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Kibaki 'Not Linked To Criminals'

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  • Kibaki 'Not Linked To Criminals'

    KIBAKI 'NOT LINKED TO CRIMINALS'

    News24, South Africa
    Dec 8 2006

    Nairobi - Kenya's usually mild-mannered President Mwai Kibaki has
    furiously denied family links with two flamboyant Armenian brothers
    deported last week for roughing up customs officers at Nairobi airport.

    The president also promised an investigation into the activities in
    Kenya of brothers Artur Margariyan and Arthur Sargsian, who had been
    accused of receiving official protection for shady dealings in the
    east Africa nation.

    The saga of the Armenians had gripped Kenya for months.

    Terming claims of family links "blatant lies", Kibaki demanded an
    apology and threatened to sue the media for a report linking the
    Armenian pair to a woman said by some local media to be the president's
    second wife.

    Media house raided

    But, Kibaki's statement - a rare flash of anger for the mild-mannered
    74-year-old president - did little to quell growing demands from
    Kenyans for a proper probe into allegations of links between the
    Armenians and powerful politicians.

    The two burst into the national limelight in March after an opposition
    politician accused them of being "mercenaries" used by the government
    to provide muscle for a raid on Kenya's second biggest media house,
    an act widely condemned around the world.

    The brothers denied that, saying they were respectable businessmen
    wanting to invest in Kenya.

    Brothers 'became celebrities'

    But, they had become virtual celebrities in recent months, seldom out
    of cartoons and gossip columns, and leading a swaggering lifestyle
    that included parties, luxury cars, flashy jewellery and trademark
    sunglasses.

    The saga took a fresh twist with their deportation on Friday after
    a scuffle at the airport.

    But, a broad spectrum of Kenyan politicians, civil activists and media
    complained they should have been kept here, and interrogated over
    their alleged high-level connections and mysterious business dealings.

    Two lesser-known brothers deported

    Kibaki said: "I have only one family, which consists of the first
    lady Lucy Kibaki, daughter Judy Kibaki, Sons Jimmy, David, Tony and
    their wives and children.

    "No member of my family has had any dealings with the said
    foreigners...I am, therefore, demanding that the newspaper should
    apologise to me and my family for the blatant lies."

    Two lesser-known brothers were also deported. Kibaki added: "The
    matter of their stay and transactions in Kenya is the subject of
    investigations."

    Fuelling concern at what they were doing, police said guns, machetes
    and bulletproof vests were recovered at the Armenians' luxury home
    in Nairobi after they were deported.

    It was reported that the government's handling of the saga was
    "shameful".

    The reports said: "Besides seeking explanations as to why the two
    brothers were quickly spirited out of the country, the public demands
    to be told how government vehicles got their way into the Runda
    residence of the Artur brothers," it said in an editorial.
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