Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Raila Odinga's next steps: The full statement



TUESDAY OCTOBER 31 2017    
 

 Raila odinga
Nasa leader Raila Odinga. He accuses the government of killing more than 60 people since the August 8 General Election. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP 
By RAILA ODINGA
We Reject Sham Elections: Nasa Campaign For Electoral Justice And Democracy            
Ladies and gentlemen 
The meaningless exercise, a charade purported to be an election, is now behind us.  
Today, we return to the hard but essential task of making elections count and democracy work in Kenya. 
This is in line with the task we assigned ourselves at the beginning of our current journey; that we be the people who will end electoral fraud not only in Kenya but in all of Africa and be the team that will uproot the evil culture of sham elections with pre-determined outcomes.

Sunday, 29 October 2017

In edgy Kenyan slum, a rumor ends in fires and a death


A rioter throws stones in Kawangware 
By the end of Friday night’s confrontation, a man had been beaten to death and rows of shops and homes set alight, a worrying taste of how quickly ethnic violence can erupt in the Kenyan capital’s volatile slums.
Almost all the 50 deaths since August’s presidential vote have been in clashes between protesters and police.
The deeper fear of Kenyans is that the months of political strife, exacerbated by the courts annulling the August vote, eat away at deep tribal divisions and ignite a wave of inter-ethnic violence, as happened after a disputed 2007 vote when 1,200 people were killed.
The Kawangware fighting was sparked by rumors that Kikuyu, the tribe of President Uhuru Kenyatta, had drafted in members of the Mungiki to protect them from opposition supporters.
On Friday, a Reuters witness saw a group of men armed with machetes, known locally as pangas, on the streets of Kawangware.
Their identity was unclear, although several residents said they were Mungiki, brought in after opposition loyalists burnt down a prominent Kikuyu-owned business the previous night.
The Mungiki, notorious for castrating and decapitating victims, were blamed for hundreds of deaths in the 2007 clashes. Their relative quiet since has not diminished their reputation.
“They were more than a hundred, and they were carrying all new pangas,” Vitalis Aloyi, a Kawangware resident, said.
Another man said residents had to act to defend themselves.
“We had to teach them not to bring Mungiki here. If they bring Mungiki, we will destroy their property and their lives,” said Kennedy Ochieng, an ethnic Luo, like opposition leader Raila Odinga.
 
As the pro-Odinga vigilantes, also armed with clubs and machetes, swept down the muddy street they set fire to Kikuyu businesses suspected of hiding Mungiki militiamen, Ochieng said.
One man was killed, and his body burned, leaving a charred spot on the road. Some Odinga supporters denounced him as Mungiki, but no one could explain how they knew.
The next day, with smoke still rising from the twisted wreckage of homes and shops, the remaining traders in Kawangware began loading their wares of pipes, popcorn machines and meat onto trucks.
“All the other tribes are against the Kikuyu here because of the voting,” said Stephen Kamau, whose fruit stall was burned down. “These people will come back and burn more.”
Others in the district, long home to mixed communities, said the truth was more nuanced. As political tensions rose, some businesses had hired local youths for protection, said Rhoda Kungu, a market trader.
She insisted the vigilantes were not Mungiki.
“We are all brothers and sisters. We just want to live in peace,” she said.
Another trader, Brian Njenga, said it may merely have been pro-Odinga youths spotting a chance to enrich themselves, demanding protection money or looting businesses before they burned them.
“Some people are just using this situation to get personal benefit,” Njenga said to somber nods from a crowd of youths around him. “Many have not worked for a long time because the economy is very down.”
A few hundred meters down the rubbish-strewn road, hundreds of young men milled around on street corners. Teargas from the night before lingered in the air.
“We want to kill Mungiki. They must know this is our territory,” one man shouted. “Don’t think because it is quiet now that we are at peace. We are just waiting for something!”

Raila Odinga: Uhuru Kenyatta won't have it easy after repeat poll


SATURDAY OCTOBER 28 2017
By ELVIS ONDIEKI
Raila Odinga
Nasa leader Raila Odinga. The repeat election was “a vote of no confidence”, he says. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP 

National Super Alliance (Nasa) leader Raila Odinga now says he can only dialogue with President Uhuru Kenyatta on holding fresh elections in 90 days and nothing else.
Because Mr Kenyatta shunned dialogue before Thursday’s repeat poll, Mr Odinga holds that there is little else left to talk about.
TURNOUT
In an interview with CNN on Friday,  Mr Odinga said that even if Mr Kenyatta is announced the winner after Thursday’s repeat election, the Jubilee Party leader will not have it easy ruling Kenya.
The opposition leader also advised Mr Kenyatta to resign because the “low” voter turnout in Thursday’s poll.
The election was “a vote of no confidence”, he says.

