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Odinga urges peacekeepers
for Kenya
Al Jazeera and agencies
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 03, 2008
Raila Odinga, the Kenyan opposition leader, has called for African
Union (AU) peacekeepers to be deployed in the country to quell
ethnic violence that erupted after last year's disputed
presidential elections.
The Orange Democratic Movement leader's call on Sunday came as
police reported at least 13 deaths overnight in the west of the
country.
"The AU should bring in peacekeepers because the violence in Kenya
is appalling," said Odinga, who accuses Mwai Kibaki, the incumbent
president, of rigging the vote.
Western Kenya has seen some of the worst ethnic clashes in the
violence that has killed more than 800 people since December 27.
The violence has often degenerated into ethnic clashes over
decades-old grudges about land and resources, with much of the
anger aimed at Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe, who are resented for their
domination of politics and the economy.
Armed gangs
The latest fatalities occured along the Kisii-Kalenjin tribal
border and in nearby areas of Nyamira district, a local police
commander said.
"Fighting is going on along the border, people are fleeing homes,"
he said.
The latest deaths brought the total to about 70 dead since Friday
in area where police have now launched a crackdown on ethnic
fighting.
Men armed with clubs, sharpened sticks and machetes patrolled
roads in the Rift Valley on Sunday, while scores of people fled
ethnic attacks on their homes in heavily armed police convoys.
A Reuters news agency said that he saw police fire shots to
disperse a gang manning a roadblock, allowing a busload of
refugees to flee to safety.
"We're just keeping the peace around here," Charles Cheriot, who
was manning at a roadblock where youths sharpened machetes on
rocks and lined up arrows they said were poisoned, said.
"The police have taken sides. We just patrol."
At a hospital in the town of Kisii staff said that injured people
were streaming in after being attacked with bows and arrows.
"We had one patient with an arrow in the neck from clashes
overnight, so that's been 18 so far," Dr Wycliffe Mogoa, Kisii
hospital medical superintendent, said.
"It has been bad. All these arrow wounds - you have to open up the
wounds then remove the arrows. But we've managed."
Peace plan
Despite the efforts of Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary-general,
Kibaki and Odinga remain opposed.
A deal marking out a joint roadmap to end, within two weeks, the
violence was agreed last week but it was unclear how the political
issues would be addressed.
The agreement calls for illegal militias to be disbanded and for
investigation of all crimes connected to the violence, including
those allegedly committed by the police, who have killed scores of
people.
The document was negotiated came only hours after Kibaki made an
uncompromising speech at an AU summit in Addis Ababa, the
Ethiopian capital, in which he insisted that opposition protests
over the election results be taken to court.
He accused the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), led by Odinga, of
instigating the violence.
Odinga rejected the claims and said Kibaki was undermining peace
talks.
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