News
Ruto: Why I prefer The Hague route
Posted Saturday, February 21 2009 at 21:55
In Summary
- Agriculture minister wants Annan to hand over Waki envelope to ICC prosecutor without further delay
Agriculture minister William Ruto wants the secret envelope containing names of the post-election violence suspects handed over to the International Criminal Court at The Hague without further delay.
Mr Ruto says the two-month period given by former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan to Kenya to make a new attempt at setting up a local tribunal to try the suspects was unnecessary.
“Kofi Annan should hand over the envelope that contains names of suspects to the International Criminal Court at The Hague so that proper investigations can start,” Mr Ruto said. “Mr Annan should allow us to move forward. We cannot just get stuck in one place addressing the same thing.”
Mr Ruto’s latest stand contradicts the position of Prime Minister Raila Odinga, leader of his ODM party, who prefers a local tribunal.
A government motion to set up a special local tribunal was defeated in Parliament earlier this month, raising the possibility that suspects whose names were given to Mr Annan in a sealed envelope by the Waki Commssion could be taken to The Hague for trial.
The Hague option was to be activated should Kenya fail to establish a local tribunal as proposed by the commission that investigated the post-election violence.
Mr Ruto – whose constituency was among those worst hit by violence — spoke during the week he weathered a storm in Parliament over a maize scandal in which brokers are believed to have benefited by trading with national food security reserves at a time when the country was facing widespread hunger.
The minister described the attempt to pass a no-confidence motion against him as his most trying moment politically.
“It touches the soft belly of the nation. Food and hunger are very sensitive and delicate issues. When a whole machine has been turned against you as the cause of hunger in the face of hungry people, it is very trying to try to explain your contribution. Thank God I managed to explain myself,” the minister told the Sunday Nation.
In a wide-raging interview Friday, Mr Ruto maintained that Justice and Constitutional Affairs minister Martha Karua had approached him seeking to form a political alliance ahead of the 2012 elections.
“She attempted to draft me into the 2012 succession game. She sent emissaries to me, and we met twice, but I declined because we had just come out of a very difficult time of violence. She has tried to deny this saying I had baggage. When did she discover I had baggage, and which William Ruto was she desperately looking for?” he asked.
But Ms Karua told the Sunday Nation that there was no way she would have sought an alliance with “someone who has baggage over corruption cases”.
Ms Karua has repeatedly asked Mr Ruto to “take political responsibility” and resign over the maize scandal. The matter attracted a new ally for Mr Ruto in Energy minister Kiraitu Murungi, who challenged Ms Karua to show what practical steps she had taken to fight corruption instead of asking her colleagues to resign.
Analysts saw Mr Murungi’s stand as the purchase of political insurance from Mr Ruto should the Energy minister have to face a censure motion in Parliament over the Triton scandal involving petrol storage and distribution.
However, Mr Murungi said that his position was informed by a principled stand against “the doctrine of political responsibility where ministers pay for the crimes of civil servants.”
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Submitted by muthinja1Posted February 23, 2009 07:37 PM
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Submitted by mulosh
The division on this forum is clearly the division on our political landscape: vicious, partisan, tribal, blind and most disturbingly, reckless. All the symptoms of a people detrmined to self-destruct are here. An little common sense here will do, and an ignorant hatred of the tribe of others will give you nothing. if you dont want to live with other Kenyans, go away!
Posted February 23, 2009 05:35 PM -
Submitted by kenmare69
Sounds very interesting, coming from a guy who was bitching about the Waki report like an exasperated little girl afraid of the boogeyman. We know his victory in escaping censure over the maize saga was more about political arithmetic than honest vindication. A victory like this (if you can call it that) has a way of getting to someone’s head and I suspect this is what’s happening with Ruto. If it turns out that his name’s among those in the ‘envelop’, will he turn around and sing a different tune? We’ll wait and see.
Posted February 23, 2009 05:18 PM -
Submitted by gathoni
How about mob justice? Our leaders use it during elections, maybe it would do them good if they felt the taste of their own medicine...
Posted February 23, 2009 01:31 PM -
Submitted by Hillaryio
antonikip@yahoo.com, your comment about Ruto and the maize scandal is the most ignorant I have read so far. No, Ruto did not steal maize from anyone's shamba. The fact is that he has failed to stop NCPB from dishing out maize to government bigwigs in his capacity as a the minister of Agricultre. There have been overwhelming evidence to prove this, but political agenda has outshone principals. So, get your facts rights and stop sounding like a total out of touch Kenyan.
Posted February 23, 2009 12:16 PM




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Ruto, Karua, Kiraitu, P.M Raila, all pawns in the corruption corridors. The Mafia running the racket are running the state, these gentlemen, or some of them, know them, but they won't speak! The person ULTIMATELY in charge is Pres. Kibake, a hostage to the Mafia-pins, that's reality!