more enemies


Do you think there would be violence here if a republican won the 2008 election?
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

Do you think there would be violence here if a republican won the 2008 election?
I'm confused; there is violence <u>right</u> <u>now</u> and the 2008 election is 11 months away, hence, what difference to Kenya right now does the U.S. elections make in November ???

As the present violence seems to be both political and tribal/ethnic; shouldn't we all be concerned that the violence might be elevated to some catastrophic level? - and I'm trying not to use that "G" word.

QiueEx
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="5"><center>
Kenya on the Verge of a Showdown</font size></center>



kenya_elections_0102.jpg

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and his political rival Raila
Odinga (l. to r.): Radu Sigheti / Reuters; Thomas Mukoya
/ Reuters

TIME Magazine
By ALEX PERRY/NAIROBI
Wednesday, Jan. 02, 2008

From the air, Kenya is a country on fire. Plumes of blue smoke rise from villages across the Rift Valley. More fires burn in the sprawling townships on the edge of the capital, Nairobi. On the ground, the city is gripped by fear. Police officers man roadblocks across its main arteries and sirens wail on its outer edges. Violence is sporadic, and sudden. In the slum of Karobongi, witnesses said the feared Mungiki sect — a group that weaves Kikuyu tribal mythology with gang rule in the slums — hacked to death several people from rival tribes in reprisal killings, leaving the roads strewn with limbs. Clashes between tribes also erupted in the tin-shack slum of Mathare, preventing aid workers from delivering daily drops of food and medicine.

The tribal violence that erupted across the country in the wake of a disputed general election has now killed more than 300 people in four days, according to Kenya Human Rights Commission and the International Federation for Human Rights. Tens of thousands have left their homes, with many others pouring over the border into Uganda.

On Tuesday
On Tuesday, a mob set fire to a church where hundreds of Kikuyu were sheltering in the town of Eldoret, burning 50 alive. The fear is that the last four days may be a taste of worse to come.

Thursday will see an unprecedented showdown between the government and the opposition in Nairobi's city center. Opposition leader Raila Odinga has called for a million of his supporters to converge on Uhuru Park and anoint him the "people's President," to protest an election he claims was rigged by the incumbent, President Mwai Kibaki. Kibaki's government has banned the rally, and in the past few days security forces have not hesitated to shoot rioters dead on sight.

Between the two leaders, this is a power struggle. Little separates them politically, but the two have been intense rivals since Odinga fell out with Kibaki after the President reneged on political promises to the man who was then his coalition ally in the 2002 election. The wave of tribal killings erupted during counting that followed a Dec. 27 general election. At one stage on Sunday in this nation of 36 million, Odinga was one million votes in the lead. Election officials in Kibaki's strongholds then disappeared with the ballot boxes, only to reappear with dramatically enhanced tallies for the President, who was promptly declared the winner and sworn in less than an hour later. Kibaki's first act was to ban live TV and radio broadcasts of the resulting unrest. With the U.S., U.K. and Kenya's own Electoral Commission questioning the result, Odinga is demanding that Kabika admit that he lost.

On the streets, the violence is about tribal score-settling. Kibaki is a Kikuyu, Kenya's largest tribe with 22% of the population. Odinga is a Luo, Kenya's third largest at 13%. The Kikuyu have dominated Kenya's politics, business and land ownership since independence in 1963, provoking simmering resentment from the Luo and other smaller tribes. That has only increased in recent years. Kibaki's government was elected on an anti-corruption ticket, and the economy has since grown at a steady 5%, fueled by a thriving tourism sector. But the benefits have not been enjoyed by all. Corruption has reserved much of Kenya's riches for the government and its cronies, and unemployment and poverty have actually increased, so that today more than half the country lives on less than $2 a day.

On Wednesday
On Wednesday, the government said of Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement: "It is becoming clear that these well-organized acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing were well planned, financed and rehearsed by Orange Democratic Movement leaders prior to the general elections." That charge made explicit the specter now haunting what has historically been one of Africa's most stable and tourist-friendly nations — that it might descend into the kind of ethnic slaughter seen in Rwanda in 1994.

On Thursday
On Thursday, Kenya will confront those fears.

