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Kenya Opposition Boss'S Coup Confession Stirs Row

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  • Kenya Opposition Boss'S Coup Confession Stirs Row

    Kenya opposition boss's coup confession stirs row

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    July 24, 2006

    NAIROBI, July 24 (Reuters) - An admission by Kenya's harshest
    government critic that he backed a coup attempt against then President
    Daniel arap Moi has rocked the country's already turbulent political
    scene a year ahead of a 2007 election.

    A new biography of opposition leader Raila Odinga, 59, reveals he was
    involved in plotting the 1982 coup attempt during which hundreds died
    and Nairobi was looted.

    Odinga's confirmation of that has outraged his foes, who called for
    him to be arrested for treason. But it has delighted supporters,
    confirming their view of Odinga as just the revolutionary firebrand
    needed to shake up Kenya's scandal-plagued political scene.

    "By 1982, the Moi regime had become a one-party absolute despotism
    with a long train of abuses," said Deputy Information Minister Koigi
    wa Wamwere, applauding Odinga.

    "This made peaceful change of government impossible; a military coup
    inevitable," added Wamwere, who like Odinga was imprisoned under Moi.

    According to the book -- titled "Raila Odinga: an enigma in
    Kenyan politics" and picturing a lion on the front -- he set up a
    communications centre at an apartment in Nairobi where he monitored
    events on behalf of the plotters.

    Moi survived the attempt to oust him.

    Reacting to the book, Moi said it revealed Odinga's true nature and
    urged Kenyans to be wary of "the man from the lake", referring to
    his origins near Lake Victoria.

    Odinga, who intends to vie for the country's presidency next year,
    is widely credited with orchestrating President Mwai Kibaki's 2002
    election win, which ended Moi's 24-year reign.

    STEEPED IN CONTROVERSY

    But the relationship turned sour during a constitutional referendum
    campaign late last year when Odinga campaigned against a new
    constitution backed by Kibaki.

    The result was a humiliating defeat for Kibaki who later sacked Odinga
    as his roads and public works minister.

    Kibaki's government has since been plagued by high-level graft
    scandals, a police raid on Kenya's second largest media house and an
    embarrassing airport security alert involving two Armenian brothers
    said to be under official protection.

    As a vocal critic of Moi, Odinga was jailed on and off during a period
    of eight years, a fate shared by many of the ex-president's critics. He
    then stunned opposition colleagues by forming a coalition with Moi's
    Kenya African National Union party in 2002, but led a walkout six
    months later.

    The fiery son of a famous Kenyan opposition campaigner derives his
    main support from his western Luo tribe and slum dwellers in the
    capital Nairobi.

    "The air force plotters were mainly from the Luo ethnic group unhappy
    with the political developments which had marginalised the Luos in
    the affairs of the nation," says the book by Nigerian author Babafemi
    A. Badejo.

    Odinga is running third in popularity ahead of next year's presidential
    poll, according to the most recent survey. Analysts said it was too
    soon to tell if the book would help or hinder.

    Odinga faces a stiff challenge from Kalonzo Musyoka -- running second
    for the presidency according to opinion polls -- to win the nomination
    of their Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
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