Politics
Police refute ICC claim Kibaki met Mungiki in 2007
Posted Friday, January 27 2012 at 22:30
The groups at State House Nairobi on November 26, 2007, were there to declare their support for President Kibaki’s re-election and to find out the plans he had for the youth, police said on Friday.
Commissioner of Police Mathew Iteere said 33 people representing eight groups were addressed by the President at a function attended by head of Public Service Francis Muthaura.
However, Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta was not at the function as alleged by the International Criminal Court. (READ: Judges: How Uhuru bankrolled violence)
He named the eight groups as Warembo na Kibaki, Vijana na Kibaki, Kipya-Youth Inter-parties, PNU Youth Alliance, Kanu Youth, KAWA, OKA, and Hawkers.
Mr Iteere dismissed allegations that Mungiki members attended the meeting. (READ: Kibaki attended Mungiki meeting at State House, says ICC)
“We have all the files dating many years back and we are ready to provide that information,” Mr Iteere said adding that no person could access State House without the consent of the Comptroller.
Mr Maina Kang’ethe and Mr Godwin Kamau who, according to the police, attended the function under the umbrella group called OKA were among the people adversely mentioned during the ICC ruling on Monday.
Police said Mr Kang’ethe and Mr Kamau attended the meeting together with Mr Anthony Kamau.
According to Witness OTP-4, Mr Maina Kang’ethe alias ‘Diambo’, Mr Godwin Kamau and “DO” were members of the highest group in the Mungiki ranking after Maina Njenga and Charles Ndung’u Wagacha.
Witness OTP-12, according to ICC ruling, stated more specifically that Mr Kang’ethe alias “Diambo” was the former bodyguard of Mr Njenga.
Draw support for Kibaki
A group of youths who met President Kibaki at State House days to the 2007 General Election also denied being members of the outlawed Mungiki sect.
The youths called themselves Kibaki Youth Campaign Team 2007, or Vijana na Kibaki at that time and were drawn from various tribes and could not belong to the banned sect as alleged by ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo.
In a statement read by Mr Evans Gor Semelango, who represented Nyanza at the function, the youth said they were only 20 in number. Police put the number at 33.
“While acknowledging the importance of ICC process in pursuit of justice, the said meeting was to purely draw support for the President,” Mr Semelango said.
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Submitted by sarowiwakenPosted January 29, 2012 04:25 AM
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Submitted by tpeteh
What is the value or benefit of making public denial statements. If the police have any credible they should ask for their day in court and present it there. Anything else is plain but useless nonsense. One would expect police and state house to know this
Posted January 29, 2012 01:45 AM -
Submitted by magicsami
Talk of disguised colonialism. This judges seem to be working under the whims of some foreign masters. Indeed, this woman judge known as Ekaterina or something like that is an attention seekeer, nothing more. How long will it take for us to understand that we have been fooled?
Posted January 29, 2012 01:14 AM -
Submitted by sil8316
Ukweli ukidhihiri, uwongo hujitenga...who's telling the truth here...time will tell!!
Posted January 29, 2012 12:29 AM -
Submitted by MaizeScandal_23b
Like I have said before, the ICC claims are just crap. I dont know if they were just desperate to balance the equation between ODM and PNU or what. Any reasonable and sane person can see that these allegations are baloney. It makes me sick when kenyans throw their patrotism through the window and allow some people to rubbish their seat of power because of the percieved political gains they might have. These allegations are silly.
Posted January 28, 2012 09:13 PM




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The Kenya Police should know that ICC is not Kenyans that it treats with contempt. It is the Kenya's intelligence agency that provided the information against the Ocampo 4 to the International Criminal Court at the Hague. Statements like these are what strengthen the cases against the suspects. Gordon Teti