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Kenya bloodshed called ‘genocide’
Foreign Desk Report
NAIROBI—President Mwai Kibaki’s government accused rival Raila Odinga’s
party of unleashing “genocide” in Kenya on Wednesday as the death toll
from tribal violence over a disputed election passed 300.
“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,” the
statement read by Lands Minister Kivutha Kibwana on behalf of his
colleagues said.
Odinga’s supporters, drawn mainly from his Luo tribe, have made similar
charges against Kibaki, whose Kikuyu have dominated political and
business life in East Africa’s biggest economy.
Western powers have called for calm and Britain has urged the African
Union and Commonwealth to try to reconcile Kibaki and Odinga whose
parties accuse the other of vote-rigging during the December 27
election. “There are independent reports of serious irregularities in
the counting process,” said British Foreign Minister David Miliband and
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in a joint statement. They called
for an end to violence and “an intensive political and legal process” to
end the crisis.
As young men armed with machetes manned roadblocks in rural areas, a
trickle of office workers in the capital Nairobi made it through police
cordons to begin the new working year. “They call this democracy,” said
a central bank worker, delayed by police as he tried to get to work.
A local and an international rights group accused Kenyan security forces
of having “bloodily repressed” protests by opposition supporters. “As a
reaction, some protesters are responsible for the assassination of
Kikuyus,” added the Kenya Human Rights Commission and the International
Federation for Human Rights.
And in an apparent chain reaction, there were growing examples of
Wednesday of revenge killings by Kikuyu militants, including the
notorious Mungiki gang, on members of pro-opposition tribes. The turmoil
caused confusion in local markets. Currency trading was delayed then
muted, while stocks went lower, and tea and coffee auctions were
postponed.
“If some normality comes back, we will resuscitate the business,” a tea
broker told Reuters. On Tuesday, about 30 Kikuyus died when a mob set
fire to a church where they had taken sanctuary in the western town of
Eldoret — reviving memories of the slaughter in churches of hundreds of
thousands in Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.
The Eldoret attack was one the worst episodes of violence that has
uprooted nearly 100,000 Kenyans, many of them fleeing across the border
to Uganda. It sparked reprisal attacks. Adding to the chaos, Kenya’s
electoral commission head Samuel Kivuitu said: “I do not know” when
asked if Kibaki won the vote. The comment by Kivuitu, who pronounced
Kibaki victor on Sunday, stunned Kenya and cast further doubt on the
result. Western powers have warned their citizens against visiting a
popular tourist destination that was regarded as one of the most stable
democracies on a volatile continent. African Union chairman John Kufuor
was planning to fly to Kenya and start mediation, while British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown was on the phone to both sides.
“There are elections in other parts of Africa over the next 18 months,
in Angola, in Ghana, in Malawi. Kenya is very, very important in and of
itself and it is important for what it says about the rest of Africa and
its approach to democracy,” Miliband said. A reporter flying over
Eldoret saw plumes of white smoke billowing blazing homesteads. Youths
with machetes, rocks and bows and arrows could be seen manning crude
checkpoints.There was early calm in Nairobi slums on Wednesday but
residents said Mungiki, a gang with roots in traditional Kikuyu rites,
dropped leaflets warning of reprisals against Luos. In Naivasha town in
Kenya’s Rift Valley, scores of people were injured in revenge attacks
for the church killings, and about 300 terrified locals spent the night
camped at a police station and prison for safety.—Agencies
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