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1699350,00.html?imw=Y
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

I'm confused; there is violence <u>right</u> <u>now</u> and the 2008 election is 11 months away, hence, what difference to Kenya right now does the U.S. elections make in November ???

As the present violence seems to be both political and tribal/ethnic; shouldn't we all be concerned that the violence might be elevated to some catastrophic level? - and I'm trying not to use that "G" word.

QiueEx
sorry

I meant that question in regard to the US 2008 Elections.

For Kenya ? :lol: :(

I really think the US will pour cash and weapons into the Kenyan government to prevent it from turning into Somalia. Kenya is a key nation for US african interests.
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth


Trying this again . . .

Do you think there would be violence here [in the U.S.] if a republican won the 2008 election?
Honestly, no. There is no real history of violent protest in the aftermath of elections in this country. If any election warranted massive protest, the 2000 presidential election would have been one. There were no massive protest in 2000 or 2004, hence, I don't believe there will even be serious protest (and certainly not real violence) if a republican is elected in 2008, assuming, of course, that election is relatively free of serious election violations, especially efforts to stifle minority participation.

I know there is quite a bit of talk about throwing Bush and his cronies out; unless, however, enough of those actually come out to vote that sentiment, it will be republican rule for another 4. And again, assuming there isn't serious interference with the efforts of those who are likely to vote for the democrats, I'd bet the farm there won't be any serious violence. And, I don't think there should be. I think change should occur via the ballot instead of by the bullet, hence, people should get off their asses and vote early and often for the candidate that comes closest to their ideals - knowing that it is impossible for a particular candidate to mirror those ideals.

QueEx
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

Think again about serious violations. Not much has changed since the last elections and a few states passed voter id laws - the supreme is going to rule on those :hmm:
After 2000 and 2004 no amount of bullshit would surprise me.
Van Spakovsky is still out there too.
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

I define serious violation as any plan, scheme or practice which is designed or has the effect of discouraging or preventing the participation of any group, race, ethnicity, etc., in the election process. I view the bullshit of the last two elections as approaching abominations which challenged the legal and philosophical underpinnings of our Constitution. But what is the Constitution? - but a piece of paper.

I don't know that the perpetrators of Florida2000 realize or care how much they have weakened public confidence in the system in general (I would also surmise that the events of 2000 have made it easy for some to conclude government participation in 9-11). Confidence and belief is the glue; without it, the system starts to become, unglued. Sounds silly but this sums it up for me: "If you build it, they will come." If you build the kind of economy, justice system, election system, etc., that reeks of fraud and abuse -- the rebellion and violence inevitably, will come.

QueEx
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="5"><center>Ethnic violence: Why Kenya is not another Rwanda</font size>
<font size="4">Africa Union Chairman John Kufuor is expected to arrive in Kenya
Thursday for talks to calm ethnic tensions in the wake of
Thursday's disputed presidential vote</font size></center>


OKENYAFIGHT_P2.jpg

Fed up: Supporters of opposition
leader Raila Odinga wave crude
weapons and a poster of Odinga
in a slum in Nairobi, Kenya. Karel
Prinsloo/AP


The Christian Science Monitor
By Scott Baldauf | Staff writer
from the January 3, 2008 edition

Nairobi, Kenya - The ethnic violence that has killed more than 300 people since last Thursday's disputed presidential election has come as a shock for many here in East Africa's most stable and prosperous country.

It carries echoes of Rwanda's 1994 genocide in which more than 800,000 Tutsis were slaughtered in 100 days and it is prompting a flurry of diplomatic activity.

While President Mwai Kibaki and his populist rival Raila Odinga were accusing one another of stoking the ethnic strife, Kenya suffered its worst outbreak of violence yet on Tuesday. An estimated 30 Kenyans of the Kikuyu ethnic group – many of them children – were burned alive after taking shelter from a mob in a church in the western town of Eldoret.

"If you look at what happened in Eldoret, it's genocidal," says Abdullah Ahmed Nasir, a political observer and former chair of the Law Society of Kenya. "It has echoes of Rwanda, and this could be the start of a wave of revenge. If people are killing Kikuyus because they are Kikuyus, then definitely it will spread elsewhere to other [ethnic] communities."

