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Monday 13 February RNW - NEWS, ANALYSIS AND BACKGROUND INFORMATION IN 10 LANGUAGES, WORLDWIDE 24/7 ON RADIO, TV AND ONLINE
Post election violence Kenya 2008 (photo: EPA)
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Nairobi, Kenya
Nairobi, Kenya

U.S. says Kenya must reform to avert another crisis

Published on : 26 January 2010 - 4:29pm | By RNW Radio Netherlands Worldwide
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Kenya risks suffering another eruption of violence even before its next presidential election in 2012 if long-awaited reforms are not put in place soon, the United States warned.

 

Ethnic clashes killed at least 1,300 people and drove 300,000 from their homes after a disputed ballot at the end of 2007, shattering the image of east Africa's biggest economy as the region's tranquil business, tourism and logistics hub.

 

A coalition government formed to end the turmoil has disappointed many Kenyans by doing little more than bicker amongst its members, while local activists and donor nations say time is running out for it to enact the reforms it promised.

 

"Failure to implement significant reforms will greatly enhance prospects for a violent crisis in 2012 or perhaps even before, which might well prove worse than the last post-election crisis," U.S. Ambassador Michael Ranneberger said. "Most Kenyans agree the window to achieve significant reforms will close by the end of this year, so the coalition leaders must act decisively and with a much greater sense of urgency," he told a business gathering in Nairobi.

 

Washington has already barred several senior Kenyan officials, including the attorney general, from visiting the United States over concerns about the slow pace of reforms, and Ranneberger said more travel bans might be issued soon.


"Put behind bars"

"We may take additional actions in the coming weeks regarding persons who are not welcome," Ranneberger said.

 

The ambassador listed a string of unresolved corruption scandals that he said had cost Kenyan taxpayers more than a $1 billion and said Washington had suspended a planned five-year, $7 million programme with the Education Ministry that was due to start this year because of another procurement scandal there.
"Those culpable for the fraud should not merely be sacked; they should be prosecuted and put behind bars," he said, to loud applause from his audience of business leaders.

 

He said President Mwai Kibaki and Prime Minister Raila Odinga, the former opposition leader, should set aside their differences in talks to create a new constitution.

 

 

President Barack Obama and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called both men recently to urge them to compromise. "The development of a consensus draft and the holding of a successful referendum would constitute a very significant watershed for reforms," Ranneberger said. "My government, at the highest levels, would respond very positively to this."

 

 

 

source: Reuters

photo: EPA

 

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