Miguna
leaves Kenya quietly
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Updated 2 hrs 58 mins ago
By Cyrus Ombati and Athman Amran
A former advisor to Prime Minister Raila Odinga
has left the country without fanfare hours after he accused some of the PM’s
allies of threatening him.
Miguna Miguna has reportedly embarked on “a
worldwide tour to promote” his new controversial book, 'Peeling
Back the Mask’, which has attracted sharp
reactions with allegations of abuse of office and corruption in the PM's
office. The book also claims that ODM had a role in the 2007 post-election
violence with a strategy to isolate one ethnic community.
Miguna left the country with his family Monday
night and declined to divulge his next destination. Sources close to him he was
embarking on promoting the book with his first stop being Canada.
He leaves behind a cloud of dust kicked by his
controversial book which made wild allegations on the happenings around his
former boss Prime Minister Raila Odinga.
Immigration officers said he left Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport in Nairobi on Monday night aboard an international
airliner headed for Netherlands. It is not clear when he will be back.
Those close to him said he had told them he was
on a worldwide tour to promote the book which was his memoirs.
In an interview with Standard Digital, Miguna
said he was targeting selling 500,000 copies in North America alone.
“Someone bought a bulk of 2,000 copies on the
launch date, another 1,000 were sold at the launch, and book sellers took
2,000.
"By one week we expect to have sold 10,000
copies…please let the country know.” Miguna said.
“The book will do half a million copies in North
America alone that is a guarantee,” the author said.
A visit to his Runda home revealed heaps of
copies stored in various packages.
His aides at the Runda home said he had left
for Canada and refused to say more about the travel plans or when he is
expected back home.
He left hours after the Director of Public
Prosecutions Keriako Tobiko ordered police to investigate him over allegations
that he is privy to ODM’s participation in the 2008 post-election violence.
Tobiko said withholding information over an
alleged crime is criminal itself and asked commissioner of police to summon
Miguna and get information he claimed he has over the crimes. He said there was
need for Miguna to record a statement with the police on what he knows for them
to weigh if it constitutes anything that can be relied on as evidence. Tobiko
said he was concerned why Miguna has been holding the said information for the
last for years, if indeed what he says is true.
Some police officers had apparently advised him
to leave the country as soon as possible because it was not safe for him to
continue staying in the country in the wake of the launch of the book. Miguna
had even received more security seconded to him by the state, some of whom were
seen surrounding his compound on fears of an attack on Monday.
One of the PM’s aides who is adversely mentioned
in the book Caroli Omondi has instructed lawyer George Oraro to sue for damages
over for defaming him.
A lobby group allied to Odinga's presidential
campaign asked the DPP to open charges against Miguna over allegations
that he is privy to ODM’s participation in the 2008 post-election violence.
The Friends of Raila (Fora) group urged Tobiko
to prosecute Miguna for withholding evidence on the post-election violence.
Speaking at the launch of his book on Saturday,
Mr Miguna said he was privy to the ODM campaign strategies and was present when
the party declared that the 2007 General Election was a contest of 41 tribes
against one.
FORA's legal advisor Anthony Oluoch on Monday
rubbished Miguna's book as an exaggerated dossier that is ill timed and
malicious.
“If indeed Miguna was aware that some MP’s
allied to ODM participated in the post-election violence, why didn't he hand
the information to the ICC?” posed Mr Oluoch.
FORA took issue with the title of the book,
which they say is crafted to give the reader the impression that what the book
contains is top secret. The book discusses the successes, challenges and
failures of both the ODM and Grand Coalition Government of which he was a key
member.
Miguna is planning to sell at least 10,000 books
this week, which translates to Sh33 million at an average of Sh3,300 per book.
Soon after the book was launched, the former advisor to the PM saw two
publishers take over 4,000 books, which helped Miguna pocket a cool Sh13.2
million.
The memoir runs to 614 pages and is divided into
eight parts (Books one to eight) comprising 21 chapters and it’s available in
book stores in Kenya, the United Kingdom and North America, as well as online
via Amazon.com.
Miguna has faced tough criticism and opposition
from the PM and his supporters since the book was released over the weekend,
but he says he is ready to face anyone in court over the content in the book.
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