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Showing posts with label kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kenya. Show all posts

Kenya rivals forge coalition to end crisis

Kenya's president and opposition leader signed a deal to create a power-sharing government on Thursday, hoping to end a post-election crisis that plunged the country into its worst turmoil since independence.

Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki (2nd R) meets mediator Kofi Annan (L) opposition leader Raila Odinga (R), his Tanzanian counterpart Jakaya Kikwete (2nd L) in Nairobi, February 28, 2008. (REUTERS/Presidential Press Service/Handout)

After a month of often bitter negotiations punctuated by violence around the east African nation, President Mwai Kibaki and his rival Raila Odinga inked an agreement and shook hands to a roar of applause.

"We have a deal," mediator Kofi Annan said. "Compromise was necessary for the survival of this country ... they kept the future of Kenya always in their sights and reached a common position for the good of the nation."

Kibaki and Odinga were under intense pressure from the international community and Kenya's 36 million people to find a solution to forestall more bloodshed and help restore their country's reputation as a stable, prosperous regional anchor.

Kibaki's disputed re-election in a Dec. 27 ballot triggered ethnic clashes that killed at least 1,000 people and forced 300,000 more to flee their homes.

Under the deal, a new prime minister's position will be created for Odinga, who has sought that role since he first helped elect Kibaki in 2002. He claims the president reneged on a deal to give him the job after that vote.

It will also give cabinet posts based on each party's strength in parliament and create two deputy prime ministers' jobs, one for each side of the coalition. Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) has the largest number of seats.

Later, Kenya will undertake a full review of the constitution, a 45-year-old document which many Kenyans have pushed to change since the 1990s since it gives the president nearly unchecked authority over affairs of state.

Many Kenyans want a new charter to help address rifts over land, tribe and wealth that have plagued the nation since before independence from Britain in 1963.

"NEW CHAPTER"

Thursday's talks brought Odinga and Kibaki to the same table for the first time in a month, after an exasperated Annan suspended negotiations on Tuesday and said the two leaders had to strike a deal themselves.

"As a nation there are more issues that unite than divide us. We've been reminded we must do all in our power to safeguard the peace that is the foundation of our national unity ... Kenya has room for all of us," Kibaki said after the signing.

He ordered parliament to convene next Thursday to pass a constitutional amendment to push through the changes.

A beaming Odinga said: "We have opened a new chapter in our history, from the era of confrontation to the beginning of cooperation."

"We should begin to ensure that Kenyans begin to celebrate and love each other, that we destroy the monster that is called ethnicity," he said.

Shortly afterward, riot police fired several canisters of teargas at rowdy Odinga supporters celebrating near the president's downtown office where the ceremony took place.

In Odinga's opposition stronghold Kisumu, on the shores of Lake Victoria in western Kenya, residents took to the streets celebrating and ululating over the deal.

The immediate effect on Kenya's economy was not clear as markets had closed, but the shilling currency had strengthened in anticipation of an agreement this week.

"The closer you get to a resolution, the better. The question is now the magnitude of the damage done to companies and the economy," said Matthew Pearson, head of African equities research at Renaissance Capital Management in London.

"SENSE PREVAILS"

The crisis erupted after Kibaki was sworn in on Dec. 30 and Odinga claimed the election was rigged.

Kibaki said he won fairly and blamed his rival for inciting violence instead of going to court to challenge the result -- the closest in Kenya's post-independence history.

Protests turned into riots and looting met with a forceful police response. Simultaneously, ethnic attacks by opposition backers on Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe exploded and then unleashed reprisal killings.

The United States, Britain and the European Union applauded Thursday's deal, which they had pushed very hard to get finished as quickly as possible.

"We are pleased ... It allows the Kenyan people to move forward with a very basic issue of governance," U.S. State Department spokesman Tom Casey said.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said "common sense" had prevailed that he was ready to host a donors conference for Kenya in London. "Real leadership, patience and tolerance is necessary to ensure that the agreement sticks," Brown said.

