Kenya Reports
Report #33
February 21, 2008
Politically things are not looking good. The Government (PNU--Kibaki)
side, after immense pressure from the US, Britain, the EU, and many others,
has not compromised hardly at all. They are continuing to say much of
what they said right after the election--Kibaki is in power and the Constitution
cannot be changed to accommodate any settlement. The Opposition side
(ODM--Raila) is planning to start holding demonstrations again after
a week if Parliament is not called into session to vote on the Constitutional
changes needed for a settlement. The Government then says they (ODM)
are bringing on violence and ODM responds by saying that it is the Government
who is violent when they forbid peaceful demonstrations as allowed by
the Kenya Constitution and international law. The tear gas, water cannons,
and live bullets are what is making the demonstrations violent. For some
reason, the authorities in Kapsabet had allowed demonstrations before
and they were peaceful and the youth blew off their steam. The Kibaki
side wishes to procrastinate as long as possible since with each passing
day they remain in power.
Noah Weksa, a PNU Member of Parliament from Western Kenya, a Quaker,
and Minister for Science and Technology, has called for a power sharing
agreement--this is at some variance with the PNU hardliner stance. It
will be interesting to see if some of the PNU, non-Kikuyu MP's start
to break away to form that moderate middle that will be necessary for
a resolution.
On Tuesday
Gladys and I were at the Friends Church Peace Team (FCPT) meeting and
I heard
this interesting story. There are still about 1000
Kikuyu camped at the police station in Kakamega. On Sunday 350 Luhya
who had been displaced from Naivasha, Nakuru, and Central Province andreturned
to their "ancestral land" as is the phrase here (i.e., ethnically
cleansed) arrived in their truck at the police station, but the police
turned them away--presumably because the Luhya would have problems staying
with the Kikuyu. When the truck returned to town, not really knowing
where to drop the people, the bicycle taxi drivers got aroused. In mass,
as they do during the rioting, they
returned with the truck to the police station and demanded that the Luhya
be allowed to stay there(or they would begin attacking the Kikuyu). The
police backed down and the Luhya stayed with the Kikuyu in the police
station, both as internally displaced people.
In the reports on the FCPT distribution which I missed when we were
in Uganda, a number of people commented that the internally displaced
people would see the Red Cross vehicles pass them by, but never stop
to help. FCPT is distributing to those who have not been serviced by
the Red Cross. These people are ethnically mixed, but none are Kikuyu.
It seems that the Red Cross is servicing only Kikuyu. People I know in
Lumakanda have stopped me in the streets here to complain about the Red
Cross not
helping the Luhya. This should be investigated and if true, the Red Cross
should be taken to task for this discrimination.
Our 42 one-day listening workshops for the 496 staff at the Center for
Disease Control in Kisumu have been completed. I talked to the Director
and she was very pleased with them as she had heard many positive reports
from the participants. We had brought Chris, one of the HROC facilitators
from Rwanda, to help out. The HROC program in Rwanda is planning listening
sessions for survivors of the recent earthquake in Cyangugu at the southern
end of Lake Kivu so Chris will be able to bring the Kenya experience
back to Rwanda.
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