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Rice,
Kenyan Prime Minister Odinga criticize Mugabe government
Charles
W. Corey, U.S Department of State
June
18, 2008
http://www.america.gov/st/democracy-english/2008/June/20080618181531WCyeroC0.5977899.html?CP.rss=true
Washington -- U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice praised the "strength of Kenyan
democracy" June 18 while announcing that she will co-chair
a round table on Zimbabwe in the U.N. Security Council on June 19.
Secretary Rice spoke
just before a meeting at the State Department with Kenyan Prime
Minister Raila A. Odinga and his delegation. Both officials talked
briefly with reporters.
"It is very good
to have you here," Rice told Odinga. "I believe that
your election as prime minister shows that the Kenyan people have
come through difficult times, but it was really the strength of
Kenyan democracy, Kenyan civil society, and the will of Kenya's
leaders to resolve the crisis that brings us to this moment."
Rice said she is "looking
forward to an update" on Kenya's progress on its path
to further democratic electoral reform. "Kenya has a good
friend in the United States, and the United States believes that
it has a good friend in Kenya," she added.
Odinga said Kenya is
very grateful to the United States for the support it received "in
our hour of need during the crisis" following the country's
presidential election.
"You personally
came to Nairobi, and I want to confirm here that your personal role
in this process made it possible for us to achieve . . . understanding.
This role [was] played also by the U.N., by the European Union,
and other friends of Kenya," he added.
Rice held daylong
talks in Nairobi, Kenya, February 18 in an effort to resolve a political
crisis that emerged from the country's deeply flawed December
27, 2007 election between Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and then
political opposition leader Raila Odinga.
The flawed election left
hundreds dead and thousands displaced from their homes after the
opposition party charged the vote had been rigged in favor of the
sitting government. Both sides eventually agreed to form a coalition
government, under which Kibaki continues to serve as president and
Odinga is Kenya's new Prime Minister.
In Washington June 18,
Odinga said "peace has returned" to Kenya. "We
have come here to say that Kenya is up and moving again; we are
ready for business. That's why we are actively appealing to
the friends of Kenya to come back. We are appealing to the business
to come and invest in Kenya, tourists to come back to Kenya, because
it is now safe again. And we want the world to see that we want
to move this forward."
Odinga noted that representatives
from both sides of the Kenyan government were attending the talks
in Washington. "We want to show that it can work. . . .
It's a mixed team -- both sides of the coalition [are] with
me here . . . the minister for defense, and also the minister
for transport and assistant minister for trade."
Views
on Zimbabwe
Secretary
Rice told reporters the United States remains very concerned about
the crisis in Zimbabwe.
"We're concerned
for the people of Zimbabwe. We're concerned for the people
of the region, because [of], obviously, the refugee flow, the violence
that has been a part of this crisis. We're very concerned
about the elections and we're trying to support the efforts
of regional organizations to ensure free and fair elections, but
it's very difficult when you have the kind of intimidation
that is going on now in Zimbabwe. . . .
"I think that it
is time for the leaders of Africa to say to President Mugabe that
the people of Zimbabwe deserve a free and fair election, that you
cannot intimidate opponents, you cannot put opponents in jail, you
cannot threaten them with charges of treason and be respected in
the international community. And I think that's a strong message,
and I hope it'll be delivered."
Odinga thanked the secretary
and added that Zimbabwe "remains an eyesore on the African
continent."
"It is
a big embarrassment that a leader can say on the eve of an election
that he's not willing to hand over power to an opponent, and
he can only hand over power to a member of his own political party.
I think this is an embarrassment to Africa because it makes a sham
of the presidential elections. You cannot have free and fair elections
when opponents are being beaten up, when the secretary-general of
the party, opposition party, is in detention, and [on] very flimsy
charges, possibly to be charged
with treason.
"So my view is
that the time has come for the international community to act on
Zimbabwe."
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