Annan faces tough challenge reconciling Kenya foes

Tue Jan 22, 2008 11:32pm GMT
 
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By Tim Cocks

NAIROBI (Reuters) - Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan will hold talks with Kenya's feuding parties on Wednesday in an effort to find a rapid solution to weeks of political crisis.

The 69-year old African statesman faces a tough challenge resolving a bitter standoff between Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and opposition challenger Raila Odinga over a disputed poll that plunged Kenya into chaos and ethnic bloodshed.

"We are determined to work with the parties to find a solution as quickly as possible," Annan told reporters after landing in Nairobi late on Tuesday.

"We want to determine by tomorrow how quickly the parties want to work with us," he said, flanked by fellow mediators Benjamin Mkapa, the former president of Tanzania, and Graca Machel, the wife of former South African leader Nelson Mandela.

Clashes between Kibaki and Odinga supporters, ethnic unrest and a brutal crackdown by the security forces have killed at least 650 people over the past month.

Odinga says a December 27 poll that returned Kibaki to power was fraudulent. His supporters have taken to the streets and mobs mostly targeting Kibaki's Kikuyu tribe have hacked people to death and burnt homes. There have also been reprisal killings.

The opposition will hold a memorial gathering starting at a mortuary then proceeding to a big football field near Nairobi's Kibera slum on Wednesday for those who have died in the unrest.

Police have banned all rallies and have broken up previous gatherings of supporters from both sides but have said they will allow the memorial gathering to go ahead.  Continued...

 
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