Kenyan Rivals Sign Pact To End Violence
Agreement To End Turmoil Over Disputed Election Comes After New Upsurge In Killings
-
-
Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan gives a press conference in a Nairobi hotel, Kenya, after a day of meetings with his successor Ban Ki-Moon and opposition leader Raila Odinga, Friday, Feb. 1, 2008. Rival parties in Kenya said Friday they had agreed to take immediate action to end violence. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
-
An opposition supporter carries a machete and a misspelled sign referring to mediator Kofi Annan reading "A Koffi must go, no peacetalk" in Kisumu, Kenya, Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008, following the shooting of Kenyan opposition lawmaker David Too by a police officer in Eldoret. (AP)
-
A displaced Kenyan woman leans on a fence as she waits for food aid in Mathare slum in Nairobi, Kenya, Friday, Feb. 1, 2008. (AP)
-
An opposition supporter scrapes a machete along the road next to a burning vehicle set on fire in Kisumu, Kenya, Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008, following the shooting of Kenyan opposition lawmaker David Too by a police officer in Eldoret. (AP)
-
Opposition leader Raila Odinga attends a press conference at his Orange Democratic Party headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008. (AP Photo/Riccardo Gangale)
-
-
Photo Essay Kenya Violence Continues Opposition lawmaker shot to death in ethnic violence tearing the country apart.
-
Fast Facts Kenya Learn about the people, economy and history.
Kofi Annan, the former U.N. secretary-general who is mediating, said the sides had agreed to tackle within a week the most pressing issues - including resolving the immediate political crisis. Both sides called for illegal militias to be disbanded and for the investigation of all crimes connected to the violence, including alleged excessive force by police.
"The first (step) is to take immediate action to stop the violence and restore fundamental liberties," Annan said.
Police in western Kenya fired on armed mobs who set homes and businesses on fire. At least 14 people died in the latest clashes, sparked by a police officer killing an opposition legislator Thursday.
In neighboring Ethiopia, Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki told leaders at an African summit that "the security situation in the country is under control."
Annan said he had suggested to Kibaki on Tuesday that "a preventative deployment of the military may be necessary." He added, "Everyone would have to admit that the police are a bit over-stretched."
British Foreign Office Minister Mark Malloch Brown, also at the African summit, agreed about deploying Kenya's army, saying police "at this stage seem to be seen as no longer neutral and behind some of the killings."
Thursday's shooting of legislator David Kimutai Too added to the distrust of police, and police stations were targeted in three western towns.
In Too's home village, 3,000 people armed with bows and arrows, spears, clubs and machetes killed a police officer, said police commander Peter Aliwa. The mob accused the officer of wounding a civilian when police opened fire Thursday on a crowd protesting Too's death. It was the first police casualty reported in a month of bloodshed in which police have acknowledged killing scores of people.
In another western village, six people were hacked to death and two were killed with poisoned arrows, witnesses said. Nyamira District Commissioner Samuel Njora confirmed the deaths at Ikonge, 240 miles west of Nairobi. He said members of the Kalenjin tribe was killing members of the Kisii tribe, blaming them for the legislator's death because they are considered government allies. The fighting there was continuing, he said.
More than 800 people have been killed and 300,000 forced from their homes in violence that degenerated into ethnic clashes over decades-old grudges about land and other resources. It has pitted other tribes against Kibaki's Kikuyu people, who are resented for their long domination of politics and the economy.
The trigger was the announcement that Kibaki had been re-elected despite a vote tally that international and local election observers all agree was rigged.
Kibaki's address to African leaders indicated his distance from opposition leader Raila Odinga. Kibaki repeated that he was rightfully elected and suggested his opponents take their grievances to the courts. The opposition has already said the courts are loaded with Kibaki's allies.
"The judiciary in Kenya has over the years arbitrated electoral disputes, and the current one should not be an exception," Kibaki told the summit in a closed session. A text of his speech was distributed to reporters.
He said the opposition's rejection of the courts had the "encouragement and support of some foreign countries" and could only subvert and weaken democratic institutions.
Kibaki blamed the opposition for the violence, saying "the ongoing crisis erupted after the opposition ... went ahead to instigate a campaign of civil unrest and violence. There is overwhelming evidence to indicate that the violence was premeditated, and systematically directed at particular communities (ethnic groups)."
Odinga blamed the government. Both sides had condemned the violence but "there is ample evidence that sections of the security forces are themselves abetting this violence, including through supporting a much-feared militia which relentlessly pursues communities which supported ODM," his party. He made the charges in a letter he gave to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Ban had met with Kibaki in Ethiopia on Thursday.
There was no sign of the violence easing in the western Rift Valley, scene of the worst clashes.
About 20 elders of the Kalenjin tribe, angered by police shootings in their town of Eldoret, blamed the government and vowed vengeance.
"If the government will continue shooting and directing guns at our people, the Kalenjin ... we will rise up in arms," said Zacharia Baruo. The Kalenjin generally support Odinga's party.
"The government has started the war on us and we are ready to fight back," said another elder, Joseph Chumba.
