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WSWS : News
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Kenya: Violence spreads following presidential elections
By Chris Talbot
3 January 2008
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At least 300 people have died in clashes since the Kenyan presidential
elections held on December 27 last year, with tens of thousands
fleeing their homes fearing further attacks. Mwai Kibaki claimed
he had been re-elected and was hastily sworn in on December 30
after the Electoral Commission announced the results. He said
he had won 46.7 percent of the vote as against 44.3 percent for
opposition candidate Raila Odinga. But Kibakis narrow lead
of some 230,000 votes out of nearly 9 million cast was immediately
challenged by the opposition, which claimed the election was fraudulent.
Fighting broke out between gangs of the rival candidates
supporters in the Kibera slum area of Nairobi, which Odinga represents
in parliament, in the coastal region around Mombasa and in the
western city of Kisumu, where Odinga has most support. It appears
to have spread to other areas. On January 1, a church was burned
down in the town of Eldoret in the Rift Valley Province. At least
35 bodies were found in the remains.
Much of the fighting has been between tribal groupings. Kibaki
belongs to the Kikuyu tribethe largest ethnic grouping that
has dominated in politics and business. Odinga belongs to the
smaller Luo tribe. The victims in the burnt-out church were all
Kikuyus.
But most of the violence has come from state forces. Reuters
reports eye witnesses saying the majority of the killings were
due to police firing at demonstrators, and Associated Press Monday
cited anonymous reports from police officersdenied by the
governmentthat they had been given shoot-to-kill orders.
A priest in the Nairobi slums, Father Daniel Moschetti, told
Reuters that the violence was hitting the poor rather than the
wealthy politicians who had stoked up the conflict. It is
the politicians living in their secure compounds who are inciting
ethnic hatred, he said.
The whipping up of tribalism is being used by the leaders of
both political camps. A government spokesman told the BBC that
Odingas supporters are engaging in ethnic cleansing
in an organised, calculated manner. Odinga told Associated
Press that Kibakis government was guilty, directly,
of genocide.
There is little doubt that Washington and London wanted Kibaki
to stay in power. Kenya is a strategic centre for US security
operations in Africa. It borders on Somalia and Ethiopia. It is
also the business hub of the East Africa region.
Odinga, the opposition candidate, is a businessman and supporter
of free market economics, but is something of an unknown quantity
for the Western powers. His Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has
called for devolution of power from the Kikuyu elite and has used
populist rhetoric, while Odinga paints himself as a champion of
the poor.
On December 30, both the United States and Britain called on
the presidential candidates to accept the election results, and
the US Embassy issued a statement praising the work of the Electoral
Commission. An embassy official called for patience, urging that
any concerns over the voting be addressed to the commission. This
was backed by a statement issued in the US by State Department
official Tom Casey calling on Kenyans to accept the final result,
also praising the commission for the largely peaceful and
orderly voting.
This stance has been made increasingly untenable by the criticisms
that have since emerged over the vote-counting procedures. The
European Union (EU) observer in one constituency had witnessed
election officials saying Kibaki had won by 50,145 votes, but
by December 30, the Electoral Commission had increased the same
result to 75,261 votes. The chief EU observer stated that the
Electoral Commission has not succeeded in establishing the
credibility of the tallying process.
Western diplomats attempted to persuade the Electoral Commission
to do a re-tally, but whilst they acknowledged there had been
irregularitiesadmitting that the turnout in
one constituency was 115 percent and that a candidate had run
away with ballot papers in anotherthey were clearly under
pressure to accept the result. Four of the 22 Electoral Commissioners
have since expressed doubts about the veracity of the results.
On December 31, therefore, the US State Department was forced
to express serious concerns about the voting. Tom
Casey said, Im not offering congratulations to anybody.
Any sense that the US was happy with the election results was
an error, said Casey, and called for the problems
to be resolved by the Kenyan legal system in accordance with its
constitution. British Foreign Secretary David Milliband said in
an interview January 1 that there were allegations of voting irregularities
on both sides and we dont know who won.
