Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Kenyans React To Election Results

The people of Kenya have spoken as to
who will run the country and the losers,
unable to except defeat take to the streets
and hundreds are dead. This is a painful pill
to swallow. Events like this will continue to
keep the continent of Africa in term oil and
destabilization. This in turn keeps much of
Africa in poverty and investors away which
the continent needs to mine it's resources.
Please fell free to comment on the story
below. Africa can no longer be ignored and
shunned by the more prosperous countries
that are secretly taking advantage of it's plight.

Post- election riots in Kenya descended into savage tribal killings Tuesday as a mob burned a church where families had taken shelter from the violence, leaving at least 35 people dead, witnesses reported. Many of the victims were children.

The church massacre in Eldoret followed the killings overnight of 18 people, some reportedly beheaded, in the town about 150 miles northwest of Nairobi, the capital. A police officer also was killed Tuesday.

Witnesses reported revenge killings and clashes between mobs from rival tribes armed with machetes called pangas or with bows and arrows.

"They're armed with pangas, and when one group kills three people, the other group also kills three people. When one burns three houses, the other burns three houses. The situation has really deteriorated," said Ken Wafula, a local human rights activist.

"There is violence in all parts of town," said Kikechi Biketi, Eldoret correspondent for the Standard daily newspaper. "Houses have been burned indiscriminately in most parts of Eldoret. They're burning tires in the roads. There's no transport. You can't move. The situation is very bad."

Eldoret police estimated that about 100 people had died in the town in the last four days, as furious opposition supporters rampaged, alleging ballot-rigging in Thursday's presidential election. Police reported 170 dead in clashes across Kenya, but news agencies put the number at between 200 and 270.

Tens of thousands of people in Eldoret had fled their homes to take refuge in police compounds and church yards. Some houses sheltered dozens of terrified people.

Although the presidential candidates had avoided overt tribal campaigning, which is taboo in Kenyan society, ethnic violence exploded immediately after President Mwai Kibaki was announced the winner and hastily sworn in Sunday evening to a second term.

As the violence continued Tuesday, diplomats in Nairobi pressed Kibaki and his main rival, Raila Odinga, to negotiate a political solution to stem the killings.



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