Kenya opposition
inauguration a bid to 'overthrow govt': minister
NAIROBI, Jan 31, 2018 (AFP) - Kenya's interior minister said Wednesday that opposition leader Raila Odinga's mock inauguration as "people's president" was an effort to overthrow the government, with media outlets shut down for their complicity in the event.
NAIROBI, Jan 31, 2018 (AFP) - Kenya's interior minister said Wednesday that opposition leader Raila Odinga's mock inauguration as "people's president" was an effort to overthrow the government, with media outlets shut down for their complicity in the event.
Odinga, 73, held a swearing-in ceremony in
Nairobi on Tuesday with the event attended by thousands of supporters in
another challenge to President Uhuru Kenyatta's re-election last year following
two votes that the opposition claims were rigged.
The lawyer and MP who swore Odinga in -- TJ
Kajwang -- was arrested on Wednesday afternoon and was being investigated for
his role in the ceremony, according to a senior police officer speaking on
condition of anonymity.
After initially vowing to block the
gathering, police kept their distance, but a furore broke out after the
Communication Authority shut down three of the country's main private
television channels who were covering the ceremony.
"What was witnessed at Uhuru Park was
a well-choreographed attempt to subvert or overthrow the legally-constituted
government of the Republic of Kenya," Interior Minister Fred Matiangi said
in a statement.
"Some elements in the media fraternity
participated in furtherance of this illegal act," he charged, adding that
"their complicity would have led to thousands of deaths of innocent
Kenyans..."
Matiangi said the authorities had
information that "criminal elements operating under the banner" of
the National Super Alliance (NASA) opposition coalition had planned to
"shed blood" at the event and "blame it on the police".
That was why police had withdrawn from the
venue, he said.
"We have commenced wide-scale
investigations targeting individuals and organisations who include but not
limited to media houses," he said, indicating that the outlets -- among
them NTV, Citizen TV and KTN -- would remain shut until the probe was finished.
The shutdown came after media organisations
were summoned to State House last week for a meeting.
-
'Intimidation' of media -
During the meeting, Kenyatta, his deputy
William Ruto and other senior officials warned editors against live coverage of
the ceremony and threatened to revoke their licenses if they failed to comply,
according to Linus Kaikai, chairman of the Kenya Editors' Guild.
In a statement, Kaikai said he was
"gravely alarmed" by Friday's meeting which took place in "an
atmosphere of intimidation".
Rights groups on Wednesday criticised the
government's move to block live coverage of the inauguration.
"Kenyan authorities have restricted
media coverage at a critical moment, and violated the public's right to
information about important events," said Otsieno Namwaya, Africa researcher
at Human Rights Watch (HRW).
HRW said the shutdown "underlines a
trend since 2013, when Kenyatta took office for the first time" of
intimidation, harassment and threats aimed at the media.
For some, it brought back memories of years
of dictatorship in the 1980s and 1990s when heavy-handed government censorship
was common.
"Kenya is on a very slippery
trajectory in regard to human rights, and president Kenyatta urgently needs to
reverse this trend," Namwaya said.
-
'Anarchy and mayhem' -
Matiangi said Odinga's swearing-in itself
was also under investigation and that "appropriate legal action"
would be taken.
Authorities had repeatedly warned that such
an inauguration would be treasonous and that Odinga could face arrest.
However, as the wording of the oath was
different to that in the constitution, the consequences of Odinga's act of
political theatre remain unclear.
Odinga has refused to accept Kenyatta's
re-election, which came after last year's deeply-divisive election season in
which rights activists say at least 92 people were killed.
First was an election on August 8 that was
won by Kenyatta then annulled in a historic decision by the Supreme Court,
which ordered a re-run on October 26.
Claiming the poll would not be fair, Odinga
boycotted the second vote and Kenyatta won with 98 percent.
Since boycotting the re-run poll, citing a
lack of reform at the election commission, NASA's strategy has been to
challenge Kenyatta's legitimacy by seeking to establish parallel government
structures.
Opposition politicians have convened
so-called "people's assemblies" in some counties and the inauguration
of Odinga as "people's president" is seen as the culmination of this
process.
Matiangi on Tuesday denounced the
opposition's National Resistance Movement wing, tasked with implementing a
threatened programme of boycotts and civil disobedience, as an "organised
criminal group".
"It is a group of individuals who are
bent on causing anarchy and mayhem," he added on Wednesday.
"We will not accept subversion and
criminal acts disguised as political activities. This will not be
tolerated."
---