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Kenya elders demand goat from Kibaki

Kenyan elders have demanded a goat from President Mwai Kibaki as compensation for an alleged assault by First Lady Lucy Kibaki, local media said on Sunday.

The government denies the allegation by member of parliament Gitobu Imanyara who had threatened to sue Kibaki's wife. Imanyara said he was assaulted last month at State House.

Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki (L) and first Lady Lucy Kibaki are seen in Nairobi in this June 1, 2007 file photo. Kenyan elders have demanded a goat from President Kibaki as compensation for an alleged assault by Lucy Kibaki, local media said on Sunday. (REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya)

The Sunday Standard newspaper said a council of traditional elders, the Njuri Cheke, met on Friday and decided to take up the legislator's case.

"They have demanded a fine of a he-goat and an unreserved apology from the First Family." The paper said the elders wanted the matter resolved according to Meru tribal customs.

Kibaki is wrestling with a crisis over his disputed re-election that has triggered widespread ethnic bloodshed.

The Presidential Press Service said Lucy's lawyers would take action against Imanyara's "wild allegations", which it said bordered on character assassination, blackmail and were part of a wider political scheme aimed at tarnishing her office.

Kibaki's wife is known to be fiercely protective of her husband and has courted controversy several times. In December, local media said she slapped an official who called her by the name of a woman widely reported to be Kibaki's second wife.

On Monday, Kibaki is expected to meet chief mediator Kofi Annan again, and also U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, whose visit is meant to shore up the Annan-chaired talks aimed at finding a solution to the Kenyan crisis.

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Kenya crisis talks achieve breakthrough - media

NAIROBI - Negotiators for Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have achieved a "breakthrough" in their dispute over the Dec. 27 election, local media and a source close to the talks said on Friday.

"Yes, it's a big one. Kofi Annan will come out soon and tell you all about it," the source said, referring to the former U.N. secretary-general and mediator who was meeting the two men.

Riots and ethnic attacks have killed more than 1,000 people and uprooted 300,000 since the Dec. 27 polls, shattering Kenya's image as a stable business, tourism and transport hub.

Mutula Kilonzo, a member of the government's negotiating team, said earlier the talks were making good progress.

Annan, who is leading the attempts to bring the country's feuding parties together, said earlier the negotiations could not afford to fail -- and Kilonzo agreed.

"We cannot afford our people using bows and arrows, people being pulled out of buses to be asked 'which language do you speak?' and then being chopped," Kilonzo said.

Negotiators had agreed on principles to end violence and help refugees, but had been wrestling with the issue of who won the election and what should happen next.

Foreign ministers from the regional IGAD bloc threw their weight behind Annan on Friday, rejecting opposition charges they were visiting Kenya to launch separate talks to undermine him.

Speaking on behalf of his colleagues, Ethiopian Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin said Annan had been called in by the African Union, and the whole continent recognised its authority. "Proliferation of initiatives have not helped anywhere" he said.

IGAD member nations have had bad experiences from numerous peace initiatives, he said, referring to Somalia, Sudan and the Ethiopia-Eritrea border conflict.

Kenya holds IGAD's rotating chairmanship and has built up goodwill in the bloc for its regional peace efforts.

In addition to hundreds of deaths, the turmoil in Kenya has uprooted 300,000 people, many living in squalid conditions and fearful of returning home.

To assess the situation, the U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, John Holmes, flew in on Friday for a three-day trip and was due on Saturday to visit Rift Valley towns hit by tribal clashes.

Both sides have accused each other of rigging the December vote -- allegations that triggered unrest laying bare deep divisions over land, wealth and power that date from colonial rule and have since been stoked by politicians.

Annan told BBC radio before his talks with the two leaders on Friday that he was not ready to contemplate failure.

"I'm not ready to give up now ... We cannot afford to fail, he said, noting signs of compromise on both sides.

