Interview: Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga

Despite contrary evidence, Odinga claims Kenya's relations with the White House are cordial.

By Mark Scheffler
Published: May 26, 2009 06:17 ET
Updated: July 23, 2009 21:30 ET
Page 2 of 2

Kenya’s prime minister says the United States is helping with health and food aid and the two countries are working together to stop the piracy threat in East Africa’s coastal waters.

The strained relations have been evident since the deadly riots and street violence that took place in Kenya in late December 2007 and the early part of 2008 in the aftermath of a presidential election gone wrong between Odinga and incumbent President Mwai Kibaki.

Early returns and exit polls projected Odinga as the winner, but once the election was over, Kibaki had apparently won by more than 200,000 votes, to the surprise of many local and international observers.

That sent Odinga supporters out onto the streets to protest what they saw as a fraudulent vote tally. In response Kibaki’s military police squads used strong-arm tactics to quell the violence.

Mayhem ensued for the next few weeks, resulting in some 1,300 people dead and the image of Kenya — a tourist beacon with a reputation for stability — severely tarnished.

Under international pressure to control the chaos, the two rival politicians in February 2008 forged a power-sharing deal at the behest of former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan and then-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. After a few more months of haggling over the details, Odinga was officially named prime minister in April 2008, with Kibaki continuing as president.

But trouble may be brewing yet again in Kenya. Police and judicial reforms have been slow to take hold, Odinga admits, and reports of corruption by both Odinga and Kibaki are rampant.

There are also signs that the power-sharing arrangement isn’t working. Observers say the government is plagued by inertia. Odinga complains he’s being left out of the decision-making process and is proposing structural changes that give the power to run the government to the prime minister, with the president handling foreign policy and defense.

“It is not that there is anything wrong with the structure that has been introduced,” says Odinga. “It is only the resistance by those that have been there not to respect [it].”

Kibaki’s contingent, for its part, has accused the Odinga crowd of fomenting a coup, a charge Odinga himself is all too familiar with. The son of Kenya’s first post-independence vice president, Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, the prime minister spent most of the 1980s in prison for allegedly plotting a coup against Kenya’s ruler at the time, the dictator Daniel arap Moi.

Things have reached a point where Johnnie Carson, the former U.S. ambassador to Kenya and now the assistant secretary of state for African affairs, made a trip to the country earlier in May to deliver a stern warning to the co-leaders that changes need to be made. He was quoted in Kenya’s Daily Nation saying the U.S. was “deeply concerned and worried whether the events of the last several weeks were again a prelude to a round of instability,” adding that “political tensions must not be allowed to turn into a political crisis, and a political crisis must not be allowed to turn into political violence.”

Carson’s words were straightforward: “We came here to warn a friend about our concerns.” It is clear that instead of letting Kenya bask in a special glow because it is the ancestral fatherland of Obama, the new U.S. president is showing that he knows the situation in Kenya well and he intends to hold the country to high standards of democracy and economic management.

More GlobalPost dispatches on Kenya:

Kenya angered by killing

New wave of elephant poaching in Kenya

Recession worsens Kenyan famine

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Posted by Hop Holmberg on May 29, 2009 16:38 ET

Hurrah for the Obama Administration. They are sending the right message to the President and the Prime Minister.

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