"The only way to stop this is for [Kibaki] and [Odinga] to agree on a way forward," Mr. Nasir adds. "If they can agree to an interim government, and then hold elections again in one year's time, then all this could stop."

But getting these two men to agree will take international pressure, Nasir adds. "If Kibaki is pushed to talk, and if the international community can put pressure on Raila, they can agree to meet, and move toward a solution."

In an apparent olive branch to Odinga, Kibaki invited all members of the new opposition-dominated parliament to a meeting Wednesday at State House in Nairobi. But no opposition MPs attended as Odinga demanded outside mediation.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Wednesday that Ghanaian President and African Union Chairman John Kufuor would go and would meet Kibaki and Odinga on Thursday.

Kibaki's tenuous hold on power took a shock Tuesday, as Kenya's chief election official, Samuel Kivuitu, admitted that he was "under pressure" to pronounce Kibaki the winner on Sunday, and that he did "not know whether Kibaki won the election."

"We are the culprits as a commission," Mr. Kivuitu told reporters Tuesday, after meeting with the 22 other members of the Electoral Commission of Kenya. "We have to leave it to an independent group to investigate what actually went wrong."

On Tuesday, chief European Union election observer Alexander Lambsdorff also delivered a blow to Kibaki's legitimacy as president, by announcing that he and his observer group noticed significant irregularities in the way in which the election results were tabulated by Kenya's election workers, and thus, had "doubts about the results."

<font size="4">Echoes of Rwanda</font size>

The overtones of Rwanda's 1994 genocide are ominous, but Kenya's ethnic strife differs from that of Rwanda in crucial ways.

The Rwandan genocide had been planned well in advance. State radio had demonized the economically powerful Tutsi minority for years, and after the apparent assassination of President Juvenal Habyarimina, that same state radio urged Rwandan Hutus to kill Tutsis in large numbers.

Hutus were supplied with machetes to do the job, urged on by local officials – and even parish priests – to not rest until "the work was done."

Kenya's ethnic strife, by contrast, is being carried out on a much smaller scale by many different actors. Much of the violence is focused on the economically and politically dominant Kikuyu group, but the attacks lack the Rwandan genocide's organization and preparation, and there is no evidence that Kenyan officials are organizing it. To the contary, all TV and radio stations have been temporarily forbidden to broadcast live and all news is heavily censored for the time being.

The danger in Kenya, however, lies in the intransigence of the two main leaders, both of whom claim to be president after last week's vote.

Raila Odinga has called for his supporters to hold a mass rally on Thursday in Uhuru Park in the center of Nairobi. A similar rally was effectively shut down by Kenyan police and paramilitary forces, who closed all routes into the city, declared a city wide curfew, and announced shoot-to-kill orders for soldiers stationed around the slum neighborhood of Kibera, which forms Odinga's main support base.

In Kibera itself, residents predicted that the country would erupt into further violence if Odinga's rally is banned. "If people are not given the chance to go to Uhuru park to hear what Raila has to say, there will be a lot of fire in the country tomorrow," says Peter Obuto, a civil servant. But if they are allowed to gather, "when Raila tells the people to cool down, they will do it."

<font size="4">Prices skyrocketing</font size>

The streets of Kibera have become an obstacle course of charred cars and minivans. Prices for milk and bread have doubled, and cooking fuel is simply not to be found. "The food sold in Kibera comes from the Kikuyu people, and they are really helping us," says Mr. Obutu. "But because of the perception that the Kikuyus don't want to give up power, the Luos, Kalingens, Luhyas, Kissis, and Kambas are ganging up on them. And we, the common people, are suffering."

As Obuto speaks, a crowd gathers to talk to a visiting reporter. But within minutes, a gang armed with machetes walks up, and shouts at the crowd to disperse. "Disperse immediately, or we will burn that car," a man shouts in Swahili.

A few miles away, close to Uhuru Park, Father Francis gives advice to parishioners who are deeply troubled by the violence and looking for their church to lend its help for peace.

"It is not enough to kneel and pray," he says. "We tell parishioners that whatever they do, they must do something that will affect peace somehow."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0103/p01s03-woaf.html
 
Re: US offers scholarships to Maasai youth

<font size="4"><center>In Kenya, Death Toll From Violence Rises to at Least 85</font size></center>

By Stephanie McCrummen
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, January 28, 2008; 9:39 AM

NAIROBI, Jan. 28-- The toll from five days of fighting between rival tribal gangs in western Kenya rose to at least 85 Monday, as the brutal, hand-to-hand clashes moved into the normally calm and scenic tourist town of Naivasha, about two hours from Nairobi.