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At least 20 killed in Somali port blast - governor

BOSASSO, Somalia - An explosion killed at least 20 people and wounded a hundred more on Tuesday in a northern Somali port where Somali and Ethiopian immigrants begin the dangerous crossing to Yemen, a regional official said.

"A big explosion killed more than 20 people and wounded at least a hundred tonight," Bari regional governor Musa Gelle Yusuf told Reuters.

"More dead bodies are still being brought to Bosasso hospital. We do not know the cause but police are investigating," he said.

Most of the wounded were Ethiopian immigrants, Bosasso hospital nurse Mohamed Ali Hassan said. Ethiopia has for hundreds of years been the chief rival of Somalia.

Thousands of people fleeing poverty and violence in Somalia and neighbouring Ethiopia risk passage through the Horn of Africa nation to make the trip to Yemen in hope of better lives.

But the journey across the Gulf of Aden is treacherous, and kills hundreds annually when often-overloaded boats capsize or sink in the shark-infested waters.

Bosasso is the main port in the semi-autonomous northern Puntland region, which is relatively peaceful compared with southern Somalia, where the interim Somali federal government is battling an insurgency led by Islamist militants.

In the Somali capital Mogadishu, four people were killed by insurgents in the northern part of the city, witnesses said.

"The insurgents first killed a policewoman and then they chased a policeman who ran when he saw them," resident Quresh Osman said. "The insurgents then opened fire indiscriminately, killing the policeman and two other civilians."

A bloody insurgency pitting the government and its Ethiopian military allies against the remnants of a militant Islamist movement has raged in the capital. The movement was run out of the city a year ago.

At least 6,500 people have been killed and more than 600,000 forced to flee near-daily violence.

In Baladwayne, near the Ethiopian border, four gunmen shot dead the local district attorney, a regional official and a resident said.

"It is true that the district attorney of Baladwayne, Sheikh Ibrahim Gonle, was killed this evening. We do not know yet who killed him," Hiraan regional chairman Yusuf Ahmed Hagar told Reuters by telephone.

A witness, Omar Mohamud, said four men shot the attorney and wounded one of his bodyguards.

Hiraan region has seen a few episodes of violence by pro-Islamist gunmen in the past few months, but residents say it has mostly been sparked by dissatisfaction with the regional administration's levying of high taxes.

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Annan launches Kenyan mediation, violence spreads

NAIROBI - Former U.N. chief Kofi Annan brought together Kenya's political rivals on Tuesday in a push to end a post-election crisis and deepening tribal bloodshed.

About a dozen people were killed in the east African country on Tuesday, bringing the toll to more than 850 since President Mwai Kibaki's disputed Dec. 27 election triggered turmoil that has grown from riots into waves of ethnic revenge attacks.

An opposition supporter runs with empty canisters to bring water to extinguish a burning house in Nairobi's Kibera slum January 29, 2008. (REUTERS/Anne Holmes)

Annan, bringing together Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga to launch formal mediation, said he was confident the "immediate political issues" could be resolved within four weeks and the broader issues underlying the crisis within a year.

"To the leaders gathered here today I say that the people want you to take charge of the situation and do whatever possible to halt the downward spiral that is threatening this beautiful and prosperous country," Annan said.

The crisis has cost Kenya its reputation as a bastion of peace in a turbulent region and dented its previously flourishing economy, east Africa's largest.

"We stand here during a defining moment, when we must all make the decision that we must regain the dignity of our nation and restore the stability we have enjoyed since independence," Kibaki said.

Odinga, who says Kibaki stole the vote, said the most urgent issue was addressing "the deeply flawed results of the presidential elections".

"This mediation process must show our people that peace, justice and security are around the corner," he said, stressing that the talks were between his Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party and Kibaki's party, not his government.

Later, Kibaki, Odinga and Annan chatted cordially over a cup of tea while negotiating teams met behind closed doors. Kibaki and Odinga met last Thursday for the first time since the vote.

FLAMES

Their teams, a mix of both hardliners and moderates, were due to meet again on Wednesday and the stakes are high.