Thursday, 26 October 2017

Envoys regret Supreme Court quorum hitch

THURSDAY OCTOBER 26 2017

US Ambassador to Kenya Robert Godec leading
US Ambassador to Kenya Robert Godec leading other diplomats in addressing journalists at Radisson Blue in Nairobi on October 23,2017. The envoys say they regret the postponement of a case on the repeat election by the Supreme Court over quorum hitch. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION MEDIA GROUP

By AGEWA MAGUT
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The international community has urged Kenyans to reject violence and to remain calm as they vote in the fresh election Thursday.

Wednesday, 25 October 2017

We won't allow you to plunge Kenya into chaos again, President Kenyatta tells opposition


NAIROBI, 20 OCTOBER 2017, (PSCU) — President Uhuru Kenyatta today said Kenyans should stand up and reject leaders who are scheming to plunge the country into chaos.

The President said the Government will not tolerate chaos disguised as exercise of freedoms to create suffering in the country.

He said those calling for some Kenyans to stay away from the polls were against the ideals that the country's forefathers struggled and died for.

Leading Kenyans in celebrating Mashujaa Day, President Kenyatta said Kenya has a Constitution that guarantees many rights but it was saddening that those freedoms are being used to perpetuate impunity and create anarchy.

He said Kenya has had a second peaceful election since 2007 and that the Government will not allow a repeat of the painful past where lives and properties were lost.

“We vowed never to repeat the regrettable events that almost sunk us. We must, therefore, wake up and say “NO” to any misleading leader out to plunge Kenya into chaos. Kenyans have the choice and means of resisting such leaders and their evil schemes, and should do it now,” said the President in his address from Uhuru Park, Nairobi.

He said Kenya needs to move forward and away from the unending campaign mood.

The President called on Kenyans to exercise their democratic right on October 26 to defend their inalienable right to vote for the leader of their choice.

The Head of State said the Government is ready to counter any threats to national security during and after the October 26 fresh Presidential election.

He said the security apparatus has been enhanced and appropriately deployed to maintain law and order.

“The law will apply equally to all regardless of social class, political position and no one will be spared. For those who thrive in chaos and relish anarchy, your days are numbered; the law will take its course and sanction you accordingly,” said the President.

He thanked Kenyans for showing maturity and peacefully electing leaders of their choice in the August 8 General Election.

He said Kenyans chose to remain peaceful, allowing democracy to prevail despite all forms of incitement targeted at the majority.

The President called for peace as the country heads to the fresh election, which was ordered by the Supreme Court after the nullification of the August 8 Presidential election result.

He said voting for leaders of the people’s choice is a right that was hard won by the country’s forefathers, which should be guarded jealously.

The President warned opposition leaders who are intimidating the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission in a bid to prevent it from holding the election.

“To those threatening and intimidating the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), its staff and other entities, this must cease forthwith.  We must trust, nurture and safeguard our institutions to enable them to grow and perform their functions,” said the President.

The President said even though the Constitution guarantees the right to demonstrate peacefully, that right is guaranteed only for those operating within the confines of the law. “As a modern state, Kenya must be guided by the rule of law,” said the President.

The President said he has personally shown his respect for the law by accepting the annulment of his clear victory and subsequently offering himself for re-election.

He urged Kenyans to vote for him so that his Government can continue with its transformational development projects.

He said his Administration’s track record during its first are visible for all, adding that the Jubilee Government has set higher targets for the next five years.

The Jubilee manifesto has outlined ambitious targets including the provision of free day secondary education for which the government has allocated Sh25 billion.

He called on Kenyans to turn out in large numbers to exercise their democratic and Constitutional right to vote on October 26.

“Your vote will be your contribution to the dream of our forefathers for a peaceful and prosperous Kenya.  True Kenyan heroes will cast their votes on 26th this month.  This is the only way we can make Kenya great and guarantee a great future for our children,” said the President.

The President also announced that the Government will soon set up a Heroes Council, which will be responsible for identifying and coming up with solutions to issues of welfare and support to our heroes and heroines.