They said police had killed four people and wounded 21 in Eldoret on Thursday. That figure included the slain legislator, Too.
Too was the second anti-government legislator killed this week, prompting Odinga's party to charge there is "an evil scheme" to rob the opposition of its parliamentary majority. Melitus Mugabe Were was shot twice in the head Tuesday in Nairobi. Legislative elections held the same day as the Dec. 27 presidential vote gave Odinga's party 99 seats to 43 for Kibaki's party.
Odinga said the United States had offered to send FBI agents to investigate Were's killing. Government spokesman Alfred Mutua said Kenyans "are capable of conducting our own murder investigation."
Police said Too's killing was a crime of passion: He was shot by a traffic police officer who discovered the lawmaker was having an affair with his girlfriend, also a police officer. The girlfriend was slain in the same attack. A Too family spokesman accused the police of a cover-up, saying the lawmaker was not involved with the woman.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- CBSNews.com on Digg

- it is retarded raducal fascist nazi terrorislamic jihadist muslim slavers and murderers stupid,,,
non muslims of the world unite,,, fight against the tyranny of the fascist nazi terrorslam imperialist empire of the darkside,,,
I was a fanatic...I know their thinking, says former radical Islamist
By blaming the Government for our actions, those who pushed this "Blair''''s bombs" line did our propaganda work for us.
More important, they also helped to draw away any critical examination from the real engine of our violence: Islamic theology.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=465570&in_page_id=1770
Bless the Beasts and Children
Fascist nazi terrorslam kills every man woman and child in the village again%u2026 typical mo for terrorslam%u2026
http://www.michaelyon-online.com/wp/bless-the-beasts-and-children.htm
Our Prophet commanded us to fight the kaafirs when we are able and to attack them in their homelands and to give them three choices before we enter their lands: either they become Muslim and be like us, sharing our rights and duties; or they pay the jizyah (poll tax) and feel themselves subdued; or they fight, in which case their wealth, women, children and homes become permissible as booty for the Muslims.
http://islamqa.com/index.php?ref=13759&ln=eng&txt=before%20islam%20arabia%20pagan
the truth about fascist nazi terrorislam...
http://www.terrorismawareness.org/what-really-happened/ - Reply to this comment
- antoniorega,
No, I wouldn''t let a monkey run a country, however, blacks are human. And the way things are going they will continue to gain power and influence through inter-racial breeding and single racial voting. In particular white women are drawn to them. Many bi-racial offspring have superior physical and mental qualities, having got the better qualities from each parent. Where they are raised outside the ghetto jungle culture they can do very well. The same phenomenon is true in breeding between whites and Latinos. The relation between blacks and Latinos does not work out so well. - Reply to this comment
- gaaru is exactly right. The Kenyan crisis has nothing to do with black-white. Unless jihadists of Arab descent (Caucasians) get into it, this is a black-black crisis all the way.
- Reply to this comment
- If you are looking for the real causes of the Kenyan crisis, it is simply sycophancy to the extermes.
A leader needs only wink and the sycophant interpretes that to mean burn your neighbours house and goes right ahead and does it.
There is absolutely no reason to bri8ng in this white-black dogma into the fore as a result of the Kenyan crisis. - Reply to this comment
- Yes there will be plenty of work for whites if blacks took over - fixing everything that they mess up.
Blacks, not all blacks, are very ignorant people, like children or monkeys. They are curious but don''''t think ahead about their actions or consequences, like getting their biotch pregnant, smoking pot before the drug test, robbing the bank with no disguise. They don''''t think ahead. So if they were to run things they would run it to the ground just like every other place they have tried it. Detroit, Guyana, Suriname, Haiti, All of Africa, Harlem. Anything that blacks touch turns to ***** because it''''s like having monkeys run the place. You wouldn''''t let a monkey run a country would you? I wouldn''''t.
Posted by antoniorego at 09:10 PM : Feb 01, 2008
Goodness gracious. Sir, let me just give you one piece of information that was actually gathered by your own government, which is made up of mostly White folks: The consumption of all legal and illegal drugs by White Americans, with the exception of crack, is about 3 to 5 times higher than what Black Americans do.
The fact that most people in jail for drug offenses are Black goes to show how police work concentrates on what''s going on in some Black neigborhoods and ignores what goes on in the White suburbs.
And that''s what Blacks are so upset about and for a very good reason.
Please have some mercy in your judgement of your fellow Black Americans when it comes to this issue. - Reply to this comment
- antoniorega,
Your contention that if Blacks took over it would be like the Planet of the Apes went over my head. Wasn''t the ape society well organized and well run in the movie? Well organized and well run would be a good thing, right? I never saw anything but short pieces of the movie on TV, because I don''t care for science fiction, and that was a long time ago. One thing for sure though, if Blacks do take over there will be plenty of work for whites. - Reply to this comment
"Kenyan Rivals Sign Pact To End Violence"
Rule #1
There are no rules.- Reply to this comment
Grammy winner Shakira on her music career, philanthropy and being sexy.