"If they do not come together, this country is going up in flames and I don't think either want to be judged by history as responsible," said Yusuf Hassan, a legislative candidate from a government-allied party whose election is due to be re-run.

Western donors have urged both sides -- who appear far apart -- to take the talks seriously or risk losing development aid.

"We are certainly asking everyone to maintain calm. It's deeply concerning," U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in Washington. "The election was not one that inspired confidence in the Kenyan people and therefore there needs to be a political arrangement."

Post-election protests have degenerated into cycles of killing between tribes who have never reconciled divisions over land, wealth and power left by British colonial rule, stoked by politicians at election time over 44 years of independence.

The killing of an opposition legislator stoked the violence on Tuesday. Kibaki appealed for peace and promised a swift investigation into the "heinous" murder of Melitus Were, who was shot dead while driving up to the gate of his home.

Local media reported three people had been arrested, but police spokesman Eric Kiraithe declined to comment.

Noting that two bullets went into Were's eyes, Odinga called it "a planned political assassination". He also said that Kenya was "drifting into a state of anarchy".

The European Union condemned Were's murder and urged the government and opposition to "engage fully" with Annan.

"We condemn the massive human rights abuses and systematic violence being perpetrated in Kenya," EU High Representative Javier Solana and Development, Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Louis Michel said in a statement.

After meeting in London, leaders of Britain, France, Italy, Germany and the European Commission issued a statement welcoming Annan's achievement in bringing the two sides together.

"We call on Kenya's leaders to pursue this dialogue urgently," it said. "We urge all leaders to act urgently to ensure the cycle of violence is quickly brought to an end."

Reuters reporters in the lakeside city of Naivasha said military helicopters dive-bombed armed mobs, firing what police said were rubber bullets at about 600 Kikuyus -- Kibaki's ethnic group -- brandishing machetes and clubs at Luos, Odinga's tribe.

Nine more bodies arrived at the Naivasha morgue on Tuesday, bringing the total death toll from violence there and in nearby Nakuru since Thursday to more than 100.

Kenya's Red Cross said 8,000 people were taking refuge at a Naivasha police post, joining the 250,000 forced out of their homes by ethnic violence mostly in the rest of the Rift Valley.

At Were's house in a middle-class suburb near Nairobi's Kibera slum, riot police fired tear gas to disperse mourners and supporters, some of whom had taunted officers. Ethnic fighting broke out in Kibera within hours, and later in Dandora slum.

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Kenya police fire teargas at funeral

NAIROBI - Police fired teargas to disperse stone-throwing youths outside an opposition funeral on Wednesday while former U.N. boss Kofi Annan tried to negotiate an end to Kenya's bloody political crisis.

Several teargas canisters landed in the large football field in Nairobi where coffins were laid out and opposition leader Raila Odinga was winding up an oration for 28 slum-dwellers he said were shot by police.

A priest asks riot police to not shoot teargas in Nairobi, January 23, 2008. Police fired teargas to disperse stone-throwing youths outside an opposition funeral on Wednesday while former U.N. boss Kofi Annan tried to negotiate an end to Kenya's bloody political crisis. (REUTERS/Peter Andrews)

Pro-opposition youths then set fire to a nearby post office.

"This is a war between the people of Kenya and a small clique of very bloodthirsty people who want to cling on to power at all costs," Odinga told the crowd of mourners as violence was erupting on a road outside.

"Let us stand as one people to liberate our country."

The latest trouble came as Annan began talks to resolve a post-election stalemate that threatens to wreck the east African nation's image as a stable democracy.

Annan held talks with Odinga after meeting the speaker of parliament and Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni -- also in the country to try and mediate -- before planned talks later with President Mwai Kibaki.

Kibaki held two rounds of talks with Museveni.

Adding to a death-toll of about 650 since the Dec. 27 election, at least two more people were killed in a Nairobi slum during the morning in the latest ethnic clashes.

Odinga says Kibaki stole the narrow victory, which has split the country of 36 million down the middle.

