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Archive for January 7th, 2010

What victims of Post Election Violence want

Posted by Administrator on January 7, 2010

BY JUDIE KABERIA (CAPITAL Fm)

NAIROBI, Kenya, Jan 6 – “I want to forgive them, because I want peace. There is nothing else that can give us peace except forgiveness. They chased my family out of our house and up to now they have not left my house. But I forgive them, because I know them and they know me,”
 
This is the grief and the reality of life that 79-year-old Mzee Kamau and many others have to live with following the 2008 post election violence.

“We drink together, they even greet me,” he says somberly. “I come to Kibera every day hoping they will give me back my house, but they live there as if it is their house; they have completely refused to leave.”

From the tone of his voice, it’s clear Mzee Kamau is hurt with memories of the violence still vividly fresh on his mind. He was forced to move his family to live with a relative in Nairobi’s Kawangware slum.
 
The septuagenarian, however, wants to leave vengeance to deity. “I leave them to God, not The Hague or a local tribunal can do anything,” he asserts. 

Deep in the heart of Kibera, accessible through careful hops over stinking garbage, open sewers and dirty paths is Mary Wanjeri, another victim of the violence.

It’s about 2.00pm. Wanjeri and her friends are conversing in hushed tones in an illegal brew den at the centre of Kibera. In a slum like this, a stranger is easily picked out and my entrance is immediately greeted with suspicion as everyone goes silent.

I am definitely out of place with my microphone and recorder. At this point, my guide quickly signals me to identify myself by my first name to conceal my tribe.

It is only with his intervention that Ms Wanjeri agrees to tell her story.

“I lost my house and property. My two cousins were murdered in cold blood – hacked to death,” she starts. “You see, we live with these people every day, what will happen if they are arrested?” she querries, maintaining that forgiveness is the best option for her.

Not far from where she lives, Ronald Igadwa wipes tears and sweat from his brow as he sadly narrates the aftermath of a disputed presidential election,

“I was very hurt, we suffered. We could not sit outside, it was helter skelter. People never wanted to see other tribes, it was hatred; my business went down to ashes, but I m praying for them, all I want is peace, they don’t have to be punished.”

The post-poll violence in Kenya claimed over 1,500 lives and displaced 650,000 people. Property worth billions of shillings was also destroyed.

Kibera was among the worst hit areas in Nairobi and two years down memory lane, the fear, suspicion and hatred is easily noticeable.

Despite the agony they went through, these victims want to forgive – quite an unusual reaction given the magnitude of their suffering. It is evident in the way they look around suspiciously and lower their voices anytime the issue of the post election violence is raised.

When they talk of forgiveness, the tone of the voice rises, it seems as if they are going out of their way to make the whole world know they want forgiveness. Could it be a sign of fear or intimidation?

Why are they quick to forgive?

International Centre for Policy and Conflict Executive Director Ndung’u Wainaina says it is clear victims want justice done but they cannot say this because of fear,

“If people will be prosecuted it will only be a few of them. What do you do with the rest of the suspects whom they live with everyday?  Many of them have fear for their security, which is a very serious concern.”

Mr Igadwa and his neighbours may be fronting forgiveness, but will they be getting any closure if they still have to live with the very same people who killed their relatives, stole and destroyed their property?

But even as the victims continue suffering trying to re-collect their lives, neither the government nor the politicians are willing to bring justice to them.

The government refused to refer the Kenyan perpetrators to the International Criminal Court forcing the Prosecutor Moreno Ocampo to seek approval from the Pre-trial chamber. On the other hand Members of Parliament have frustrated a Bill seeking to establish a local tribunal.

The only window of opportunity for justice is the Pre Trial judges to give Mr Ocampo a go-ahead to open a case against the Kenyan perpetrators.

Though the government gave strong indications that the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission was the solution, a lot remains to be seen.

For Njonjo Mue of The International Centre for Transitional Justice – Kenya office -, justice involves truth telling, prosecution of perpetrators, promotion of democracy and human rights.
 
“The society we want to create in Kenya is a society where truth and mercy have met together, justice and peace have kissed each other so that you are telling me what you did and the truth about what you did and why you did it, there cannot be peace without justice, and there cannot be justice without peace, but the two is not an either or, it is both end,” he explains.

