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  • Nairobi: Leaders: State is hiding something

    The Standard (Nairobi) Kenya
    June 10, 2006

    Leaders: State is hiding something

    By Ben Agina

    Kanu chairman Uhuru Kenyatta yesterday read conspiracy on the part of
    the Government in deporting the four Armenians.

    Uhuru said the Armenians had not broken any immigration rules to
    warrant deportation, but had committed a crime that called for
    prosecution.


    Artur Sagarsyan and Artur Margaryan await deportation pensively at
    the Kenya Airport Police Unit

    "The Armenians had committed a criminal offence and they should have
    been charged and prosecuted. The Government is in this," said Uhuru.

    Speaking on telephone from the US, Mwingi North MP Kalonzo Musyoka
    said the Armenians should not have been here in the first place.

    Kalonzo said it was clear from the beginning that the Armenians were
    people with ulterior motives.

    Uhuru said it was shocking that foreigners could threaten Kenyans.

    He said it was not enough to deport the Armenians, adding that they
    should have faced the full force of the law.

    "Why should you deport people who have entered our security area and
    failed to pay duty?" he asked.

    Uhuru wondered whether the Armenians were above the law for them not
    to face charges. He said the Government should be held accountable
    for their failure to prefer charges against the Armenians.

    Kalonzo said now that they had committed a crime, they should be
    charged.

    The Liberal Democratic party chairman, Mr David Musila, said the
    incident witnessed at JKIA on Thursday breached the security of the
    country.

    "As LDP we had raised concerns that these were mercenaries with
    ulterior motives," said Musila. Musila, who is also the Deputy
    Speaker, said the President owes Kenyans an explanation after some
    senior ministers earlier defended the Armenians.

    "Kenyans must get an explanation on who was protecting the
    Armenians," demanded Musila. Musila accused some people in Government
    of protecting the Armenians.

    He also wondered whether Kenya's security is at the mercy of
    foreigners.

    Musila congratulated the Commissioner of Police Major-General Hussein
    Ali for the action he took against the Armenians. Kabete MP Paul
    Muite said the behaviour of the Armenians at the JKIA was insulting.

    "If you were in a foreign country and you enter a security area and
    behave like that you could be dead by now," said Muite.

    He wondered why the Armenians were spared when they threatened to
    shoot Immigration officials at the airport.

    Muite, who chairs the Parliamentary Committee on Legal and
    Administration of Justice, said the Armenians have been part of their
    discussions since the raid on The Standard Group premises on March 2.

    He said the committee hopes to summon the Commissioner to brief them
    more with the unfolding events.

    Muite also congratulated the police commissioner and expressed
    optimism that the due process of law would be followed. LDP
    secretary-general Joseph Kamotho yesterday asked Internal Security
    minister John Michuki to tell Kenyans why the Armenians were being
    deported instead of being charged in court.

    Kamotho said the Internal Security Minister had assured Kenyans that
    the Armenians were being investigated.

    "Now that they have committed a crime, why are they being let off?
    What Kind of cover-up is this by Government?" posed Kamotho.

    "If the Government has nothing it fears the Armenians would expose,
    they should not have been deported," they said.
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