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Kibaki and Raila meet to set date for Ocampo’s arrival
President Mwai Kibaki meets with Prime Minister Raila Odinga at his Harambee house office, Nairobi. PHOTO/ FILE
Posted Monday, October 12 2009 at 22:00
President Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga met on Monday to decide when International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo would come to Kenya.
The two leaders met at State House after receiving Mr Moreno-Ocampo’s request to visit Kenya. The prosecutor’s letter was delivered to the two by Justice, Constitutional Affairs and National Cohesion minister Mutula Kilonzo.
There was confusion on Monday morning at Harambee House when journalists who expected Mr Kilonzo to deliver the letter camped outside the building only to be sent away by security officers.
The President and PM later launched the Vision 2030 Delivery Board. President Kibaki also received several new envoys before leaving for State House in the afternoon.
Mr Kilonzo, who had requested for the meeting with the two leaders, was slotted to meet them at 5pm.
Sources close to State House on Monday said the date of Mr Moreno-Ocampo’s arrival would be announced soon and that the ICC prosecutor had stated in his letter that he was ready to visit Kenya as soon as possible to spell out his plan of handling the key suspects behind the post-election violence in which 1,133 people were killed and over 650,000 displaced from their homes.
The violence was sparked by a dispute over the December 2007 presidential election results.
Those who have seen Mr Moreno-Ocampo’s letter revealed that the prosecutor had proposed to deal with at least four key suspects who may include ministers and key government officials while the rest, who number in hundreds, should be tried by a local tribunal.
He is said to have made it clear the two approaches had to be used to deliver justice to the victims of the election killings.
The Hague has made it clear that suspects must be punished to avoid a recurrence of violence which had been entrenching itself since the 1990s. He also wants to use “Kenya as an example to the rest of the world.”
Mr Kilonzo received Mr Moreno-Ocampo’s letter on Friday and said he would act on it yesterday, meaning, handing it over to the President and the PM.
The principals have pledged to respect Kenya’s responsibility to the International Criminal Court.
Signals that The Hague would soon come knocking became clear two Sundays ago when chief mediator Kofi Annan visited for three days to get the government’s commitment to punish the main suspects who were identified by the Waki Commission into the post-election violence.
The President and the PM declined Mr Annan’s request to directly write to the ICC chief inviting him to Kenya, but asked him to ask Mr Moreno-Ocampo to write to them requesting talks with the two.
Arrest suspects
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Submitted by JellyfishPosted October 14, 2009 10:53 AM
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Submitted by peter mugambi
This is the greatest circus ever seen. The truth sets people free.so these two fellows should be candid with the good old prosecutor.Tell him that you both screwed up and you do not have any idea of how to proceed.Tell him that indicting some warlords while leaving others free will cause serious rifts in the country.Tell him that we need to borrow a leaf from Mzee Kenyatta who adviced people soon after independence, "tusahau yaliyopita tujenge taifa".
Posted October 14, 2009 07:24 AM -
Submitted by TARBEY
Retards
Posted October 13, 2009 06:28 PM -
Submitted by vgogero
Efforts to form a local tribunal must be fast tracked to deal with the minor suspects .Justice Waki should also be invited in the talks with Ocampo and he should also meet with the other stakeholders and listen to all victims and suspects for they all have a story to tell.
Posted October 13, 2009 05:40 PM -
Submitted by wagatungu
Do you see the wood carving picture behing the Pre..,? It looks exactly like....
Posted October 13, 2009 03:29 PM




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Those asking for the two principles to go to the Hague are fools. Let me just put you on notice it won't happen. First they complained bitterly over their bickering now they are cooperating they are still not happy. Kibaki will not be running in 2012 so he has nothing to fear from them. They asked for the Hague now they have it and they are still not satisfied. No one can satisfy this hecklers. Good work Mr. President and PM.