The Head of State also celebrated heroes including Mary Mokaya, who  at the cost of her life, saved fellow students from the Moi Girls’ fire.

“May God rest her soul and that of her colleagues, in eternal peace.  And may her name and her example of selflessness, be a shining example to us all,” said the President.

Deputy President William Ruto said the right to choose leaders is a right that cannot be taken away from Kenyans.

He said Kenyans will vote in huge numbers on Thursday next week to choose the President of their choice. “We go to the ballot next week to defend our right to choose and respect the will of the people,” said the DP.

French Intelligence reveals Akombe closely worked with A former UN employee to have Uhuru’s election Annulled


http://safarionline.co.ke/french-intelligence-reveals-akombe-closely-worked-former-un-employee-uhurus-election-annulled/

Date: 



akombe
Roslyn Akombe was part of a scheme to have Uhuru and Raila share power by creating a constitutional crisis – A dossier by the French Intelligence shows Akombe worked with a former top UN employee and other wealthy people for the plan to go through – She gave IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati a fake form 34C to announce Uhuru winner of the annulled August poll – The schemers of ‘Operation Lawfare’ also roped in judiciary officials in their plan

Friday, 20 October 2017

Kenyatta Was Trailed Over 'Communism'


By Gitau wa Njenga,London
The Standard,3 March,2005


The United Kingdom yesterday released secret files on
Kenya's founding father Jomo Kenyatta, detailing how
the British trailed him for 24 years.

The secret files, made public through the Public
Record Office under the Freedom of Information Act,
date back 76 years ago and show Kenyatta indulged in
espionage of his own kind.

Secret File KV 2/1787-1789 shows Kenyatta came to the
attention of British Security Service attention in
1929 when he arrived in London and was kept under
surveillance by the Metropolitan Police Special Branch
because of his suspected links to the International
Committee of Negro Workers.

Kenyatta arrived in London on March 8,1929, after
sailing for nearly a month on board Bernadino de St
Pierre cruise ship that had started the voyage at
Kilindini Harbour on February 17, 1929.

Another file, KV 2/1787 (1930-1940), follows
Kenyatta's activities in this period through Special
Branch reports, and from 1934 through intercepted
mail. The warrant for intercepting his correspondence
states that Kenyatta was believed to be succeeding
George Padmore as principal Soviet propaganda agent
for the British colonies.

Kenyatta had met Padmore, a left-wing Communist from
Trinidad, in Berlin, Germany, and it is believed they
remained in Germany until February 21, 1933, when
police deported Padmore.

Intelligence records show that shortly before his
deportation, Padmore had taken Kenyatta to Moscow,
Russia, where Kenyatta allegedly joined the Communist
Party. This activity postdates Kenyatta's visit to
Lenin School in Moscow between 1932 and 1933.

In 1945, he was described as a Trotskyist while a year
later he was labelled "a well-known communist
extremist".

During an earlier stay in Russia, the security service
appears to have lost track of him. However, the
details of Kenyatta's mission to Russia remain
unknown.

The file contains copies of correspondence to
Kenyatta, until the watch on his mail was suspended in
December 1934. There are many reports of his speeches,
including one at an Indian National Congress meeting
at The Strand, Central London, in December 1935 where
he said: "The only way I can see independence being
obtained is by the rising of the native peoples,
casting aside their chains and driving their common
enemy from their land, if need be by the use of bombs,
machine guns and such things."

It is reported that Kenyatta's Indian audience, who
regarded him as "a comedian rather than a serious
speaker", did not take the remarks seriously.

Other elements that emerge on the file are pressures
from Kikuyu organisations in Kenya for Kenyatta to
return home, and details of his financial worries. He
was constantly short of money during his 18-year stay
in Europe.

The warrant on Kenyatta's mail was reapplied following
a request from the Kenyan police in 1939, since he was
now suspected of engaging in subversive work in Kenya.

It becomes clear from the intercepted correspondence
that Kenyatta, no doubt to manage the evident
financial worries, had taken work censoring native
language recordings made by various gramophone
companies intended for export to East Africa. His
services were dispensed with in 1940.

One strange inclusion on the file is a copy of the
passport application form for British archaeologist
Louis Leakey, father of paleo-anthropologist and
former head of the Civil Service, Dr Richard Leakey.

Louis Leakey was a known critic of Kenyatta and they
had a bitter public argument in November 14, 1935 in
London when Kenyatta, then an anthropology student at
London School of Economics, presented a paper on
female circumcision.

