DO NOT MISINTERPRET MY STATEMENT ON ICC- ODINGA NOW SAYS
STATEMENT BY PRIME MINISTER RAILA ODINGA
OVER ICC REMARK;
By Lethal Team
I began writing this from Paris where I had come for a
special meeting of the Emerging Markets Forum hosted by the Governor of Banque
de France.
The theme of the meeting was “Striving for a Just,
Prosperous and Harmonious Global Community.” It was attended by various world
leaders and particularly President Alassane Ouattara, President Horst Koehler,
Michael Camdessus and Hiroshi Watanabe.
While in Paris, I learnt of a medieval dance that originated
in France called the “danse macabre,” which is French for “the dance of death.”
It started in the mid-14th Century and involved a procession in which people
danced to the graves of the dead in their community in celebration of death.
As I thought about this very perverse type of custom and
traditions, I could not help but compare this with what President Uhuru
Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto have planned to do at Afraha Stadium
tomorrow, April 16, 2016.
Firstly, I wish to explain my position on the collapse of
the cases. I did congratulate my friend Hon. William Ruto for being free from
the cases, as I had also done to my brother President Kenyatta.
Ruto’s freedom was of particular concern to the Orange
Democratic Movement as it proved, as we had always maintained, that ODM did not
plan any violence against other Kenyans. Ruto could not have planned for the
eviction and murder of so many ODM supporters in so many parts of the country
including Nairobi, Naivasha, Nakuru and Kisumu. Ruto certainly could not have
evicted so many perceived ODM supporters from the remote parts of central Kenya
where the party then had to hire buses and ferry people to Kisii, Kericho,
Kakamega, Kisumu, Eldoret and other parts of western Kenya.
The collapse of the cases brings little to Kenya in terms of
justice and an end to impunity. While we all agree that our leaders got caught
up in a mixture of botched investigations and subversion of the administration
of justice, we must admit that the collapse of the I.C.C engagement with the
Kenya situation denied this country the only chance it had to end the culture
of impunity that has condemned us to an orgy of violence with every election.
As we reflect on the cessation of our engagement with I.C.C
regarding the post election violence, we must moan the continued lack of
justice for those who were killed, the helpless women who were raped and the
multitude of persons who lost their homes and were displaced.
Clearly, as a nation, there is nothing to celebrate about.
Instead, we have to reflect on the many critical decisions that we need to
make. We have many people who we still need to condole and reparate and a
national sense of justice that needs to be reconfirmed.
In light of these circumstances, it amounts to mocking the
dead and the surviving victims of Post Election Violence for the President and
his Deputy to assemble their political supporters at Afraha Stadium to
celebrate the end of the pursuit of justice over the atrocities of the mayhem
in 2007/2008.
The only picture that comes to mind is that of the President
and his Deputy leading a procession of Jubilee followers performing the ‘danse
macabre’ over the graves of their fellow county men.
What Uhuru and Ruto should be doing is keeping their jubilation
in check and thinking of the pain that abounds in the country. There is pain
over continued lack of justice for the hundreds of young Kenyans shot in their
backs as they ran away from the steaming barrels of AK47's. The children who
helplessly watched their mother's being beaten and raped are hurting. The
thousands whose homes, property and places of worship were incinerated beyond
imagination remain pained. That elderly father who had to identify his son's
maimed body from a sea of blanket covered corpses, the young girl who
discovered her mothers body lying in a pool of blood as stray bullets tore
through their "mabati" home, striking her mother in the chest all
remain in pain.
Kenya does not need a self-absorbed jamboree hosted by the
Presidency but a genuine engagement to pursue truth, justice and
reconciliation. Justice was always intended to be our shield and defender.
Without justice, the shield is gone, and we are exposed.
Uhuru and Ruto must cease this continued mockery of the
victims of the Post Election Violence and lead this nation towards the truth
and reconciliation that will save us from what is quickly becoming an
irreversible descent towards another orgy of violence.
We need truth and reconciliation in our Presidency. Barely a
couple of years ago, the Deputy President was complaining that people close to
the President “fixed” him. With the Jubilee Coalition constantly marketing
itself as a partnership to unite communities, these loudly pronounced
accusations must be addressed openly to remove the suspicion they have created
among the people.
We need truth and reconciliation in our institutions. The
National Intelligence Service provided a lot of the evidence that I.C.C cases
were riding on, and in particular what is now known as the confidential Exhibit
19 and 19A of the Waki Report. These are the exhibits that were compiled by
then Director General of NIS as evidence against Ruto and other ODM members.
The president must now make these exhibits public if he is serious about truth
and reconciliation.
The President should open up the envelope and let the people
deal with the I.C.C ghosts and exorcise them from their national psyche.
Similarly, the Police must come out openly regarding their
operations in the 2007/2008 period. We need to know how they ended up shooting
close to the declared 500 people. We also need to know the exact number of
people the police shot. Most critically, the police must answer the yet
unanswered question of what happened to the over 1000 Kalenjin youths that went
missing during and after the post election violence.
We need truth and reconciliation among our communities. In
2007/2008, neighbours rose up against neighbours. Long time family friends
picked arms against each other’s parents and children. They burnt each other’s
homes.
We can’t sweep these realities under the carpet and move on.
We must bring people together to talk and make peace. This has been done
successfully in South Africa and Rwanda and we have seen it bring lasting
peace.
And lastly, we need truth and reconciliation in the whole
country. The President must now publish the list of all the people who died in
the Post Election Violence, those who were injured and those who were
displaced. He must also publish what reparations his government has given to
each of them.
Just last week, we observed the International Day of
Reflection on the Genocide in Rwanda. That was on April 7. I ask that we
consider undertaking a similar initiative like Rwanda’s village courts.
I think we can have “Baraza Courts” in villages that were
affected by the Post Election Violence. Let people come together and say what
they did, why and on whose instructions. It is never too late to pursue truth
and reconciliation.
APRIL 15, 2016.
Pulled from ODM Reloaded Official Facebook page….
Comments
Post a Comment
Lethal Aballah will be glad to receive your feedback on this item.