Politics

Top officials planned Naivasha chaos

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Families fleeing from the post-election violence in Naivasha Naivasha during the post election violence. PHOTO/STEPHEN MUDIARI  

By NATION Reporter
Posted Wednesday, October 15 2008 at 19:44

Top government officials and powerful businessmen with State House connections were involved in planning the bloody attacks in Naivasha, the report reveals.

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The commission received “credible evidence” that the raids on the lakeside Rift Valley town, between the January 27 and January 30 were planned and later executed by Mungiki members backed by Naivasha political and business leaders.

Witnesses told Judge Waki that the planning involved government and political leaders in Nairobi, including key office holders “at the highest level of government”.

They had held two meetings, one at State House and the other at Nairobi Safari Club in the run up to the election, both attended by prominent Kikuyu personalities.

Former MPs

Intelligence agents collected information on the planning of the Naivasha violence by Mungiki and “national and local” politicians.

As early as January 3, 2008, NSIS had information that two former MPs were negotiating with Mungiki to have sect members assist Kikuyus to counter their attackers and that Mungiki members were meeting “in an undisclosed location in Nairobi with a view to carrying revenge attacks on Luos/Kalenjins travelling along Nairobi-Naivasha highway on undisclosed date.”

On January 15, intelligence was informed that Mungiki members were planning to discredit the Government by instigating chaos in Nairobi and Nakuru “while others would raid Kamiti and Naivasha Prisons to rescue their colleagues held there among them [Maina] Njenga.”

“This supported information presented to us in camera by a senior police officer in Naivasha who had learned on 9 January that “there was a likelihood of the so-called Mungiki making a way into prison with the intention of whisking away the chairman who is currently held in that particular prison,” says the commission.

Following up on this information, the Naivasha District Security and Intelligence Committee (DSIC) chaired by the District Commissioner decided on January 9 to increase patrols within the town and additional officers were sought from the Naivasha Prisons to assist the police.
The Naivasha Prisons Commandant, Mr Duncan Ogore, confirmed having received such request for 102 officers.

On January 21, NSIS learnt that Kikuyu youths in Naivasha “plan to block Nakuru-Naivasha and Gilgil-Mai Mahiu roads, to block/intercept vehicles from Western and Nyanza regions to fish out the targeted communities,” which happened on 27 January.

The commission heard that local politicians received support from outside Naivasha to mobilise local jobless youths, who were backed by Mungiki followers from Nairobi and Central Province.

The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights had evidence of two planning meetings held on January 23 and 26, at a hotel where influential Naivasha business people paid between Sh100 and Sh200 to attackers, who were to target mainly Luos.

A witness said the attacks happened at the same time, around 9am, in the estates of Kayole, Kabati, Kihooto and Karagita.

The raiders, the commission heard, “were dropped at those areas and they had orders [to] start at 9:00am”. A witness characterised them “as having the Mungiki type of organisation.”

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Add a comment (7 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by kenmare69
    Posted October 17, 2008 11:23 PM

    It breaks my heart to even imagine fellow Kenyans hatching out deathly plots as happened earlier this year. I just cannot fathom any measure of it. But what riles me is that the govt. is almost certainly going to farce around the commission’s report and only come up with scapegoats to appease us. Meanwhile, the architects of those crimes, who are in or well heeled to the corridors of power, will be going about their tainted lives in great comfort. This is the destructive moral shame of our land and we must do something to extricate ourselves of it.

  2. Submitted by gathoni
    Posted October 17, 2008 03:40 PM

    Truth cannot be one sided - i need the other half of the causers of post election violence - one cannot maintain a siege with the enemy behind... All in all, killing is wrong.

  3. Submitted by comprah
    Posted October 17, 2008 08:13 AM

    A cry is here, a cry of the most adversly affected, a cry of those who deserve justice most; but whose hope of getting this justice is null. Are we having these top officials still holding offices? What moral authority do they have? I would expect somebody to leave office even before the law catches up with him/her. Let us not wait for the law, kwani where is the conscience?

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