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Post-media blackout update Jan 1 4:30 pm

Not much to report at this point. Here’s the latest I have:

– Was worried about running out of food this morning, but a good friend who lives in Kiambu, where it’s business as usual, came over with “relief supplies” including meat because you know Kenyans can’t do that vegetarian story if they can help it:-) Very surreal. Anyway, I’m in Kenya until I run out of diapers and formula, which will probably be this weekend.

– Bulk sms has been blocked by the government to prevent guys from sending inciteful messages. Meanwhile the “President” is wishing Kenyans a happy new year and has said absolutely not one thing about the hundreds of lives that are being lost – isn’t this lack of action just as inciteful?

– Alfred Mutua, the government spokesman, continues to be in la-la land talking about incidents of violence “here and there.” Actually, he is beginning to remind me of Baghdad Bob when the Iraq war started.

– Apparently the media blackout is not based on any law, the media council could theoretically challenge it. Something fishy is going on, because the local media is not even taking advantage of the delay thingy they have to broadcast updates through out the day. Is this self-censorship or does Michuki have a gun to their head? I’m getting more news from BBC than from anywhere else right now.

– Nairobi Women’s Hospital sexual assault unit is reporting a sharp increase of cases of rape and sodomy – keep in mind that these if from the few women who are able to make it there.

– Displaced families walking around city center.

– International community pressing for a recount to be done in presence of the media and to be broadcast live as a way out of impasse. Former president of Sierra Leone being brought in to talk to Kibaki.

– Minister for Internal Security John Michuki is running the country for all intents and purposes.

Please keep the information coming (kenyanpundit-at-gmail.com), I may not post everything you send but it is all very helpful as far as keeping me abreast of what’s happening out there from my “bunker.”

Out for a few hours, no posts till later this evening.

53 comments to Post-media blackout update Jan 1 4:30 pm

  • Caleb

    This what the Daily Telegraph wrote today about Kibaki and his supporters:

    “What is shocking about the rigged poll is not the fact of electoral manipulation, but its blatancy. President Kibaki’s partisans barely troubled to cover their tracks.

    In one instance, observers saw one total being recorded at a local polling station, and a different one reported to the national electoral commission.

    Government supporters would have us believe that Kenyans voted decisively against the ruling party’s parliamentary candidates, that they turfed out the vice-president, but that they then split their tickets to return Mr Kibaki.

    …Commonwealth leaders should suspend Kenya from their ranks and retain the option of further sanctions unless the election is re-run. If the Commonwealth fails, all Africa will fail with it…”

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/01/01/dl0101.xml

  • Janet Wafula

    Hi Ory,

    Just watching BBC in London, Mr. Brown has spoken to Kibaki and Odinga in an effort to explore the possibility of the two getting to talk to each other… Odinga is still adamant and wants Kibaki to accept that he lost the elections and that the whole process was flawed.

    And yes there is lots of pressure from the international community.

    BBC also says that more than a dozen people have been burnt to death in a church in Western Kenya while seeking refuge…. in Eldoret. The Church was sheltering Kikuyus.

    Rgds
    Jan

  • Nits

    A church in Eldoret was just torched by a huge mob, it was sheltering several hundred people. Fifteen to Twenty people are reported to have burned to death. Reported by Associated Press.

  • Justice4Kenya

    FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE MEETING IN LONDON AND TO THE WALKING TO DOWNING STREET THEN TO KENYA HIGH COMISSION GO TO THIS WEBSITE

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  • Ken

    Ory,

    Thanks for keeping us updated. You are the best.

    The church incident is really scary. The Nation website is also saying that there are tens of thousands of armed people going into burnt forest.

    Things are happening so fast. Someone needs to arrest the situation. Do our leaders realise the risk they are running?

  • Nairobi Typ0

    Am currently watching Al Jazeera which, despite my long held dislike of the network, has had the best coverage of the elections and everything that has followed. They are currently doing a live intervivew with Odinga while CNN can barely be bothered to give the issue here 10 seconds during the headlines. They also promised a second live interview soon this time with a PNU rep.

  • zizi

    it is just getting out hand. just talked to a journalist in Kenya who says that there is anger and resentment among ODM supporters who thought they would use the ballot to remove Kibaki. Had Kibaki won in a clean way perhaps such could be an issue of the past. But apparently the anger is driven by the alleged rigging.

    Police have banned the ODM 1-million march on 3rd. My opinion is by allowing the rally to go on, it will enable ODM supporters to vent their anger and send their message at home. By banning the rally means that these people will still go back to the archaic tactic we r all condemning.