The figures include at least 17 people who were chased through the streets of the lakeside town, trapped inside a house and burned to death, according to an aid official who did not want to speak on the record until he had a more precise count.

On Monday, more people were killed as gangs of hundreds of young men armed with machetes, stones and nail-studded clubs continued to square off along a main road near a fancy country club until they were dispersed by police who fired live bullets into the air.

"We have houses burned, property destroyed, roadblocks erected, and we are retrieving bodies from where they've been laying," said Anthony Mwangi, a spokesman for the Kenya Red Cross Society.

The latest spate of violence across western Kenya has taken on the character of revenge and appears to be spiraling beyond the control of the country's deadlocked political leaders, who have vaguely called for peace but also blamed each other for the fighting.

With former United Nations secretary general Kofi Annan in Kenya for mediation, opposition leader Raila Odinga is preparing for talks with President Mwai Kibaki, whom Odinga accuses of stealing this country's Dec. 27 election. Controversy over the election results set off a wave of ethnically-charged violence that has plunged Kenya into its worst crisis since gaining independence in 1963.

"If this process fails, we are going to face severe difficulties in our country," said Salim Lone, a spokesman for Odinga.

At least 800 people have been killed so far, and more than 250,000 people displaced from villages and towns in the west and from the poorest urban settlements around Nairobi. Most of that number come from Kibaki's ethnic group, the Kikuyu, who have been chased from their homes in western Kenya's volatile Rift Valley by well-organized groups of fighters from the local Kalenjin and Luo communities. Those communities backed Odinga, but also have long-standing issues with the Kikuyu over land that date back to British colonial rule.

But now the Kikuyus are fighting back.

In the once-calm western provincial capital of Nakuru on Thursday, gangs of hundreds of young Kikuyu men began hunting down people mostly from the Luo and Kalenjin communities, hacking people with machetes or stoning them to death. The violence continued there until Saturday evening, leaving at least 56 people dead, then shifted to Naivasha on Sunday.

"We have moved out to revenge the deaths of our brothers and sisters who have been killed, and nothing will stop us," said one young man, a Kikuyu, heaving a club on the streets of Naivasha, the Associated Press reported. "For every one Kikuyu killed, we shall avenge their killing with three."

The attack on the house in Naivasha appears to be an act of revenge for the burning of a church near the western city of Eldoret earlier this month, which killed 17 people, most of whom were Kikuyu, according to local Red Cross officials who combed the charred ruins for the bodies.

On Monday, thousands of Odinga supporters poured into the downtown streets of another western city, the opposition stronghold of Kisumu, burning tires, blocking roads and vowing to avenge the killings in Naivasha.

The demonstrations shut down the city's central business district, already a burned-out mess from three days of rioting last month.

A local reporter said that the few Kikuyus who seem to be left in the town ran Monday to a local police station, fearing another wave of revenge.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/01/28/AR2008012800849.html
 
Kenya in Crisis

<font size="4"><center>Kenya in crisis after disputed elections
The Chronology</font size></center>



Reuters
Mon Jan 28, 2008

Jan 28 (Reuters) - Protests erupted in west Kenya and machete-wielding mobs faced off in the Rift Valley on Monday after dozens were killed in ethnic violence that complicated mediation efforts by former U.N. boss Kofi Annan.

Here is a chronology of the crisis:

  • Dec 27 - Voters elect a new president and parliament.

  • Dec 30 - The Electoral Commission declares Kibaki winner of the presidential election, he is hurriedly sworn in.

    -- Raila Odinga's opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) wins the biggest number of seats in the parliamentary election.

  • Dec 31 - Streets are flooded with security forces and a ban on live TV broadcasts after riots convulse the nation is maintained.

  • Jan 1 - A mob sets fire to a church, killing about 30 villagers from Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe.

  • Jan 2 - The government accuses Odinga's backers of "ethnic cleansing" as the death toll from tribal violence rises.