Leakey, like Kenyatta, had been initiated into the
Kikuyu age-group of Kihiomwiri and had written
extensively on female circumcision. Writing for an
anthropological journal in 1931, he disagreed with
certain aspects of Kenyatta's presentation, resulting
in both men "screaming at each other in Kikuyu, as
bewildered students watched in horror".

Ironically, Leakey was later appointed by the colonial
authorities to act as it's Kikuyu-English interpreter
at Kenyatta's Kapenguria trial but was eventually
dropped after Kenyatta persistent complaints that he
was biased.

Secret file KV 2/1788 of (1940-1953) contains further
copies of intercepted correspondence and reports of
Kenyatta's activities. In 1946, British Intelligence
Services took some interest in Kenyatta's marriage to
Edna Grace Clarke, and investigations were made to
establish if it was legal. Eventually, a marriage
certificate was located at St Catherine's House, and
the matter was dropped.

Kenyatta married Edna, the daughter of a marine
engineer, on May 11, 1942, at Chanctonbury Registry
Office.

A copy of their marriage certificate shows Kenyatta
put his age as 37, and gave his profession as "author
and lecturer". Edna was 32.

In the document, he describes himself as a bachelor.
There was no mention of his first wife, Grace Wahu,
and his two children, Margaret Wambui and Peter
Muigai left behind in Kenya.

Kenyatta returned to Kenya on September 5, 1946, but
the surveillance continued, and particular interest
was taken in his involvement in the Mau Mau movement.

He was arrested in connection with Mau Mau activities
on October, 20, 1952, along with other nationalists
Paul Ngei, Kungu Karumba, Fred Kubai, Bildad Kaggia
and Achieng Oneko.

Secret file (KV 2/1953-1954) focuses on Kenyatta's
trial at Kapenguria and conviction for managing the
Mau Mau rebellion.

Kenyatta and his co-accused were later sentenced to
seven years in jail with hard labour and were
imprisoned in Lokitaung in the remote Turkana
District.

An interesting aspect of this file is the allegation
that even in custody in Kapenguria, Kenyatta was
continued exchanging covert messages with Padmore, who
was by now working as Kwame Nkrumah's personal
assistant, using secret radios.

Another African nationalist whose secret files have
also been made public are Kwame Nkrumah, who according
to file No KV 2/1847-1851, came to the attention of
the Security Service in 1942.

Nkrumah was studying in the United States during the
Second World War when the Security Service was
informed of an anti-British speech he had made at a
meeting on "The Role of the Negro in the War Effort in
Philadelphia".

Nothing specific, however, linked Nkrumah to
Communism. A dispatch from the Public Record Office
says the motivation for Security Service interest in
figures like Kenyatta and Nkrumah was because of
suspected links to Communism or to the Soviet Union,
rather than because of their pro-independence or
Pan-Africanist stand.

Monday, 16 October 2017

Donors ask Raila Odinga to rescind decision to boycott poll

MONDAY OCTOBER 16 2017    
 
 

 Raila Odinga
Nasa leader Raila Odinga. PHOTO | NATION MEDIA GROUP 
By AGGREY MUTAMBO
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Western donors want National Super Alliance leader, Raila Odinga, to rescind his withdrawal from the upcoming repeat election, even as they insist on respect for the IEBC.
The move by the Opposition last week may have surprised many of the envoys, after they had pressured both sides of the political divide to let the IEBC do its job and plan for elections.
However, Mr Odinga argued he and his running mate Kalonzo Musyoka were withdrawing from the race because the electoral agency had not heeded their call for reforms.
“We called on all actors to participate and respect the Constitution. We are reviewing the practical implications of this withdrawal,” a senior diplomat from the European Union Delegation in Kenya told the Nation, suggesting the Supreme Court may be required to “pronounce itself on this matter.”

Thursday, 12 October 2017

Anti-IEBC demos banned in Nairobi, Kisumu, Mombasa CBD - VIDEO


Anti-IEBC demos banned in Nairobi, Kisumu, Mombasa CBD - VIDEO 

THURSDAY OCTOBER 12 2017
By FAITH NYAMAI 
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The government has outlawed anti-IEBC demos in central business districts of Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu.
Citing Public Order Act, Interior Acting CS Fred Matiangi on Thursday said the ban was aimed at protecting Kenyans and their property.
RIGHTS
Dr Matiang’i cited Section 56 of the Public Order Act in making the decision even as he insisted that his order does not curtail the right of National Super Alliance (Nasa) supporters to demonstrate and picket.

