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Nairobi: Expulsion =?UNKNOWN?Q?isn't?= all; explain this saga

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  • Nairobi: Expulsion =?UNKNOWN?Q?isn't?= all; explain this saga

    The Standard, Kenya
    June 10 2006


    Expulsion isn't all; explain this saga



    June 8 will be remembered as the day foreigners intoxicated with
    impunity tried to put our national security agents to shame - and
    failed.

    That night, foreigners who had hitherto strutted the length and
    breath of our country with incomprehensible arrogance assaulted at
    least one security agent and drew guns at others at the Jomo Kenyatta
    International Airport - a restricted security area - thereby
    triggering a terror alert.

    The notorious foreigners of dubious origin claiming to be brothers
    and investors from Armenia - Artur Margaryan and Artur Sagarsyan -
    have many times asserted that no force in the land can touch them, at
    least twice dared our Police Commissioner to visit their residence
    and face unspecified consequences and once asked our internal
    security minister to shut up.

    All this time, nothing was done to them even as senior politicians,
    led by LDP leader Raila Odinga, claimed that they were mercenaries on
    hire. This paper even carried a Page One comment urging action on the
    foreigners for asking our minister to shut up.

    Shockingly though, that minister defended the foreigners in
    Parliament where he said it was not his responsibility to act against
    investors merely demanding their money back from their debtors.

    While appreciating that someone has finally acted on the Armenian
    menace, we wish to emphasise that their deportation is not enough to
    put the matter to rest.

    First, as we report elsewhere, the foreigners had been issued with
    VIP Government passes giving them access to all areas of all our
    airports. What was the compelling reason for the Government to issue
    such passes to these two foreigners?

    Second, after the Government-sponsored raid against the Standard
    Group in March, Raila claimed that the two foreigners led the illegal
    raid in which the entire raid crew was hooded. The Government has
    failed to explain why official security agents had to wear hoods.

    That notwithstanding, part of the arsenal police recovered at the
    residence of the foreigners yesterday morning were balaclavas similar
    to the ones the raiders wore. Is this a coincidence or is there a
    link the Government needs to explain?

    Third, the deportation of the foreigners before standing trial in
    Kenyan courts raises a lot of questions. The foreigners had valid
    permits to live and work in Kenya subject to our laws. Is the
    Government trying to hide something by hurrying to deport them
    without trial?

    Fourth, the manner in which this whole saga was handled from the
    start stinks to high heaven: Government officials contradicted each
    other, and often themselves, over such minor details as the
    nationality of the foreigners; the exact nature of their business
    here has been kept secret; and the foreigners' registered business
    partners remain tight-lipped on what their business partnerships
    entail. Who was protecting these foreigners? And what does that say
    about the people tasked with guarding our internal and national
    security?

    Our position is that the country's national security has been
    seriously compromised. For a modicum of confidence in it to be
    restored, the Government - specifically President Mwai Kibaki - must
    immediately replace those tasked with its management beginning with
    Mr John Njoroge Michuki, the internal security minister, if Michuki
    himself fails to see it fit to resign.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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