Whilst there were 10 presidential candidates and 300 political
parties with more than 2,000 candidates competing in the parliamentary
election that take place at the same time as the presidential
elections, the main contest was between Odingas ODM and
Kibakis Party of National Unity (PNU). Both organisations
are loose ad-hoc coalitions led by government ministers or former
ministers put together for the purpose of raising finance and
campaigning in the election. Kibakis slogan was let
the work continue, standing for economic conservatism and
prudence, whereas Odingas call for devolution
was coupled with a vague commitment to spending more public money
on the poorest sections of the population. Kenya has one of the
most unequal societies in Africa, with about 14 million, 60 percent
of the population, living below the poverty line.
In 2002, Kibaki came to power as leader of the multi-ethnic
National Alliance Rainbow Coalition (NARC), winning a large majority
against Uhuru Kenyatta of the Kenya African National Union (KANU).
Kenyatta is the son of independence leader Jomo Kenyatta and was
the chosen candidate of Daniel Arap Moi, who had been president
since 1978. The big vote for Kibaki resulted from the widespread
hatred of Moi because of his repressive police measures and alleged
corruptionit is claimed that Moi and his cohorts stole 2
billion dollars from state coffers. Raila Odinga was a leading
figure in NARC, although he had merged his own National Democratic
Party with KANU earlier in the year. Odinga, imprisoned by Moi
in the 1990s for his opposition to the regime, had dropped his
differences in the hope of being made Mois successor. When
Moi chose Uhuru Kenyatta instead, Odinga threw his support to
Kibaki.
Although Kibaki had promised to root out corruption, his regime
soon became involved in scandals, including the Anglo Leasing
case in 2004, which involved giving huge government contracts
to bogus companies linked to presidential advisors. Last year,
the government dismissed the investigation carried out by the
Anti-Corruption Commission into a number of state contracts. Neither
Moi himself or any of his relatives and cronies have been prosecuted
by the Kibaki regime.
While NARC fell apart with differences among its factions,
Kibaki made overtures to Moi and succeeded in winning his support
and considerable financial backing for the current election. KANU
is a major constituent of the PNU and includes Uhuru Kenyatta
as a parliamentary candidate. The Kenyatta, Moi and Kibaki families
are among the three richest in Kenya and have dominated Kenyan
politics since independence. According to Africa Confidential,
there is talk of a secret succession pact in which Uhuru would
take over from Kibaki in 2012. Odinga has been able to appeal
for support among sections of the ruling class excluded from this
narrow circle around Moi.
Though there has been little change in the amount of corruption
and there are complaints about the continuing lack of investment
in Kenyas infrastructure, Western investors and local businessmen
have generally supported Kibaki for imposing fewer government
restrictions. The head of Kenyas Association of Manufacturers
told the Financial Times that under Moi, executives
were regularly strong-armed into dishing out jobs and contracts
to enrich the political elite, whilst under Kibaki, you
still get requests but its not so overt. The economy
is now growing at about 7 percent a year compared to 0.2 percent
in 2002.
The Kibaki government has also been a major supporter of the
US war on terror and has collaborated in seizing dozens
of people accused of being Al-Qaeda operatives. The US has recently
given Kenya US$14 million to pay for training and equipment.
Earlier this year, a Kenyan man, Abdulmalik Mohammed, was moved
to Guantanamo Bay after being handed over to the US following
his arrest in Mombasa. US officials claimed he had confessed to
taking part in the 2002 hotel bombing in Mombasa.
Muslim groups have opposed a draft lawpushed for by the
USthat would give the Kenyan security minister powers to
declare an individual or an organisation terrorist.
No doubt, one of the US concerns about Odinga is that he has won
Muslim votes by pledging that he would guarantee defence of their
constitutional rights.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and British Foreign
Secretary David Milliband have now issued a joint statement urging
both sides to engage in a spirit of compromise, insisting
that they call on their supporters to stop fighting. The African
Union chairman, Ghanaian President John Kufuor, has been dispatched
to Kenya to try to calm down the situation. Recognising that the
degree of opposition to Kibaki would make a government led solely
by him unworkable, the US and Britain are calling for a government
of national unity. Despite intense diplomacy, so far there has
been a complete deadlock, with Odinga refusing to enter talks
with Kibaki unless he agrees to give up his claims on the presidency.
See Also:
Report exposes massive
looting of Kenyan state funds
[24 September 2007]
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