The first poll was annulled. A second may be violently disrupted

IN THE rickety wooden markets in Nairobi, where traders sell old books, second-hand clothes and kitchenware, walking away is a buyer’s last negotiating ploy. If he is lucky, he will be chased down the street and offered a better price. Raila Odinga, Kenya’s softly-spoken opposition leader, seems to be hoping a similar strategy may rescue his electoral chances.
On October 10th Mr Odinga withdrew from a re-run of the presidential election scheduled for October 26th, arguing that if it went ahead then it would not be free or fair. Courts had already annulled the presidential part of a wider set of elections held on August 8th, after finding problems with the way it was run. But no reforms have been made to the electoral process since then, he argued.

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It had already been clear for several weeks that Mr Odinga did not plan to contest the election. His coalition of parties, the National Super Alliance (NASA), had been running a bare-bones campaign. The candidate himself had made plans to travel to Britain and possibly America two weeks before the vote—prime campaigning time—presumably to drum up international support for his withdrawal.
Yet the announcement still contained a surprise. This is because instead of proposing a straightforward boycott, Mr Odinga seems to be hoping that by standing down he will force the courts to halt the election altogether and order a new one in the future after the parties have nominated new candidates.
Under the original Supreme Court ruling that annulled August’s election, the electoral commission has until November 1st to organise a new one. If that deadline is missed, then Kenya will be plunged into a constitutional crisis. It is unclear how that would be resolved. Those in the camp of the incumbent president, Uhuru Kenyatta, want an election to be held no matter what. Some hardliners want him simply to be declared president. In parliament MPs pushed through an amendment to the electoral law that automatically awards victory to the remaining candidate if one of them withdraws from a re-run of a presidential election.
Yet the real crisis is one of legitimacy, not law. Should the courts and electoral commission go ahead with a vote that is not contested by Mr Odinga, his supporters will surely try their best to disrupt it, says Michael Chege of the University of Nairobi. In their strongholds, principally in western Kenya and certain Nairobi slums, they could prevent the electoral commission from holding a vote that would satisfy the courts.
By walking away, Mr Odinga seems to be gambling on his ability to threaten chaos to push Mr Kenyatta to negotiate. But the trouble with that strategy is that Mr Odinga is running out of money. And although opposition protests occasionally gum up the centre of Nairobi, even his most fervent supporters will not stay on the streets indefinitely.
The worst outcome for Mr Odinga is that his bluff is called and the election goes ahead without him. Electoral officials said they plan to do just that. Mr Kenyatta might remain president, but a large proportion of the population would not recognise his right to rule and would feel left out of the political system.
This article appeared in the Middle East and Africa section of the print edition under the headline "Going all in"

Wednesday, 11 October 2017

Nasa finds refuge under 2013 court verdict

Parliament passes bill to amend election laws

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 11 2017    
 
 

Senator Fatuma Dullo (left) and Baringo North
Senator Fatuma Dullo (left) and Baringo North MP William Cheptumo - chairpersons of the parliamentary ad hoc committee handling the proposed changes to the election laws - pay attention during proceedings at Continental house, Nairobi, on October 3, 2017. Mr Cheptumo sponsored the bill. PHOTO | DENNIS ONSONGO | NATION MEDIA GROUP 
By SAMWEL OWINO
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The National Assembly has passed a controversial bill to amend election laws.
MPs passed amendments to the bill on Wednesday morning backed by Jubilee Party.
Seven amendments were introduced to the bill by the committee chaired by Baringo North MP William Cheptumo after last week's public bearings.

Mutahi Ngunyi warns Jubilee not to celebrate before understanding Raila's scheme


-NASA has formally withdrawn the candidature of Raila Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka from the presidential race
-President Kenyatta and Jubilee leaders have been calling on Raila to withdraw from the race
-The IEBC was thrown into a crisis meeting shortly after Raila announced he would not participate in this month's election

Could this be the kingmaker?Court: Include Aukot in repeat presidential poll


WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 11 2017 
 


The High Court has ordered the electoral agency to include Thirdway Alliance presidential candidate Ekuru Aukot be included in the October 26 repeat election.
Justice John Mativo directed the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission to amend a gazette notice it had issued on presidential candidates to contest in the repeat election to include Mr Aukot's name.