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Police turn machine guns on protesters as Kenya fractures



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Published Date: 19 January 2008
AT LEAST 13 people were killed in Kenya yesterday when police fired into a Nairobi slum and different ethnic groups clashed during protests against the disputed re-election of President Mwai Kibaki.
The worst bloodshed was in the huge Kibera slum, an opposition stronghold, where at least seven people were killed and a dozen were wounded by police automatic gunfire.

The French medical charity MSF called it a "massacre".

Police also ope
ned fire and lobbed tear gas in the port of Mombasa, where one person was killed in protests after Friday Muslim prayers, and the southern town of Narok.

Yesterday's deaths were the highest number of confirmed killings in three days of protests called by opposition leader Raila Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) against Kibaki's re-election.

At least 21 people have been killed in the demonstrations, which were due to end on Friday. About 650 people have been killed since the disputed 27 December election.

The opposition and human rights organisations accuse the police of using excessive force and firing indiscriminately at unarmed protesters. Police say they only fire at rioters and looters.

Reuters journalists counted seven bodies from the Kibera shooting, including a man with the back of his head blown off and 15-year-old girl, Rosa Otieno. Both were carried to the nearby Masaba hospital morgue in a pickup truck.

Otieno's aunt, Martha Mtishi, said: "If they can kill a little girl let them kill us all."

At least 11 wounded people were brought to the hospital. "We need more doctors because ... we cannot handle an emergency of this magnitude," said a medical official who gave his name only as Joe.

Outside the hospital a crowd shouted: "Murderers and killers."

In south-west Kenya, officials said five people were killed in clashes between Mr Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe and tribal Maasai protesters in Narok town, gateway to the Maasai Mara game reserve. They were killed with arrows and machetes.

MSF official Ian Van Engelgem said: "We have seen violence over the last two weeks but today it has really exploded. Young guys – 13 years old– have died, young women, young men, this is unbelievable ... this is like a massacre."



A statement by envoys from nine countries including Britain, the Netherlands and Australia, urged Mr Kibaki and Mr Odinga to meet for direct talks without delay or preconditions, and called on Kenya's security forces to show restraint.

"We have seen clear and disturbing footage of the use of lethal force on unarmed demonstrators," it said.

The opposition said earlier yesterday that it would call off street protests and switch its campaign to small strikes and boycotts of companies run by Kibaki allies.



The full article contains 453 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 January 2008 1:28 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Kenyan elections
 
1

Firozali A.Mulla MBA PhD,

Dar-Es-Salaam Tanzania 19/01/2008 15:26:41
Sir
This are sad days for the African continent as Kenya after riding the yolk of the British rule in the East Africa was the wealthiest industrialised country that we saw as growing without any boundary. We put Uganda and Tanzania on the second and third. In fact Nairobi was the hub of many activities in Arusha, Tanzania; a town near Nairobi had a big pump in cash in 1960 when John Wayne etc came to shoot the movie Hatari. Many became millionaires in few days. Now that Nairobi seats on the hot rack, Arusha, the tourist centre for Tanzania also seats down badly. Why do I state this? I come from Arusha and we have seen Tanzania economy growing by the growth of Kenya.
I thank you
Firozali A Mulla MBA PhD
P.O.Box 6044
Dar-Es-Salaam
Tanzania
2

Media 1,

cape town 19/01/2008 16:48:44
Africa, once you leave the borders of the white built metropolis that is SA, you are immeditely confronted with chaos, poverty, dust bowl towns, hunger and displacement. And the more you travel the worse it becomes..
And now this nation is slowly spiralling out of control under African rule. As I write this post I am without electricity. Thank goodness for batteries and 3G cards. This week, the electricity has been down for 5 hours per day nation wide. Business is at a stand still, the economy is in trouble and corrupt government officicials and high profile police officers rape and pillage the nations coughers. Oh Africa! What a place indeed.
3

Caora Dubh,

Croit sheasgair 20/01/2008 13:34:32
#1 and #2: South Africa was a beacon of hope. But then so too was Zimbabwe, and Zambia and Malawi before that. South Africans now seem to be intent on Jacob Zuma as their president, a man who is so manifestly a mediocrity incapable of managing his own finances, let alone leading a country, that one can only say that South Africans will deserve exactly what they get, and perhaps that is what South Africans are worth, as a nation. What one forgets, is that European countries went through centuries of both civil and international warfare - centuries of dictatorships, assassinations, coups d'etat, and genocide - before reaching the current position. And Europe's bloodiest century only ended a few years ago, in the Balkans. Perhaps African developments should be set against the European experience, which is of imperceptibly slow advance punctuated by terrible setbacks? Perhaps a resolute tortoise is better than a petulant, quixotic hare?

4

Caora Dubh,

Croit sheasgair 20/01/2008 13:48:53
#2 I agree with you about South African powercuts. A good government would have gone on a war footing and built a new power station in six months. The cost of power cuts to SA's economy: e.g. loss of meat and other refrigerated produce, loss of turnover in restaurants and retailers, will knock the sails out of SA's economic growth and make it unattractive to investors. On the other hand fat cat South Africans have barely raised a finger to install solar water heating and energy-saving devices. Rich South Africans are shockingly bad when it comes to energy & recycling - most do not give a damn - many have humungous 4x4s, leave lights on all the time, etc. South Africa is a developing country, with millions of desperate people. So the fact that it is wasting huge sums importing luxury vehicles, spare parts and petrol, plus many other luxury goods for the wealthy, really matters. Interest rates must rise to keep the balance of payments acceptable, so squeezing economic growth and keeping the poor out of jobs. My impression of South Africans was that they actually hate each other and don't give a dman about building a society or preserving the environment: it's every man & developer for himself out there, and the devil take the hindmost. The Wild gun-slinging West - literally.

 

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