Uhuru Kenyatta: "I can run Kenya while on trial."

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I CAN RUN KENYA WHILE ON TRIAL, SAYS UHURU



Monday, January 21, 2013 - 00:00 -- BY OLIVER MATHENGE


JUBILEE Coalition presidential hopeful Uhuru Kenyatta says that he will face no difficulties in running the country even if he is required to be at The Hague for trial.

The Deputy Prime Minister told Al Jazeera he and his running-mate, Eldoret North MP William Ruto, will continue to appear before the ICC even if they are elected President and Deputy President in March.

He added that there will be no vacuum of power in the country despite the Rome Statutes requiring that the accused must be present in court during the trial.
"There is absolutely no power vacuum because one thing that people always tend to forget is that Kenya is not a banana republic. Kenya is a country that actually has really firm and clear institutions in place," Uhuru told Al Jazeera's Folly Bah Thibault in the interview to be broadcast tomorrow.

Uhuru, who has been touted as one of the front-runners in the elections, said that since the two cases are different and there was a possibility that they would not be required in court at the same time.

"And we also are not facing similar charges. We are never there at the same time if at all. So consequently the system and the state will continue to run regardless of the court. The two are not interlinked," Uhuru said.

Uhuru and Ruto are among four Kenyans the ICC has charged with crimes against humanity in relation to the 2007-08 post-election violence. The other two are former Cabinet Secretary Francis Muthaura and radio presenter Joshua Sang.

Uhuru said he is confident about the outcome of his trial at The Hague which kicks off in April - a month after the country goes to the polls. There is a possibility that the country will be holding the presidential run-off, if there is no winner in round one, on the same date the trials start.

ICC Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has told the court that she will need more than one year to present her case against Uhuru, Ruto and their co-accused.

Thibault asked Uhuru if being elected as president would be a vote of confidence against the ICC and if this would be a sign of vindication.

Uhuru said that though this was not a proof of innocence, it would show that Kenyans are not confident with the charges brought against him and Ruto.

"I am not going to say that it means I am innocent but it will show as we have consistently stated that the charges and how they have been brought about, the Kenyans themselves put to question the charges that have been leveled against us. Clearly… I am not saying that international justice doesn't have a purpose… But if Kenyans do vote for us, it will mean that Kenyans themselves have questioned how and the process that has landed us at the ICC but that does not mean that we will cease to cooperate because as I have said most importantly we understand and recognise the rule of law and we will continue to cooperate as long as we are signatories to the Rome Statute," Uhuru said.

At least 1,133 people were reported to have died in the violence that also led to the displacement of 650,000 Kenyans from their homes.

Uhuru said he is innocent and denies any links with the Mungiki sect, one of the key militias involved in some of the violence.

The DPM also said he believes his main opponent in the March presidential race, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, bears the political responsibility for what happened after the 2007 elections.

Uhuru said neither he nor Ruto were running for presidency in 2007 and thus Raila, who is the Cord Alliance presidential nominee, should be asked to explain who was responsible for the violence.

"So consequently, you who wants to assume leadership, you who wants to give this country directions, you who is leading a team, ultimately that is where responsibility accounts and matters, so consequently that question should be addressed by the two individuals who were seeking presidency in 2007," Uhuru said.

Asked whether Raila should be charged at the ICC, Uhuru responded: "The question that I was asked by Mr Ocampo when I was at the pre-trial was whether Raila Odinga should face criminal charges in the ICC… I said I am not an investigator, but what I do know is that Raila Odinga has political responsibility for the chaos that occurred in 2007. I stand by that position."

I CAN RUN KENYA WHILE ON TRIAL, SAYS UHURU | The Star
 
Na akifungwa ata run Kenya akiwa gerezani Hague,itakuwa kama Pablo Escobar ! alikuwa anaendesha kikundi chake hata akiwa gerezani.Jamani Kenya ni nchi,haiwezekaniki mtu aseme yupo tayari kuwa raisi hata kama atakuwa anahudhuria kesi huko Hague,hii itakuwa ni ya kwanzo kutokea duniani.Psss! Prof Ndemo asije akaniita natoa maoni ya uchochezi
 

Kiburi ndicho kinachowasumbua hawa mabwana!
 
uyu lazima atakutwa na hatia na kufungwa kuna ushahidi wa kutosha,harafu majaji wa kule awaongeki,ata baba awezi ongoza familia yake vizuri akiwa jela anacheza na kuongoza nchi,apo Odinga anachukua nchi
 
uyu lazima atakutwa na hatia na kufungwa kuna ushahidi wa kutosha,harafu majaji wa kule awaongeki,ata baba awezi ongoza familia yake vizuri akiwa jela anacheza na kuongoza nchi,apo Odinga anachukua nchi

80 ICC witnesses in safe houses

By STANDARD INVESTIGATION TEAM

The 80 witnesses the International Criminal Court will line up against Jubilee presidential candidate, his running mate and two other Kenyans when trials start in April are now all out of the country.