    It is not even time for governmnet to blame Raila or ODM. It is time kibaki to recognise that Raila is captive of the desire of 4million people. It needs to tone down.

  • Juliana

    still in Eld. There is fuel in a place called ‘pioneer’ – still tense and as it gets dark, its v. scary. Saw some police in riot gear, but i have been keeping away from town today. Heard about the church burning on bbc too, though i haven’t seen it…Apparently no water in Eldoret town. fears of retaliatory attacks between kales and kikuyus.
    Talked to a shopkeeper, he will reopen his shop tomorrow though he doesnt know whether his workers will make it (the workers live in langas)

  • Grace

    This appears to be a reasonable crowd so I am posting my question here.

    When all this nightmare is over – and I have convinced myself that this madness must end soon – there are going to be plenty of people in the country in need of help specifically food, shelter and medicine.

    How many of us posting here would be in a position to help? Is this something that others have started thinking about and has anyone set anything up that or is it something we can organize either here or in other forum. I am in the US and can offer some money and some of my time.

  • Katie

    We are thinking of everyone in Kenya right now that is suffering. We will keep praying for you all

  • Lyn

    Happy New Year Ory,

    Whatever that means at a time like this.

    Sir Edward Clay is reluctant to say that the election was stolen, puhleeze.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/kenya/story/0,,2233848,00.html#article_continue

  • Lisa, California

    I’m in the United States and MSNBC and CNN are reporting that approx. 50 people seeking refuge in a church were burned alive when a mob set fire to the church. Here are the stories http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/01/01/kenya.elections/index.html
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22460182/
    I’m praying for Africa.

  • Kenyan damu

    BBC Africa has a photograph of an altered ballot paper on its website. I really don’t think a recount is the way forward. Much could have already been done to further taint the tally papers in the intervening days.

    There should be a fresh presidential election countrywide with appropriate safeguards.

  • Ann

    Hi Ory,

    Thx for great job you’re doing –

    I also heard from friend in Eldoret this am, that Kikuyus sheltering in churches & police station, while gangs of youth roam the outskirts of town, wearing skins, and looking for Kikuyus and Kisii to attack.

    Ann

  • Christina

    Ory,

    It bothers me that increasingly the violence throughout the country is being attributed to Luos when Kenyans of every ethnic group are in this. One tribe is not responsible for what is happening in Mombasa, Kiambaa, Eldoret, Molo, Kuresoi, Nairobi, etc…

    We (Kenyans) all are! Maybe the government wants you to forget this and think that what we are experiencing is the result of a few disgruntled, power-hungry group of people from Odinga’s homeland throwing a national tantrum!

    Take a closer look. IT IS YOUR (KENYANS) votes that began this! It should be your true and properly counted votes that end this not violence!

  • gina

    Ory
    Inciting is what you are doing here on your blog. Present two sides/the whole story so we can keep respecting your blog and stop bungling. The people dying and killing are the poor, the homeless, youth and possibly unprotected women. Kibaki speaking up now will not do much- but what people like you are doing will keep this going. Is anyone else having dejavu from back in the day Raila vs. Wamalua fight for Ford K?

  • robert

    For a more critical look – try mental acrobatics

  • Doques

    Ory thanks for the updates as always. I just talked to some of my folks in Nairobi. The situation is really getting desperate, people are running out of food and money. Most of the business are closed for fear of looting. The few available businesses that are able to open for few hours are charging exorbitant prices. People have now resorted to borrowing money from neighbors just to feed their families.I’m told it is impossible to get the the town center or work- no matatus. One of my rela who tried to walk to work was badly slashed. I really wonder how long Kibaki would afford to let this go on.

  • WK

    I’m not being an alarmist, but the information I have about the Burnt Forest/Eldorest area is very bad. I’m asking you to post this on your blog so that Kenyans across the world can rally international governements, media houses, etc. We need to get the word out – Approximately 40-50K people are holded up at the compounds of ST. PATRICKS CATHOLIC CHURCH and ARNESENS HIGH SCHOOLl, both in Burnt Forest. There is no running water, food and ELECTRICITY has been cut. THIS MEANS THAT PEOPLE CANNOT RECHARGE THIER CELL PHONES and soon we’ll not be able to contact them. Also, due to the chaos/anarchy in these compounds, means that people, especially women are not any safer than if they were out in the chaos. There has been reports of rapes and molestations. I’ve also heard that the Eldoret highway has been closed by thugs an d that there is no transportion, hence people cannot leave this area. My family in that area feels very helpless and we can only ask that we spread the world and try and get some security in the area.