Police had eased a ban on public demonstrations, in place since Kibaki's Dec. 30 swearing-in prompted rioting and looting, to permit a memorial led by the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) for what it called the "freedom fighters" of Kibera slum.

VIOLENCE

The day began peacefully as hundreds of supporters marched from Kibera, a stronghold of Odinga's Luo tribe.

But the event turned violent when about a dozen youths on a major highway outside stopped some cars, smashed windows and beat occupants who did not belong to their Luo tribe.

Police moved in but held fire, witnesses said, as a growing crowd of youths threw rocks at them. They eventually responded with charges and fusillades of teargas, some of which landed in the field, terrifying mourners and scattering ODM leaders.

As police pulled back, youths set upon the post office, smashing windows, starting a fire and tearing a wall down.

ODM complained afterwards that police had committed "a terrible crime" by assaulting peaceful mourners.

Earlier, opposition sources said ODM would call off protests planned for Thursday -- but there was no official announcement.

"Annan has told us he will request no more street protests while he is here, and I can tell you we will not be objecting to that," a senior Odinga aide told Reuters.

After meeting Annan, the newly elected parliament speaker Kenneth Marende said face-to-face discussion between the two Kenyan leaders "is going to be on the table."

World powers have called on Kibaki and Odinga to hold urgent talks after more than three weeks of unrest.

Underscoring the urgency of Annan's mission, two men were found dead -- one stoned and one decapitated -- in Nairobi's Kariobangi slum. Area police commander Paul Ruto said the fighting was between Luos and Kibaki's Kikuyu ethnic group.

At least eight others were reported killed in the city and the Rift Valley, local media said.

Odinga has demanded Kibaki stand down or face an election repeat, which some diplomats have cautioned against as having too much potential for further bloodshed.

But Odinga hinted he may accept the creation of a prime minister post for him. "We are ready to share power with him. He remains president and we take the position of prime minister," Odinga told Germany's ARD television.

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Annan arrives in Kenya, urges rivals to talk

NAIROBI - Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan arrived in Kenya on Tuesday to try to end a political crisis that has killed at least 650 people, and called on the feuding parties to start talks and respect the rule of law.

The disputed re-election of President Mwai Kibaki in a Dec. 27 vote unleashed weeks of ethnic and political violence that have severely damaged one of Africa's most promising economies and left around 250,000 people homeless.

An anti-riot policeman walks through tear gas during a march in support of Kenya's president Mwai Kibaki in Nairobi January 22, 2008. (REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya)

Despite pressure from Western powers -- and to the disgust of millions of ordinary Kenyans -- Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have still not met to discuss a way out of the crisis.

Odinga says Kibaki stole his victory and has used the power of the state to consolidate his control of the government.

Shortly after his arrival in Nairobi, Annan told reporters the two sides must begin talks in good faith and respect the rule of law.

"We expect all parties to enter into dialogue in good faith ... Our message to the parties is this: there can be no solution, no peace and stability ... without respect for the rule of law," Annan said.

Annan's mediation mission follows a similar attempt earlier this month by Ghanaian President John Kufuor, the head of the African Union, who was unable to get Kibaki and Odinga to meet.

He faces an uphill task resolving a bitter dispute between two men who deeply distrust each other and are entrenched in apparently irreconcilable positions.

"Short of getting them both in a choke-hold and banging their heads together, Mr Annan has very little leverage on either President Kibaki and Mr Odinga or their respective entourages of myopic warmongers and sycophants," columnist Macharia Gaitho wrote in the Daily Nation newspaper.

Diplomats hope Annan, a Nobel Peace laureate whose negotiating experience ranges from Israel to Darfur, can bring Kibaki and Odinga to the same table, and possibly persuade them to join some sort of power-sharing arrangement.

In the latest violence, a mob killed a member of Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe by setting him on fire inside his car in the volatile Rift Valley, police said on Tuesday.

Police, who have banned all demonstrations, fired teargas to disperse supporters of Kibaki in central Nairobi hours before Annan's arrival.