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Why I reported back to work late this year

Posted by Administrator on January 7, 2010

Today is my first working day of the year and the events of the last three days have jolted me rather harshly into the New Year. I left the village last Saturday all set to return to the Coast on Sunday evening. Initially, one of my cousins (his name is Bob) had volunteered to give me a ride back to the city. We even agreed that we would leave the village at about 7 am so that we would be in the city by lunchtime. Come 7 am, my cousin sent me a text saying that we leave at 11 am since he had a hangover. I didn’t want to complain too much since I was a ‘beggar’ in this situation.

Imagine when at 11 am, my cousin told me to find him at the nearest shopping centre with my luggage. I had to ‘bribe’ my young nephews and nieces to help me transport all the goodies (vegetables and chicken), hat my mother had insisted that I take for my use at the Coast.

When I got to the shopping centre, I found Bob holding court in the company of a group of men and women. His audience was in rapt attention listening to his tales about being always up and about on company travel. It did not hurt that he was throwing rounds of beer to his audience- a fact which must have helped the listening process. He told me to make myself at home and sit in the middle of two ladies who had also ‘begged’ him to give them a ride.

He whispered to me, “ one chick for you, and one for me!” and then gave me a leery wink. Initially, I was very reluctant to the whole idea of delaying our travel, but after a few drinks my reluctance melted away. By 2 p.m, we were having our second round of roast meat as the drinks kept flowing.

I had even managed to banish my earlier fears about having another “Peris, of last year Xmas” situation and was seriously tuning the girl seated next to me (she told me her name is Wambo). We finally managed to leave the village at about 4 pm and by then we were tipsy and I had invited Wambo over to Mombasa for a nice weekend in my ‘spacious bachelor pad.”

After an hour of driving, I had to ask Bob to surrender the driving to me. My cousin Bob was clearly showing off to ‘his chick”(her name was Terry), and pulling very strange stunts. He also kept using every corner and bend as an opportunity to pat her thighs, or to lean over and whisper in her ear. We stopped for a short call after one hour, and I persuaded my cousin to let me drive so that he could ‘zero in’ on the girl from the back seat.

My strategy where Wambo was concerned was to portray myself as the more sober-minded and more careful driver who was not in a rush to do a thing. I must say that Bob has a super machine that moves fast and easily and we ended up in the city at 8 pm. Bob made the logical suggestion that we should go out for a meal.

The meal became ‘the drinks’ which naturally became ‘the dancing’. Let us just say that I missed my Sunday flight because I could not summon the energy to wake up and be at the airport by 3 pm. Luckily for me, my ticket allowed for one free change, so I moved my flight to Monday evening.

This time the jam caused by the matatu strike caused me to miss my departure time altogether. The airline was not as gracious and I had to pay an extra 10k for a new passport. By this time, the vegetables that had been given to me had rotten in the boot of Bob’s car. In our quest to have fun with Wambo and Terry, we had totally forgotten about the veggies.

So, I missed my official start date by three days and now I have to deal with influx of emails and things to do that need my attention. What a start to the year!

Business Daily

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African immigrants deal with scrutiny concerns after bombing attempt

Posted by Administrator on January 7, 2010

by Larry Miller
NNPA News Service

PHILADELPHIA – When Islamic extremists piloted passenger jets into the Pentagon and the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, it changed the way many Americans viewed people of Middle Eastern descent and Islam as well. In the years since, more American Muslims and Middle Eastern immigrants have reported harassment, hate-motivated crimes against them and discrimination.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab

After the recent incident in which Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian national, was charged with attempting to blow up a plane, some recent African immigrants are worried they, too, will become targets of hate.

Bernard Bility, who is from Liberia, said he is concerned about the negative image portrayed by media regarding Abdulmutallab and how it reflects on African people.

“Of course, it is negative,” Bility said. “He should be held responsible for his actions, but the action of a single individual reflects on all of us, there is a certain stigma on all of us being West African. It’s not fair to us. We live in this society and it can make it difficult for all of us – we can be joined to that crime and we should not be held liable. However, some people might think, ‘I wonder if this fellow is from the same place as that fellow.’”

According to the U.S. Justice Department, Abdulmutallab, 23, was charged in a federal criminal complaint with attempting to destroy Northwest Airlines passenger flight 253.

