Protests shake Kenya, vote probe urged



Protests in Nairobi

Protesters are dispersed by riot police with tear gas after they were blocked from attending a rally against President Mwai Kibaki’s disputed re-election in Nairobi January 3, 2008. Kenyan police fired teargas and water cannons on Thursday at thousands of anti-government protesters chanting “Peace” and singing the national anthem as they tried to march to a banned rally.
REUTERS/Noor Khamis (KENYA)

NAIROBI (Reuters) – Attorney General Amos Wako called on Thursday for an independent probe into Kenya’s election after a day of battles between police and protesters disputing the re-election of President Mwai Kibaki.

Warning Kenya was “quickly degenerating into a catastrophe of unimaginable proportions,” Wako said both sides should agree on an independent person or body to carry out “a proper tally” of votes from the Dec. 27 poll.

“Such an exercise will go a long way in assuaging the inflamed passions of people,” Wako said. But he added that while the tally should help political mediation, only a court could overturn Kibaki’s win.

The turmoil has cost some 300 lives and threatens to wreck Kenya’s reputation as one of Africa’s most promising democracies, strongest economies and favourite tourist destinations.

African Union chair Ghana sought to build consensus around the continent for mediation. The European Union and United States urged both sides to seek a coalition government.

After hours of police clashes with thousands of protesters trying to reach central Nairobi, the opposition called off a planned demonstration in Uhuru (Freedom) Park, saying it wanted to save lives.

But another protest was scheduled for Tuesday.

Shots cracked out as police fired over the heads of protesters and smoke billowed over the city slums.

Flames burst from a large crucifix suspended from the roof of a burning church in Kibera, one of Africa’s largest slums, and a hotbed of support for opposition leader Raila Odinga.

Currency and stock trading was halted on Thursday, with the Kenyan shilling and share prices both down about five percent since the troubles began. Tea and coffee auctions were delayed.

From dawn, riot police were out in force as the city, vitually deserted by workers, was slowly transformed into a battleground.

Several columns of protesters surged out of slums towards the city-centre, singing the national anthem, chanting “Peace” and waving twigs and leaves.

When confronted with police lines, they at first sat or kneeled in roads. As tempers rose, they began burning cars and buildings. Police responded with teargas and water cannons.

They fired in the air when the crowd kneeled, shouting “Kill us all”, a Reuters witness said.

“DICTATORSHIP”

Demonstrator Julius Akech yelled: “This is dictatorship now.”

The daily violence has shocked world leaders and choked supplies of fuel and other goods to a swathe of central Africa.

Pro-Kibaki legislators called for opposition leader Raila Odinga and others to be charged by the International Criminal Court for “ethnic cleansing and genocide”.

The opposition has itself charged that a police order to shoot during protests was “bordering on genocide”.

Numerous international figures called for reconciliation in a nation previously known as an African peacemaker in Sudan and Somalia, rather than a trouble zone itself.

“This is a country that has been held up as a model of stability. This picture has been shattered,” said South African Nobel peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, in Kenya to try to start mediation.

“This is not the Kenya that we know.”

Odinga called Kibaki a “thief” who had carried out a civilian coup. But he said he would accept international mediation and proposed setting up an interim power-sharing government to prepare for a re-run of the vote.

“The people will not take this vote-rigging by the government lying down,” he said.

Supporters set up barricades on roads around the opposition’s “Orange House” headquarters. As opposition leaders left for the rally before it was cancelledt, some police smiled, let them pass and shook fists in a show of solidarity.

In rural areas, the unrest has touched off deep ethnic tensions. In an area where 30 members of Kibaki’s Kikuyu tribe were killed in a church torched by a mob, young men with machetes manned roadblocks and hunted for their enemies.

Protesters began to overwhelm police as they tried to enter the centre of Kisumu, an opposition stronghold in western Kenya already ravaged by riots and looting.

Kikuyus, long dominant in politics and business, were targeted in initial clashes, but revenge killings — including some by the Kikuyu Mungiki criminal gang — are on the rise.

The government said “well-organised acts of genocide and ethnic cleansing were well planned, financed and rehearsed” by Odinga’s Orange Democratic Movement ahead of last week’s vote.

Observers said the vote fell short of democratic standards.

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni became the first African leader to send congratulations to Kibaki. But at the same time, Kampala closed its borders due to the violence.

Hundreds of refugees, however, were allowed to cross into Uganda, taking shelter in schools and churches. Kenyans are more used to taking in refugees from conflict zones in Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia and Uganda.

Kenyan media united in pleas for peace, with every major newspaper running the same front-page headline: “Save Our Beloved Country”.

(Additional reporting by Katie Nguyen, Helen Nyambura-Mwaura, George Obulutsa, Joseph Sudah, Wangui Kanina, Duncan Miriri, Bryson Hull; Guled Mohamed in Kisumu; Tim Cocks in Eldoret)

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