Riot police scattered about 100 government supporters who had been chanting "Lead on, Kibaki!", sending business people scurrying for cover.

TEARGAS AND MACHETES

Weeks of bloodletting in a nation long seen as one of east Africa's most stable has undermined its democratic credentials and laid bare deep tribal divisions underpinning politics.

In a new sign of economic damage, Kenya's shilling neared a 14-month low versus the dollar and Kenya Airways said it has seen an 18 percent drop in passengers from Europe since the crisis began.

Scenes of police firing teargas and live ammunition in Nairobi slums, or of bloodied victims of machete and spear attacks in the picturesque Rift Valley, have sullied Kenya's image as a tourist haven and regional trade and aid hub.

An aid agency complained on Tuesday that the government was closing a Nairobi refugee camp, where victims of violence in the vast Kibera slum had fled.

"We can't tell people whose houses have burnt down in Kibera to go back to their homes. These people have rights," said Gerald Rukunga of the health charity AMREF.

Opposition Orange Democratic Movement chairman Anyang' Nyong'o said the party was filing a complaint with the International Criminal Court in The Hague, charging Kibaki, his cabinet and police commanders over killings of protesters.

"The charges are crimes against humanity," he said.

The government has taken out full-page adverts in newspapers accusing Western powers, the international media and rights groups of fanning unrest by questioning the election result.

U.S. Ambassador Michael Ranneberger dismissed the adverts as "scurrilous propaganda".

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni also flew into Nairobi on Tuesday to try to mediate.

(Additional reporting by Tim Cocks, Wangui Kanina, Bryson Hull and Andrew Cawthorne in Nairobi)

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Three killed in Kenya clashes, opposition defiant

NAIROBI - Attackers hacked three people to death with machetes in a slum in Kenya's capital on Sunday in ethnic clashes triggered by President Mwai Kibaki's disputed re-election last month, witnesses said.

Armed police chased away youths in Nairobi's Huruma neighbourhood, whose name means "mercy" in Swahili, and some residents started to leave with their belongings on their heads.

"I saw three people dead, killed by pangas (machetes), slashed on the head, cuts on the back and a hand chopped off," said Samuel Oduor, 22, a freelance cameraman.

Other witnesses confirmed the death toll from fighting between youths from Kibaki's Kikuyu ethnic group and the Luo tribe of opposition challenger Raila Odinga.

They bring the number of dead to at least 34 since the opposition launched three days of anti-government demonstrations on Wednesday. Many were killed by police opening fire on protesters, others by ethnic gangs.

"No need to kill somebody because of his tribe, even if he did not vote for me," Odinga told several hundred supporters as he came out of a church service in Nairobi's Kibera slum, its roads blackened with the remains of days of flaming barricades.

Odinga said a memorial service would be held at a sports field in central Nairobi on Wednesday for those who had died and repeated a call for more demonstrations from Thursday, despite police orders to prevent rallies.

"You can beat our body, but you cannot break our spirit of justice," he told cheering supporters, some holding up banners reading "Raila our solution" or "Kibaki hand over to Raila".

TRIBAL TENSIONS

More than 650 people have been killed since Kibaki was sworn into office after a disputed Dec. 27 election the opposition says was rigged and observers said was seriously flawed.

Police in the Rift Valley said they had found two more bodies near the village of Kipkelion, 180 km (112 miles) northwest of Nairobi, bringing the death toll there to 8 after armed men attacked a camp housing refugees on Saturday.

The violence has tarnished Kenya's image as a stable nation in a troubled region, undermined its democratic credentials and laid bare the underlying tribal sentiments behind its politics.

A flyer apparently from the Mungiki, an ethnic Kikuyu gang notorious for brutal attacks and lucrative protection rackets, was circulated outside the church where Odinga spoke.

It warned Luos living in Kibera of reprisals.

"It is now known ... that the Luo had predetermined to cause chaos," said the printed flyer, whose authenticity could not immediately be verified.

