Nairobi Star (Nairobi)
Isaac Ongiri
17 February 2011
Nairobi — DEPUTY Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and suspended Higher Education minister William Ruto want Prime Minister Raila Odinga arrested for incitement.
Uhuru and Ruto argue Raila was inciting and offensive last Monday when he said violence could break out in the next general election if the post-election violence suspects are not tried at The Hague.
Raila's remarks were made during the memorial of the 1984 Wagalla Massacre in Wajir.
Uhuru and Ruto left the room before the statement was read stating the outcome of their joint deliberations with the MPs.
The statement demands that Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere should summon and question the PM over the remarks.
Ruto and Uhuru are among six suspects named by the ICC Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo.
The others are Head of the Civil Service Francis Muthaura, former Industrialisation minister Henry Kosgey, former Police Commissioner Hussein Ali and Kass FM radio presenter Joshua arap Sang.
"We condemn Prime Minister Raila Odinga's statements in Wajir on Monday February 14, 2011 over claims that if those named by the ICC Prosecutor Moreno Ocampo are not tried at The Hague, violence will erupt in 2012," declared the unsigned statement read out by East African Community assistant minister Peter Munya.
The MPs castigated Ocampo saying he was partisan in the two Kenya cases and wondered why the PM would want to associate with the ICC.
"But we will tell him this for free. His plans to destabilise the country between now and 2012 and to acquire power through the backdoor will fail," the MPs' statement said.
The leaders said that the PM should also be ready to face the ICC.
"If he thinks The Hague is the best option, then he and his co-planners of the 2007 mayhem must face the court. He must stop pretending that he can profit from a process and a prosecutor who are brazenly partisan," added the statement.
North Norr MP Chachu Ganya said the PM was not above the law and wondered why the police had not taken action.
"His remarks were unfortunate. The police should go ahead and deal with him because such unbecoming conduct cannot be tolerated," said Ganya.
Ol Kalou MP Erastus Mureithi said Raila could have jeopardised the ongoing reconciliation in Kenya.
"For a man of his stature to have come up with such unfortunate remarks, the least we can expect is to have the police swinging into action against him," Mureithi said.
Mureithi called on the NCIC to quickly investigate Raila's remarks.
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"I am shocked that leaders are out to polarise this country. Calls for the arrest of a leader of the PM's calibre is serious and can have far-reaching and regrettable effects," Ojode said.
Uriri MP Cyprian Omolo dismissed those calling for the PM's arrest as "hypocrites" who did not have the future of Kenya at heart.
"These people were themselves running around convincing people to support the ICC when the PM and the President were literally begging them to vote for a local process. To use the PM's name for purposes of fetching undue sympathy is only political," Omolo said.
It is so unfortunate
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