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US envoy to meet Kenya leaders over reforms  

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US ambassador Michael Ranneberger (right) during a press conference at the Germany Ambassador's residence on Friday. He said that it impossible to hold fresh elections as the country does not have an electoral commission in place. Looking on is German ambassador Walter Lindner Photo/MICHAEL MUTE

US ambassador Michael Ranneberger (right) during a press conference at the Germany Ambassador's residence on Friday. He said that it impossible to hold fresh elections as the country does not have an electoral commission in place. Looking on is German ambassador Walter Lindner Photo/MICHAEL MUTE 

By ALPHONCE SHIUNDU
Posted Friday, April 10 2009 at 13:53

In Summary

  • Meeting to focus on the implementation of reforms.
  • German envoy says upon the coalition management committee to iron out differences.

A representative of the US Government will soon meet President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga to push for a quick solution to the impasse that threatens to split the Coalition Government.   

Addressing a news conference in Nairobi Friday, US ambassador Michael Ranneberger joined his German counterpart Walter Lindner in calling for the two leaders to agree on much needed reforms.

Mr Ranneberger said he would “soon” be meeting both President Kibaki and Mr Odinga with a view to having them agree to focus on the implementation of reforms.

He added that US President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were “watching closely the situation” and could intervene to prevent its escalation.

Mr Lindner asked politicians to “tone down” on their language and instead “work on important issues.”

“The art of politics in a democracy is to reach a compromise, not to continue pulling apart over trivial differences... when many key issues remain unsolved,” he said.

The German envoy said that it was upon the coalition management committee to privately iron out the “honest differences”.

“Such teams are there to solve problems, not to create them by shouting in public,” Mr Lindner said.

The two envoys said it was wrong for the church and the civil society to call for snap elections, even as the government seems reluctant to implement key reforms.

Also, they asked ODM not to go ahead with the public rallies as this would further polarise the country.

They termed the calls for elections as “a recipe for sending the country back to ethnic chaos” saying it was time for the President and the PM to “honour their word and deliver on reforms.”

“Just because the coalition government is the most viable option that does not mean it’s an excuse for inaction,” the US envoy said. 

Lately, Cabinet ministers have been saying that ‘a coalition is hard to manage’ to explain the government’s complacency in implementing police, land and Judicial reforms, as well as the constant public bickering.

“I care less about the small issues like salaries and protocol... it is time for them to focus on real issues like extrajudicial killings that have attracted global attention,” the US ambassador said.

The two defended themselves over claims that they favoured one side of the coalition, saying both PNU and ODM share equal blame for the problems affecting the country.

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Add a comment (11 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by cashD
    Posted April 11, 2009 05:44 PM

    Did anyone catch President Obama's reference to Kenya in his town hall meeting with students in Strasbourg, France recently? He definitely is concerned about Kenya, and maybe his presence and the public pressure of Ambassador Ranneberger will move Kibaki and Raila forward. I wonder if Secretary of State Hillary Clinton might make a surprise visit to Kenya one of these days.

  2. Submitted by Jellyfish
    Posted April 10, 2009 11:45 PM

    Yes both sides are responsible for lack of commitment to reform. However ODM is responsible for promoting petty issues at the expense of national development. Appointing PC's, DC's, ambassadors, judges, police chiefs and parastatal heads is not what Kenyans need. Let's see you deliver with the ministries you have already before asking for more power. Carpets and toilets with PC's in attendance is petty.

  3. Submitted by cyberspc
    Posted April 10, 2009 08:29 PM

    Kibaki must honour and implement reforms or pack up and go back to Othaya. Kenya is not his property and it does not belong to his mother or father either. Kenya belongs to the people of Kenya. We congratulate the anbassador and President Obama. Bring in the marines to teach Kibaki a lesson Noriega style.

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