  • Jan 4 - Kibaki says he will accept a re-run of the disputed election if a court orders it.

    -- The United Nations says the unrest has uprooted 250,000 people.

  • Jan 5 - Kibaki says he is ready to form a government of national unity to end the turmoil, but the opposition rejects the offer.

  • Jan 7 - Odinga calls off planned protests after meeting U.S. envoy Jendayi Frazer, saying the mediation process will begin.

  • Jan 8 - Kibaki announces 17 ministers for his new cabinet. Protesters respond by building and burning barricades in Odinga's western stronghold, Kisumu.

    -- John Kufuor, African Union chairman and president of Ghana, arrives in Nairobi to mediate.

  • Jan 10 - Kufuor leaves Kenya saying both sides have agreed to work together with an African panel headed by former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Kibaki and Odinga, amid recriminations, have not met or agreed how to end the crisis.

  • Jan 11 - The ODM calls for international sanctions against Kibaki.

  • Jan 15 - Parliament is convened and the opposition gets a boost by winning the post of speaker.

  • Jan 16 - Police fight hundreds of protesters throughout the country, as the opposition defies a ban on rallies.

  • Jan 17 - In Nairobi and the western towns of Kisumu and Eldoret, police fire teargas and bullets during rallies called by the opposition but banned by police.

  • Jan 19 - The opposition says it will resume protests next week, having completed three days of demonstrations in which at least 23 people died.

  • Jan 22 - Ex-U.N. chief Kofi Annan arrives in Kenya to attempt mediation. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni also flies into Nairobi to try to mediate.

  • Jan 24 - Kibaki and Odinga meet in a breakthrough brokered by Annan.

  • Jan 25 - Annan denounces "gross and systematic" human rights abuses in Kenya after continuing post-election violence and the next day calls for an investigation.

  • Jan 27 - Annan meets Odinga as ethnic clashes continue.

    -- Negotiators led by Annan tell the rival camps of Kibaki, and Odinga to select four officials each and for further talks in the next 24 hours.

  • Jan 28 - At least 64 people are killed in four days of ethnic fighting in the Rift Valley towns of Nakuru and Naivasha pushing up the death toll up to around 800 people.


http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSL28933987
 
Re: Kenya in Crisis

<font size="5"><center>
A New Burst of Killings in Kenya</font size></center>



kenya_violence_0129.jpg


Kenyan men from the Luo tribe armed with machetes and
rocks enforce a makeshift roadblock, searching passing
vehicles for Kikuyus trying to flee the town in order to kill
them, on the main road to the Ugandan border near the
airport in Kisumu, Kenya, Monday, January 28, 2008.


TIME
By NICK WADHAMS/NAIROBI
Tuesday, Jan. 29, 2008

Even as Kenya's President and main opposition leader launched negotiations aimed breaking their violent political impasse, the crisis reached a troubling new low with news that a recently elected member of parliament had been gunned down outside his home. At the same time, a new wave of ethnic violence has broken out across the country.

The talks, mediated by former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, began with President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga attending a ceremony that was shown in real time on television despite a government ban on live broadcasts that has been maintained since shortly after the disputed December 27 vote. "We all have multiple identities but I hope you see yourselves as Kenyans first," Annan said. "To the leaders gathered here today, I say that the people want you to take charge of the situation and do whatever possible to halt the downward spiral that is threatening this beautiful and prosperous country."

The leaders held a minute of silence to remember Mugabe Were, a young lawmaker with Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement, who was slain as he drove up to his gate in Nairobi late Monday night. The police said they had detained three people in Were's killing, which bore all the hallmarks of an assassination: he was shot at least twice in the head from a car that had pulled up next to his. "It is despicable that a member of parliament should be assassinated in this manner," Odinga told reporters earlier in the day. "We have witnessed five bullets that were shot into his body, two of them into his eyes. These were people who had planned an assassination."

The Kenyan police said they had arrested three people in Were's killing. Still, Were's death and the prolonged tension spurred attacks that included the beheading of a doctor in the nearby Kibera slum, an Odinga stronghold, and several reports of forcible circumcision of Luos, who traditionally do not practice that rite. The violence has pitted members of Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe, long accused of being the object of favors from successive Kenyan governments, against Luos, Luhyas and Kalenjin, which had hoped an Odinga victory in the December 27 election would right decades of perceived injustices.

