Prosecution
witness 487 also told the Trial Chamber V (a) that an Eldoret
businessman had provided trucks to ferry the attackers to the witness’s
village after the presidential election results were announced on
December 31, 2007.
Before the elections, the witness
said, about 50 Kalenjin youths had been taken to a bush for an
initiation ceremony. The prosecution holds that there was training of
the youths who were also given oaths to take part in the violence.
The
witness who continued with his testimony-in-chief for the second day
Tuesday said Mr Jackson Kibor was the owner of two of the trucks that
were ferrying youths who attacked his village.
The
number of attackers, he said, kept growing forcing non-Kalenjins to
leave their homes. At one point, the witness said, they were surrounded
by the youths who had taken positions on a raised ground and were only
rescued when police officers on a regular patrol shot one of the
attackers dead.
Question: Did you know those lorries belonged to whom?
Witness:
“At that time, I did not know who the lorries (trucks) belonged to but
when the things cooled, I came to know they belonged to Eldoret
businessman Jackson Kibor.
Question: Did you say they (trucks) belonged to Jackson Kibor?
Witness: Yes.
Question: Did you know him before?
Witness: I did not know him before.
The
witness said the trucks made a number of trips from morning until late
in the afternoon, ferrying youths whose numbers kept on growing and who
surrounded their village.
He also said he had started
spotting the trucks in the morning of December 31, 2007. One of the
trucks was white while the other was cream.
“There were
no women. Most of them were youths. They were not old according to how
they were jumping off the lorries,” he said of the people that were
emerging from the trucks.
The witness also said that
after the election results were announced, non-Kikuyu homesteads and
plots were marked so that the attackers could easily identify them as
belonging to either Kalenjins or other communities in the location that
supported ODM.
The marks were placed on the gates and nearby posts.
“The
plots that belonged to non-Kikuyus were marked with sign “ODM 41”.
Houses that did not have the sign were set on fire,” the witness said.
“That sign was written at the gate. If the plot had no gate you could see it written on the post,” he added.
Judge Osuji asked: In your neighbourhood where you lived what were the ethnicities?
And the witness replied: Majority were Kalenjins, there were also Luhyas and a few Luos.
Judge Osuji: Did you see ‘ODM 41’ before all hell broke loose on your neighbours’ plots?
Witness: At location 2, I did not see it.
The
witness said that with all the running he lost touch with some of his
close relatives whom he later found at a church where they had gone to
seek refuge.
Earlier, during the morning session, the
witness had said that between November 27 and 28, 2007, he had spotted a
number of Kalenjin youths heading to a bush for initiation.
“When
they came out, I remember I saw them move towards a place that had been
prepared. When they came out they put on ordinary clothes,” he said.
The
trial lawyer, Mr Ade Omofade, has indicated he will finish the
examination-in-chief of the witness today after which the defence of
Deputy President William Ruto and his co-accused, Joshua arap Sang will
take over.
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