  • WK

    Ory, I just posted above, please freel free to email and I can get you phone numbers of people in the area that you can talk too. We need to get this info. out. Asante.

  • I’m not sure where to mail/contact you.. and this is not very much off topic, but I was hoping you can mention this article on the front page.
    Great article:
    Summing up on Kenya/Other world leaders/Corruption…
    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e9b82f4a-b884-11dc-893b-0000779fd2ac.html?nclick_check=1

  • Kivuitu has apparently admitted he acted under pressure and does not know if Kibaki won or not. death toll is at least 300

    http://www.eastandard.net/news/?id=1143979833

  • joe

    wether raila or kibaki won with 4 million votes the reality is that none got even one third of the of the14millin registered voters vote
    – let them sit down and find a way forward

  • Knasus

    Hi Ory,

    I’m furious with Kibabki and Raila. How dare they make this such a personal issue irrespective of the deaths and rapes going on? How dare they! Isn’t it about time we as Kenyans realised it is up to us as individuals to show our leaders that they are pathetic?

    Given the option to vote over I think Kalonzo would sail through.

    Lets focus on helping one another, dare we call a public holiday by the people during which we pledge to visit our neighbours and share our stories in the quest to heal and bond?

    Dare we tell our leaders to go to hell. How do they sleep at night?

    We’re in Limuru and even here the ethnic viloence is spreading…………..at what point do we accept that this is a genocide?

    Shame on Kibaki, Shame on Raila and all of the so called Pentagon……….they are equally to blame!!!.

    Knasus

  • You know, I keep hearing that “Raila must forego hi s ambitions for the sake of peace” but what many people do not realise is that he is a Captive of the desires of millions of Kenya and cannot accept defeat.

    individuals on the ground can also send info through http://www.josephkaroki.wordpress.com

  • Christina

    Just saw an article on the East African Standard (online) which was then hastily removed about Mr. Kivuita admiting to announcing false results under pressure from PNU and ODM-Kenya officials!. He said he rushed to State House with the certificate, only to find the Chief Justice there already waiting to swear in Kibaki.

    His quote,

    “I thought of resigning, but thought against it because I don’t want people to say I am a coward.”

    What a price to pay… now people are not just calling you a coward, but a thief, a liar and one who now has the blood of many Kenyans on your hands. Shame on you!

  • Christina

    Found the article on Kalenjin Online

    “We are Culprits(ECK )”Kivuitu Confirms

    By Isaac Ongiri

    On Tuesday night, Mr Samuel Kivuitu made a damning admission that he announced results of the fiercely contested presidential election under pressure.

    The announcement plunged the country into a post-election violence of a scale never witnessed before.

    The magnitude of the Electoral Commission chairman’s admission and the further dent on the credibility of the election was captured in his answer when asked if indeed President Kibaki won the elections: “I do not know whether Kibaki won the election”.

    Kivuitu continued with his stunning revelations when he said he took the presidential election winner’s certificate to State House, Nairobi, after “some people threatened to collect it while I’m the one mandated by law to do so”.

    “I arrived at State House to take the certificate and I found the Chief Justice there, ready to swear-in Kibaki,” Kivuitu said.

    On claims that he was under undue pressure to declare results, Kivuitu said: “Some PNU (Party of National Unity) and ODM-Kenya leaders put me under pressure by calling me frequently, asking me to announce the results immediately”.

    President Kibaki ran for re-election on a Party of National Unity ticket, while Mr Kalonzo Musyoka, made his bid on an ODM-Kenya ticket. Mr Raila Odinga, who has said he was robbed of victory, ran on an Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) ticket.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu said the alleged pressure to declare results came in the wake of parallel pressure from a number of ambassadors from the European Union countries and Mr Maina Kiai of the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights not to announce the results until complaints, which arose, were addressed.

    “I had thought of resigning, but thought against it because I don’t want people to say I’m a coward,” he said. The embattled ECK chairman made the revelations shortly after meeting with 22 ECK commissioners.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu conceded that matters that arose from the poll results were so urgent that they should be taken to court, and the ruling done with minimum delay to ease national tension.

    Court settlement

    “If this matter is finally taken to court, the ruling should be made urgently so that if it were decided that Raila is the President, so be it. If it is Kibaki, so be it,” he added.

    Kivuitu said he made the decision, whose far-reaching implications are now being felt across the country. He said he announced the results because the commission had no legal mandate to investigate complaints raised by the opposition immediately.

    Kivuitu fell short of naming the individuals from the two parties — PNU and ODM-Kenya — who coerced him to announce the disputed poll outcome, but went on to announce that the commission was consulting eminent lawyers over the next course of action “so that its actions remain within the law”.