Annan predicted that Kenya would only need a month to resolve the immediate political crisis and a year to solve the larger issues that have lingered — and sometimes been fomented by Kenyan politicians — since independence. Yet while Odinga and Kibaki have both said they want to negotiate, neither has shown any real commitment to resolving the crisis: Kibaki insists his election as President is non-negotiable, while Odinga says he will accept nothing but a new vote.

Angry crowds of Luos and Kalenjin also squared off along a road in the tourist town of Naivasha, an hour north. The clashes in Naivasha reached a near-breaking point on Tuesday, when army helicopters fired what police said were rubber bullets into crowds of demonstrators facing off against each other along a major road. "We know very well the police are not doing their work, they are also political, they are favoring one side, they are not caring for all people," said Odinga supporter Evans Maremi.

Naivasha and the nearby city of Nakuru have seen a spate of killings in recent days as Kikuyus launched revenge attacks against people they say were responsible for attacks that killed dozens of their tribesmen further north and pushed hundreds of thousands from their homes. Those killings have changed the tenor of the violence, which the opposition initially characterized as a spontaneous surge of rage among people furious about the vote. It now appears to have devolved into simple revenge killing.

Indeed, the fear was that the violence would begin to spiral out of control into a cycle of ethnic attacks as members of Kenya's different ethnic groups act on grievances they have harbored for decades over land and the perceived inequitable distribution of resources. That, in turn, could sink Kenya's economy, whose chief engines are horticulture, tourism and tea. All three industries have been crippled.

Still, amid the violence, there was some hope that Annan's mediation could lead to a compromise at last after a month of bloodletting. The death toll is now difficult to estimate, but it is believed that some 850 people have been killed since the vote, with about 150 of them killed since Friday, when Kikuyus launched what appeared to have been revenge attacks in Nakuru. "Today our country is under serious threat of sliding into anarchy," parliamentary speaker Kenneth Marende said.

The one thing that Kenya has going for it right now, it seems, is that the world is refusing to let the crisis fade into the background. The African Union has promised to consider the issue in a summit that begins on Thursday. And the special U.N. adviser on preventing genocide, Francis Deng, has warned that Kenya's politicians could be held responsible for any violation of international law. That came just days after the New York-based Human Rights Watch released a report concluding that there was some indication that the violence had been planned beforehand, particularly in areas where Odinga is popular. "There are evidently hidden hands organizing it now," Britain's Minister for Africa Mark Malloch Brown said as he stopped in Kenya to lend London's weight to the mediation efforts. "The targeting is very specific."

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1707857,00.html?imw=Y
 
Re: Kenya in Crisis

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Armed Kenyans, mainly from the Luo tribe, enforce a
makeshift roadblock in Kisumu

London Times Online
January 30, 2008

The top US envoy in Africa gave warning today that Washington was reviewing all of its aid to Kenya because of Bosnian-style "ethnic cleansing".

Amid increasing international concern about the bloodshed in Kenya, Jendayi Frazer, the US Assistant Secretary of State responsible for Africa policy, also warned that those behind the violence might be adopting killing as their main objective.

Separately, President Kagame of Rwanda, which suffered a genocide in 1994, said that intervention by the military may be the only way to halt the Kenyan bloodshed.

More than 850 people have been killed and a quarter of a million displaced since a disputed election on December 27 that saw President Kibaki returned to power. Raila Odinga, the Kenyan opposition leader, insists that the election was rigged.

It emerged today that Kenyan police have been given shoot-to-kill orders in a bid to stem the violence after Kofi Annan, the former UN Secretary-General, launched crisis talks between the feuding leaders in Nairobi yesterday..

“There are four categories of people who will face tough police action: Those looting property, burning houses, carrying offensive weapons, barricading roads,” a police commander told the AFP. “We have orders to shoot to kill these categories of people if they are caught in the act.”

Yesterday military helicopters fired warning shots to stop ethnic fighting in the lakeside town of Naivasha, the latest flashpoint.

Although the United States previously had said it would not threaten deep cuts to its projected $540 million in aid payments this year, Ms Frazer said that neither Mr Kibaki nor Mr Odinga had done enough to halt the violence.