Together with the their families, the witnesses to testify against Mr Uhuru Kenyatta, Mr William Ruto, Mr Francis Muthaura and Mr Joshua Arap Sang, in the two sets of cases have also been put under lifetime protection and some could even have been given new identities.

This is to ensure they are safe from retribution from those aggrieved by their testimonies as to what, in their view, the suspects contributed to Kenya's bloody postelection violence five years ago.

The more than 80 witnesses, who include new ones flown out of the country recently along with their families, will not be returning to Kenya after completion of the cases.

ICC has also cancelled an earlier plan to relocate the witnesses to African countries after the cases, highly confidential sources revealed.

The witnesses and civil society groups had opposed the relocation plan, arguing it would expose them because the African Union (AU) and its member states had already opposed the court's action.

Trials for Uhuru, who is vying for the presidency on a Jubilee ticket and Ruto, as well as Muthaura who was then Head of the Civil Service, as well as Sang, who is Kass FM's head of operations, start on April 11.

Wednesday, a source linked to the witnesses and the ICC protection desk said the witnesses would now enjoy a raft of measures on their safety under a plan to be supported by the court and several European States where the witnesses have been living for the past three years.

"The worries earlier on expressed by the witnesses about their safety and welfare have now been addressed and the witnesses are now set to focus on the trials", said the source.

Some of the witnesses also confirmed they were now comfortable after ICC Chief Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda personally intervened to secure her evidence by assuring them about the safety measures.

"We will be given dual citizenship so that those who may wish to visit home can do so and return to their protection areas at any time they may wish," said one of them speaking from a country whose identity we can't reveal for security reasons.

The number of those to enjoy the protection stands at over 200 because each of the witnesses had been allowed to move with their family members, especially spouses and children. The family members will also enjoy other benefits, including education.

To be moved

Some of the close relatives to the witnesses who are still in the country will also be flown out if they wish to be placed under protection.From Next week, the witnesses are expected to be moved to The Hague to await the opening of the trials.

One of the Civil Society groups that has been pushing for better protection for the witnesses is the Center for Human Rights and Democracy (CHRD) whose executive director, Mr Ken Wafula, had written to the ICC over the matter.

He argued that neglecting the safety of the witnesses would equally undermine evidence in the upcoming cases. "They should be protected at all costs because they have put their own lives and that of their families on the line so that they stand for what they know about the poll violence", said Wafula.

Bensouda had applied to ICC Judges to be allowed to meet the witnesses ahead of the hearings.?

The sources said the witnesses had been officially notified that they would be required to give their evidence in the cases.
It has also emerged that ICC has finalised investigations against some individuals who attempted to tamper with the witnesses through threats and hacking of emails. Investigators are however still weighing how to take up the issue with the judges.

The investigators who operate from two neighbouring countries are also pushing to secure further evidence to strengthen cases against the Kenyans, particularly murder.

Already they have in the last few weeks reportedly obtained crucial evidence on the Kiambaa Church fire where more than 35 people were killed in a chilling case of murderous arson.

The latest evidence has linked a former powerful politician in the Rift Valley region to the violence and he will be implicated during the hearings. He had earlier been named in Justice Phillip Waki Commission on the violence.

Uhuru has said there will be no power vacuum when he attends trials at The Hague should he be elected president either in the March 4 contest or in the run-up in April if there will be no clear winner in the first round.

The Constitution requires that the winner must get over 50 per cent of the votes cast as well as at least 25 per cent of the votes cast in at least half of the 47 Counties in the first round. If no one attains these margins, then the top two go

Speaking to Al Jazeera television on Wednesday night, Uhuru said Kenya had not turned into a Banana Republic and has institutions that would ensure government was running well were if he were President and Ruto his deputy, and both are at The Hague where they would be required to be physically present in court.

"Even as we face these charges we will still continue to appear. There is absolutely no power vacuum because one thing that people always tend to forget is that Kenya is not a Banana Republic. Kenya is a country that has really firm and clear institutions in place…so consequently the system and the State will continue to run regardless of the court, the two are not interlinked," stated Uhuru.

Standard Digital News - Kenya : 80 ICC witnesses in safe houses
 
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