    The EU observer team has discredited the poll results and urged for an independent audit.

    On his part, Kivuitu said he backed independent investigation into what may have happened, but added that this would be only if the law would provide for it.

    “We are culprits as a commission. We have to leave it to an independent group to investigate what actually went wrong,” the chairman said, stunning local and international journalists, who had gathered at his Nairobi residence.

    It has also emerged that some countries concerned with the poll outcome, like South Africa, had sent in their electoral officials to the country.

    Kivuitu said the officials would be arriving on Wednesday “to look into the matter”.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu was in a meeting with his 22 commissioners, which his deputy, Mr Kihara Muttu, described as “a house-keeping meeting”.

    In a signed statement, the 22 commissioners condemned the violence, which up to last night had claimed the lives of about 300 people.

  • kenyan

    Kenyan damu, please include the link to the picture! I hunted all over BBC’s website but had no luck in seeing the picture mnetioned by you.

  • Linda

    I agree with Kenyan Damu — There have been plenty of alleged ballot alterations that would make recounts suspect of fraud as well, and cause more strife. As inconvenient as it sounds, they should start over with elections “with appropriate safeguards” — not just presidential, but also MP elections. The next worry is the amount of people who have suffered and their inability to travel to voting stations.

  • I asked at the EU EOM press briefing this morning if a complete recount were at all possible, and they said no – a lot of the ballot boxes have been tampered with. The only thing that would be possible is a retally – i.e. take the documented constituency tally and count up again for the national figure. However, obviously this is not going to deal with issues like significant differences between presidential and parliamentary votes in individual constituencies, EU observers being turned away from different polling stations, and extremely high voter turnout. So even if the government agreed to a a retally (unlikely, obviously), this could resolve some issues, but by far not all – so in the end, any solution would have to be political.

    Totally different matter: I saw a guy on TV crying because he’d lost his business, his livelihood, and that image stuck with me. I know far worse things have happened – but you can’t replace a relative or friend, but you can replace a small business. Does anyone have any idea how people could be identified who lost a small business, if one were to try and set up a fund to give these guys a donation to get started again? Or is this just a pipedream? Still pondering this.

  • Caz

    Nairobi typo – Are none of the Kenyan networks showing any footage of Odinga at all?

  • Wow… Per the EA Standard

    ECK Chair Samuel Kivuitu has said

    – “Some PNU (Party of National Unity) and ODM-Kenya leaders put me under pressure by calling me frequently, asking me to announce the results immediately”

    – “I arrived at State House to take the certificate and I found the Chief Justice there, ready to swear-in Kibaki”

    – “I do not know whether Kibaki won the election”

    This is unconscionable for Kivuitu, he should have had the moral temerity to resign and boldly come forward to Kenyans to say that their integrity has been compromised.

    After this latest piece of information, I apologize to all the ODM supporters whose integrity I questioned. How can one respect, let alone support, Kibaki now. It is over, he should concede and not even run in any subsequent run-off. Game-Set-Match.

  • msw

    Guys,
    Really as difficult as it is, let’s try and refrain from further inciting and adding fuel to tthe fire back home. We should be putting pressure on the two guys to talk and stop this.

    Again, both Kibaki and Raila are safe ! We need to be the voice for those who have no say, and no homes and who have lost famliy memebers and continue to have their safety thtreatened and urge the two guys who at this point in my opinion neither deserve to be in office cause neither one is stepping up and acting like a leader. We need to apply pressure on them to get the country back peacefully.

    Grace — great point ! I wondered the same, when all this is over and people are homeless, jobless and source of income destroyed, what resources will be there to help them get back on their feet?

  • hope

    I acted under a pressure, says Kivuitu

    I am reposting the entire article because last I checked it had been pulled from the main page at the standard

    Here is the direct link: http://eastandard.net/news/?id=1143979833

    Published on January 2, 2008, 12:00 am

    By Isaac Ongiri

    On Tuesday night, Mr Samuel Kivuitu made a damning admission that he announced results of the fiercely contested presidential election under pressure.

    The announcement plunged the country into a post-election violence of a scale never witnessed before.

    The magnitude of the Electoral Commission chairman’s admission and the further dent on the credibility of the election was captured in his answer when asked if indeed President Kibaki won the elections: “I do not know whether Kibaki won the election”.

    Kivuitu continued with his stunning revelations when he said he took the presidential election winner’s certificate to State House, Nairobi, after “some people threatened to collect it while I’m the one mandated by law to do so”.