"It is time that their aggression is halted forthwith without delay, therefore Mungiki taking control," it said.

After a heavy presence in recent days, police were conspicuous by their absence in Kibera as Odinga left the church but were in Huruma where the latest killings took place.

Residents said there had been sporadic fighting through the night between Kikuyus and Luos in Huruma. Police were not available for comment.

"They are beating us. They want to chase us away. They are armed with bows and arrows and they are killing our children," Wangeci Mwangi, 75, said of the gangs.

EU Aid Commissioner Louis Michel, who met Kibaki and Odinga on Saturday, has urged both to hold talks and end the killing.

Odinga said he would meet former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Tuesday. Annan had been due in Kenya last week but delayed his trip due to flu.

The Ugandan Foreign Ministry said President Yoweri Museveni would also travel to Kenya in the next few days to mediate. Museveni is one of few African leaders to have congratulated Kibaki. Opposition supporters have questioned his impartiality.

"Museveni leave Kenyans alone," read one banner in Kibera.

(Additional reporting by Bosire Nyairo and Joseph Sudah, Francis Kwera in Kampala)

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Kenya govt turns on critics, Odinga hailed

NAIROBI- Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki's government went on the offensive against critics on Monday, condemning opposition economic boycott plans as "sabotage" and summoning the British ambassador for a ticking off.

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) leader Raila Odinga returned to the opposition stronghold of Kisumu, for the first time since the disputed election of Dec. 27, to a rapturous welcome from supporters at a memorial for those killed in unrest.

Luo tribe members celebrate during ethnic clashes in Nairobi's Huruma neighbourhood January 20, 2008. (REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya)

"I'm saddened by the brutal killing of innocent unarmed people demonstrating peacefully," Odinga told Reuters as thousands sang his name and six coffins of people said to be shot by police were laid out in a stadium in the western town.

"Kibaki has proved he has no respect for democracy. I'm the rightful, elected president."

About 650 people have died in violence since Kibaki's re-election last month, and 250,000 people have also been displaced in a country that is more used to receiving refugees from war-torn neighbours like Sudan and Somalia.

Most foreign and local observers say the poll was flawed, but the government says the opposition pre-planned violence.

The crisis has damaged one of the continent's most promising economies, cut off supplies to neighbours, and threatened to taint Kibaki's reputation as the man who democratised Kenya after the 24-year rule of President Daniel arap Moi.

In an increasingly militant reaction to criticism from abroad, Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula summoned Britain's High Commissioner Adam Wood to express displeasure.

Officials are particularly irate at comments by Meg Munn, parliamentary undersecretary of state for the Foreign Office, that Britain has "not recognised" Kibaki's government.

"Our elections don't need a stamp of authority from the House of Commons," Wetangula told reporters. British officials confirmed the meeting, but offered no more details.

BOYCOTT

The opposition has vowed to continue street rallies from Thursday and also called for a boycott of companies owned by Kibaki allies. They include Equity Bank, Brookside Dairies and bus companies CityHoppa and Kenya Bus.

"Sabotage of companies (is) illegal and an insult to Kenyans," the government said in a statement, adding that ODM leaders would be held accountable for any damage.

The boycott call may be more symbolic than real, however, given that many of Kenya's poor use Equity because of its accessibility and low charges, while commuters in long queues may not want to wait even longer by shunning certain buses.

In the latest violence, three people were hacked to death in ethnic fighting in a Nairobi slum on Sunday, while police said four people died in violence related to land disputes in the volatile Rift Valley.

In jittery Kenyan markets, the shilling currency hit a 10-month low against the U.S. dollar on Monday.

In Kisumu, devastated by riots and protests, residents whistled, banged drums and marched in ceremonies both honouring the dead and celebrating Odinga.

"We have come both to mourn and to happily welcome our president back home," Rose Akinyi, 35, a tailor, while dancing to a dirge from the local Luo culture.

