Politics
Raila to push on with Mau drive
Posted Wednesday, January 13 2010 at 22:30
A ceremony to plant trees in Mau Forest will go on as planned, despite a tiff between Prime Minister Raila Odinga and State House. But it is an almost foregone conclusion that President Kibaki will skip the occasion, likely to be seen as a blow to the effort to conserve the Mau.
On Wednesday morning, Mr Odinga confirmed that the function would go ahead and that “the government will be there”. He was, however, not categorical whether President Kibaki was expected. Prodded by reporters, Mr Odinga said: “Remember the President announced that he will lead the nation in a tree planting exercise in the Mau.”
Soon afterwards, the Presidential Press Service issued a bulletin on the President’s Friday diary. “President Mwai Kibaki will this Friday 15th January, 2010 witness the swearing in of Judges of the Interim Independent Constitutional Dispute Resolution Court (IICDRC),” it said.
The statement did not state the time of the swearing in, but did create the impression that the President will be engaged in other duties and the tree-planting function was not in his plans. The President’s diary is ordinarily given to the media a day in advance.
During the PM’s press conference at the Treasury Building in Nairobi, it was clear that Mr Odinga believed — even though he did not expressly state it — that the President would lead the exercise, intended to be a show of commitment to recover the forest from illegal settlers.
The announcement he was referring to was the President’s New Year speech. PPS later issued another statement which seemed to contradict the PM. “It is misleading for sections of the media to report that the President gave a date on tree planting in Mau forest,” it said.
Attached to it was the President’s verbatim New Year speech, which read in part: “We will also begin an ambitious plan of planting trees and get our forest cover to ten per cent.” The statements had the effect of suggesting that the President was not attending the function, without directly saying so.
Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka will not be there, either. He was scheduled to leave the country on Wednesday night for Mozambique where he will be representing President Kibaki at the swearing-in of the country’s newly elected president, Mr Armando Guebuza, on Friday.
And in a paid-up advert appearing elsewhere in this paper, Mr Odinga has invited Kenyans, the diplomatic community and development partners to join the tree-planting exercise. On Tuesday, Mr Odinga had sent out letters to all ministers and assistant ministers inviting them to the function during which the government would launch the “Save the Mau Trust Fund.”
Moved from January 8
“The Government has organised a tree-planting exercise which is scheduled for Friday 15th January, 2010 at Kiptunga, Molo at 11am. His Excellency the President, myself, the entire Cabinet and Members of Parliament will participate in the exercise,” read the letter, a copy of which the Nation has seen.
The letter followed an earlier one by Head of Civil Service Francis Muthaura to all Cabinet ministers telling them that the function had been moved from January 8, to Wednesday. Mr Muthaura’s letter dated January 7, said: “You were invited by the Rt Hon Prime Minister to the above tree-planting exercise on 8th January, 2010, at Kiptunga forest station in Molo.
“However, due to unforeseen circumstances, the event has been re-scheduled to Wednesday, 13th January 2010 at the same venue.” Even though inviting the ministers to attend, Mr Muthaura’s letter made no reference to the President’s attendance.
It is likely that a section of Cabinet ministers allied to the PNU coalition may be planning to stay away from the event. Mr Odinga has in the recent past clashed with Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta over compensation for Mau settlers. The PM accused Mr Kenyatta, who denied there were any plans to pay billions to settlers, of “political chicanery”.
On Wednesday, an aide to Mr Kenyatta hinted that the Deputy PM may skip the event because “it has nothing to do with the Treasury”. “This is a function involving the ministries of the Environment, Forestry, Lands, Special Programmes and the PM’s office which has been coordinating Mau issues,” the aide, who said he was not authorised to speak on behalf of Mr Kenyatta, said.
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Submitted by shiverenje93Posted January 15, 2010 11:29 AM
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Submitted by chekulo
Even after Ruto and his followers witnessed the drought in RV (death of cattle and drying up of crops) they still can not spare a few hours to plant trees in Mau? Ruto said he is going for the presidency, are sober Kenyans ready to follow such a person? Only Kutuny and the likes of him will do. Raila go a head, you have shown you are the only remaining person in government who can lead the country. The rest are hopeless and can keep away.
Posted January 15, 2010 12:03 AM -
Submitted by shiverenje93
Go on Tinga, they are unknowingly handing you over the presidency in 2012. Bravo
Posted January 14, 2010 11:26 PM -
Submitted by tuffgong
PNU AND ODM are acting like to kidz in a sweet shop.Neither wants anything to work coz they thrive best were there is chaos ie no accountability as they pinch kenyan pockets.if they cannot work together then both shld b sent packing.
Posted January 14, 2010 10:52 PM -
Submitted by licom
I wish I was in kenya tomorrow I could have sponsored several young people to accompany Raila even from Nairobi to go and save our country
Posted January 14, 2010 10:21 PM




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For sure some of us have never voted for Kibaki. In 2002 it was a vote against Moi and Moism.In 2007 you all know who we elected and what happened afterwards. So aende au asiende Mau leo its same difference.The grabbers including those who stole elections will see after 2012. Mau ni mali yetu. Raila Oyeeh!