Federal authorities allege that Abdulmutallab mixed concealed chemicals into explosives in an attempt to blow up the aircraft as the plane was making its final approach to Detroit’s Metropolitan Airport. He has been charged with willfully attempting to destroy an aircraft within the special aircraft jurisdiction of the United States and willfully placing and causing to be placed a destructive device within the proximity to the aircraft. If convicted, the defendant faces at least 20 years in federal prison.

Lansara Koroma (right), founder and executive director of the International Forum for the Rights of Black People, with shop owner Ishmael Donzo. Many question if increased racial profiling could happen in the African community with the attempted bombing of a passenger plane by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian national. (Photo courtesy of Abdul R. Sulay/Philadelphia Tribune)

Lansara Koroma (right), founder and executive director of the International Forum for the Rights of Black People, with shop owner Ishmael Donzo. Many question if increased racial profiling could happen in the African community with the attempted bombing of a passenger plane by Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian national. (Photo courtesy of Abdul R. Sulay/Philadelphia Tribune)

“The actions of Abdulmutallab are those of one man and are not representative of us,” saidbusinessman Lansara Koroma, a native of Sierra Leone. Koroma, who the founder and executive chairman of the International Forum for the Rights of Black People, also said that the actions of one man should not overshadow the achievements of African people.

“African people have done so much and accomplished so much that one man can’t tarnish who we are and what we’re capable of. This has nothing to do with us.”

According to recent reports from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, attempts to radicalize African Muslims are not a recent development. On Aug. 7, 1998, hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous bomb explosions at the United States embassies in the East African cities of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya.

In November 2009, the Justice Department announced that terrorism charges had been filed against eight defendants in Minnesota in an ongoing terrorism investigation. The defendants are accused of providing financial support to individuals who traveled to Somalia to fight on behalf of al-Shabaab, a foreign terrorist organization. The defendants also allegedly attended terrorist training camps operated by al-Shabaab and fought on behalf of the organization. Almost all of the defendants were of Somali descent.

“The recruitment of young people from Minneapolis and other U.S. communities to fight for extremists in Somalia has been the focus of intense investigation for many months,” said Assistant Atty. Gen. David Kris in a press release. “While the charges underscore our progress to date, this investigation is ongoing. Those who sign up to fight or recruit for al-Shabaab’s terror network should be aware that they may end up as defendants in the United States or casualties of the Somali conflict.”

Federal investigators said that between September 2007 and October 2009, at least 20 young men, all but one of Somali descent, left Minneapolis for Somalia, where they trained with al-Shabaab. Many of them ended up fighting with al-Shabaab against Ethiopian forces, African Union troops and the internationally supported Transitional Federal Government.

According to federal investigators, Umaru Abdul Mutallab, the father of Abdulmutallab, contacted the U.S. embassy in Abuja, Nigeria, on Nov. 19, and told of his son’s radicalization.

On Tuesday afternoon, President Barack Obama met with relevant agency heads to discuss the ongoing reviews of the attempted terrorist attack on Christmas Day and to move forward on rectifying the problems that were exhibited that day. Afterwards, he said, “The bottom line is this: The U.S. government had sufficient information to have uncovered this plot and potentially disrupt the Christmas Day attack. But our intelligence community failed to connect those dots, which would have placed the suspect on the ‘no fly’ list.

“In other words, this was not a failure to collect intelligence; it was a failure to integrate and understand the intelligence that we already had. The information was there.  Agencies and analysts who needed it had access to it.  And our professionals were trained to look for it and to bring it all together,” Obama said.

  “Now, I will accept that intelligence, by its nature, is imperfect, but it is increasingly clear that intelligence was not fully analyzed or fully leveraged. That’s not acceptable, and I will not tolerate it.”

Meanwhile, Abana Kwaten, 25, from Ghana, said she hasn’t encountered any problems in the wake of tightened security and terrorism concerns.

“This isn’t going to tarnish our (Africans’) image. That’s like saying all black men are criminals shooting each other on the streets. All Africans aren’t terrorists and no one I know is suggesting that,” she said. “Of course some people are going to worry about you just because you have a different accent.”

(This report is special to the NNPA from the Philadelphia Tribune and includes information from whitehouse.gov.)

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