In the latest international mediation attempt, former U.N. secretary-general Kofi Annan was due to fly into Kenya to start talks with both sides on Tuesday. Diplomats hope he can bring Kibaki and Odinga into some sort of power-sharing arrangement, possibly before a fresh vote in the east African nation.

Kenyans, however, are sceptical of such a solution.

"It seems every time we vote, we bring a bloodbath upon ourselves," said a Nairobi housewife, Joy, who asked for her surname not to be used. "Why would we want another election?"

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Five die in Kenya as opposition vows more protests

NAIROBI - Kenya's opposition said on Saturday it would resume protests next week over a disputed election, and five people were killed in politically-fuelled ethnic violence in the country's Great Rift Valley.

The deaths bring to at least 28 the number of people killed in the last four days, in a combination of ethnic violence and police action against three days of opposition demonstrations the government has banned.

Children play on vehicles destroyed during post-election violence in Nairobi's Kibera slum January 19, 2008. Kenya's opposition said on Saturday it would resume protests next week over a disputed election, and five people were killed in politically-fuelled ethnic violence in the country's Great Rift Valley. (REUTERS/Radu Sigheti)

In the latest flare-up, a group of Kalenjins raided a camp in the Rift Valley village of Kipkelion, 180 km northwest of Nairobi, police said.

"A group of armed warriors attacked a village, leaving five people dead and property destroyed. These were refugees in a camp, people thought to have supported (President Mwai) Kibaki," Rift Valley Provincial Police Officer Everett Wasige said.

Several hundred people had taken refuge at the camp, located near a monastery, after three weeks of attacks across the Rift aimed at people seen to support Kibaki, mostly from his Kikuyu tribe and the Kisii ethnic group.

The opposition Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) dominates the Rift, and most of the 250,000 people who fled politically-fuelled ethnic clashes came from there. Police say the Rift accounts for 70 percent of the deaths since the vote.

Kenya's paroxysm of violence has seriously damaged its democratic reputation and harmed investor confidence in one of Africa's strongest economies.

More than 650 people have been killed since Kibaki won the disputed Dec. 27 election, in killings that have laid bare the underlying tribal sentiments behind Kenya's politics.

Both ODM and the government accuse each other of genocide.

Also on Saturday, ODM reversed its plan to call off demonstrations.

"We are resuming our peaceful public rallies on Thursday," ODM Chairman Henry Kosgey told reporters. "We will use all available means to bring down the Kibaki regime."

HIGH STAKES

ODM leader Raila Odinga on Friday had said the opposition would take its fight off the streets and use other channels, including talks with African leaders and economic boycotts.

Odinga says Kibaki stole the closest-ever election in the east African nation from him. International observers say the count was so chaotic it was impossible to tell who won, and the government says the ODM also rigged votes.

The protests are a high-stakes tactic to pressure the government, already being threatened with aid cuts after images of police shooting and beating protesters drew widespread criticism. The government has rebuffed the threat.

But many Kenyans say ODM's strategy could backfire, as the protests have bred chaos that disrupted schools and closed businesses, and shown Odinga staying off the streets while his supporters face the might of government security services.

EU aid commissioner Louis Michel, who met with Kibaki and Odinga, urged both sides to start talks to end their standoff.

"Mass meetings that can lead to aggression which can also lead to powerful responses. I urge the parties to look for a solution. Now is the time for ceasefire," Michel told reporters.

Police commissioner Hussein Ali said on Saturday he was sending a team to investigate the police killing of two unarmed protesters in the western city of Kisumu, captured in dramatic TV footage. The investigators' report is due on Feb. 1.

The video shows an officer shooting two young men from a group that had thrown stones, one of whom made faces at him. After bullets hit the two, the officer walks over and then twice kicks one of the men after he tried to stand up.

Police have said that they only shot rioters and looters, and maintain the protest ban is to prevent more property damage.

Several African leaders are shuttling between Kibaki and Odinga's camps, and former U.N. head Kofi Annan is due to arrive on Tuesday to begin talks.

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