    “I arrived at State House to take the certificate and I found the Chief Justice there, ready to swear-in Kibaki,” Kivuitu said.

    On claims that he was under undue pressure to declare results, Kivuitu said: “Some PNU (Party of National Unity) and ODM-Kenya leaders put me under pressure by calling me frequently, asking me to announce the results immediately”.

    President Kibaki ran for re-election on a Party of National Unity ticket, while Mr Kalonzo Musyoka, made his bid on an ODM-Kenya ticket. Mr Raila Odinga, who has said he was robbed of victory, ran on an Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) ticket.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu said the alleged pressure to declare results came in the wake of parallel pressure from a number of ambassadors from the European Union countries and Mr Maina Kiai of the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights not to announce the results until complaints, which arose, were addressed.

    “I had thought of resigning, but thought against it because I don’t want people to say I’m a coward,” he said. The embattled ECK chairman made the revelations shortly after meeting with 22 ECK commissioners.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu conceded that matters that arose from the poll results were so urgent that they should be taken to court, and the ruling done with minimum delay to ease national tension.

    Court settlement

    “If this matter is finally taken to court, the ruling should be made urgently so that if it were decided that Raila is the President, so be it. If it is Kibaki, so be it,” he added.

    Kivuitu said he made the decision, whose far-reaching implications are now being felt across the country. He said he announced the results because the commission had no legal mandate to investigate complaints raised by the opposition immediately.

    Kivuitu fell short of naming the individuals from the two parties — PNU and ODM-Kenya — who coerced him to announce the disputed poll outcome, but went on to announce that the commission was consulting eminent lawyers over the next course of action “so that its actions remain within the law”.

    The EU observer team has discredited the poll results and urged for an independent audit.

    On his part, Kivuitu said he backed independent investigation into what may have happened, but added that this would be only if the law would provide for it.

    “We are culprits as a commission. We have to leave it to an independent group to investigate what actually went wrong,” the chairman said, stunning local and international journalists, who had gathered at his Nairobi residence.

    It has also emerged that some countries concerned with the poll outcome, like South Africa, had sent in their electoral officials to the country.

    Kivuitu said the officials would be arriving on Wednesday “to look into the matter”.

    On Tuesday, Kivuitu was in a meeting with his 22 commissioners, which his deputy, Mr Kihara Muttu, described as “a house-keeping meeting”.

    In a signed statement, the 22 commissioners condemned the violence, which up to last night had claimed the lives of about 300 people.

  • Aly

    Grace,

    This is Kenya’s moment of truth. Can the leadership:

    1. Stabilize the insecurity and stop the carnage.
    2. Address the election malfeasance.

    IMO the next 48 hrs are crucial to what direction Kenya takes. I imagine we will start to see a public talk of intervention from the Commonwealth. The world is watching.

  • Sham

    Talk to a friend who has family in Kisumu- they are out of power, hence can’t charge their cell phones….making it hard for people to call home and confirm their family being safe!

  • lyn

    Christina,

    I agree with you. I feel that the Luos are being blamed for all the deaths and violence that is going on.

    People need to ask themselves, what is the cause of this whole situation.

    Interesting how some people are defensive, and are unable to reflect on what is really going on.

  • Knasus

    It’s chaos out there, where ‘there’ is all over the country.

    Someone tell me why we as adults dare change the rules to the games? From a very early age we learn that in any competition, cheats are disqualified.The rules ensure fair play for fear of disqualfication. In sports medals are stripped and given to the next best. So why is it with electoral rules that we allow the cheats to compare the level of cheating in a bid to chose who cheated less? Surely, if we stuck to the simple rules we teach our children, then ODM and PNU would have been disqualified. FULL STOP. Logic would then show Kalonzo as the winner. And given his decorum and sanity now, it shows that a large percentage of us Kenyans were hoodwinked into believeing Raila and Kibaki care about us citizens.

    Lets look at the real problem more carefully, it sits squarely with the rules. Lets simplyfy them. You cheat once, you get disqualified. How otherwise do we expect a corruption free nation when we elect and accept leaders who cheat to get in. W e are only kidding ourselves.

    Kenya is not bigger than any one KENYAN, it is the compilation of ALL Kenyans.

    We cannot ask our leaders to stamp out corruption when it is using the platform of corruption that we alowed them to rule.

    More sanity, less blame, more compasion and a revised set of rules is needed.

    Notice how it is the youth, the young boys out there rallying. Setting things a blaze and fueling the chaos. The women and young girls are looking for food, being raped and crying in the slums.
    If you want a peaceful rally, dare to take your mothers and sisters and children. Then I will believe it will be peaceful.

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