Speaking to reporters before an African Union summit in Addis Ababa, Ms Frazer described the violence she saw during a visit earlier this month to Kenya’s western Rift Valley, where the fighting has pitted the Kalenjin people against Mr Kibaki’s Kikuyu tribe.

Ms Frazer said she did not consider the violence genocide. “The aim originally was not to kill, it was to cleanse, it was to push them out of the region,” she said, explaining that people were told to leave their homes on the threat of death if they did not flee. It “was clear ethnic cleansing in the Rift Valley”.

Now, after weeks of deadly attacks and retaliation, she said “killing may be the object”.

The New York-based organisation Human Rights Watch has said it had evidence that opposition politicians helped direct and organize some attacks in the Rift Valley - which Mr Odinga has denied. Kenyan human rights groups have said some of the worst violence has been perpetrated by paid militias directed by politicians, and cite a long history of orchestrated political violence in Kenya.

“We’re calling for an investigation into the inciting of violence as well as an investigation into who is actually killing people,” Ms Frazer said. “We know there have been politicians on radio inciting violence before the election ended.”

Kikuyus, who make up Kenya’s largest tribe, have long been dominant in their country’s politics and economy - and resented for it. Anger at them exploded after Mr Kibaki claimed re-election. Hundreds have been killed and Kikuyus account for more than half of the 255,000 chased from their homes, most in the Rift Valley.

Ms Frazer said most US funds to Kenya go directly to people, not the Government, but that the US was still reviewing all of its funding to the country. Most US funding goes to non-governmental organisations fighting AIDS and malaria, which the US does not want to interrupt.

In Rwanda, where at least 800,000 people were killed in the 1994 genocide, President Kagame said that he thought the army might have to take over in Kenya before things got worse.

“This is a case of emergency where certain things have to be done very quickly to stop the killings that are going on. There’s no time to go into niceties and debates when the killings are taking place,” Mr Kagame told Reuters in an interview.

“I know that it is not fashionable and right for the armies to get involved in such a political situation. But in situations where institutions have lost control, I wouldn’t mind such a solution. I tend to believe that the Kenyan army is professional and has been stable.”

Mr Kagame, a former rebel leader who marched on Kigali as the genocide was taking place, said he backed mediation efforts headed by Mr Annan and said that any military takeover should only be temporary.

“I tend to suggest that maybe whatever in terms of leadership that is there should be swept aside and space be created for people to go back on the drawing board and settle their grievances,” he said.

The depth of concern about the situation in Kenya was underline by a rare public statement from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) appealing for its delegates and partners in Kenya to be allowed to do their work.

“The violence has entered a new phase,” said Pascal Cuttat, head of the ICRC's regional delegation in Nairobi. “It broke out in the wake of elections but is now being driven by ethnic divisions, and there is a great risk of further deterioration.”

“The violence is causing untold suffering in many communities and spiralling into a succession of attacks, reprisals and counter-reprisals,” Mr Cuttat said. “The longer this is allowed to continue, the more difficult it will be to return to stability and bring about some form of reconciliation.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article3277101.ece
 
Re: Kenya in Crisis

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Nobody Seems to be Talking About

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Kenya

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Re: Kenya in Crisis

hey que ex any stratford stuff on kenya's military capacity? why no troop deployments to stop this shit besides copters?
 
Kenya Finds A Solution, Reach Agreement

After weeks of violence and strife over the controversial election "results", Kenyans with the help of former UN secretary Kofi Annan come to an amicable decision. I like this alot.


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Kenya Rivals Reach Peace Agreement
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By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN
Published: February 29, 2008

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenya’s political leaders ended a two month standoff on Thursday that had plunged this country into violence, reaching a long-sought agreement to share power between the government and the opposition.

There are still many thorny issues to resolve, among them how the government will function with essentially two bosses. There is also a deeply divided country to heal. More than 1,000 Kenyans have been killed and hundreds of thousands driven from their homes in an uncharacteristic burst of violence set off by a deeply flawed election in December. Much of the fighting, like the voting, has been along ethnic lines....................Full New York Times Article

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/29/world/africa/29kenya.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin
 
Re: Kenya Finds A Solution, Reach Agreement

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