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Armenian 'Mercenary' Saga Stirs Up Kenyan Politics

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  • Armenian 'Mercenary' Saga Stirs Up Kenyan Politics

    ARMENIAN 'MERCENARY' SAGA STIRS UP KENYAN POLITICS
    By C. Bryson Hull

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    March 16 2006

    NAIROBI, March 16 (Reuters) - It was a bizarre twist in Kenya's
    increasingly chaotic political climate: claims that foreign mercenaries
    led a police raid on a major media house.

    But what began as a minor mystery from one of the most controversial
    moments in President Mwai Kibaki's three-year-old rule has quickly
    escalated to convulse local politics and bemuse Kenyans with its
    theatrical elements.

    The story began with the overnight March 2 raid on the Standard
    Group, and reached a crescendo this week with an opposition leader
    who first made the mercenary charges trading weighty accusations with
    the Armenians he named.

    "The whole thing looks orchestrated on both sides. It doesn't
    taste real," security consultant and former Criminal Investigation
    Department officer Ambrose Murunga, told Reuters. "No one has ever
    really connected those Armenians to the raid."

    Already reeling from graft scandals and a fall in popularity, Kibaki's
    administration provoked international condemnation when hooded police
    with assault rifles struck the KTN television station and its sister
    newspaper the Standard.

    Security cameras captured images of masked, light-skinned men.

    Opposition chief Raila Odinga said that supported his accusation the
    government had hired eastern European mercenaries to lead the raid
    and kill opposition politicians.

    "These two men were in on the raid and the police have given them
    Kenya police force certificates," Odinga said.

    Odinga, who wants to run for president in 2007, raised the stakes by
    recording two statements with police and producing copies of passports
    of two Armenians he said were the guns-for-hire.

    Police denied any foreign involvement and are now investigating
    his charges.

    VIP TREATMENT?

    The men Odinga named then stepped out of the shadows to hold a press
    conference on Monday to deny the accusations and level their own
    against him over business dealings.

    The venue of their appearance -- the government VIP lounge of Nairobi's
    international airport -- raised some eyebrows.

    Appearing in dark suits and heavy gold jewelry, the men said they
    were Armenian brothers from Dubai who had come to invest in Kenya,
    to complement businesses including trading diamonds and gold from
    the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    One of the men, who identified himself as Artur Margariyan, said they
    had to counter Odinga's allegations to save their reputations.

    "The next thing he was going to say was that we had tails and horns,"
    Margariyan told Reuters in an interview.

    He said it was the press who had led him into the VIP lounge.

    But the setting of the conference has fuelled speculation the two
    men have powerful government friends, as did their accusations that
    Odinga had approached them for money.

    Margariyan said the government was not protecting him and until they
    assured his safety, he would not record a police statement.

    He also alleged Odinga and fellow opposition leader Kalonzo Musyoka
    approached him and his brother for 3 billion Kenya shillings ($41.44
    million) to finance a vote of no confidence against Kibaki.

    Margariyan said they refused to loan money for political purposes,
    but gave Odinga $1.5 million in cash - in a plastic bag in a posh
    Nairobi hotel suite in December - to sort out a domestic problem.

    Odinga called the charges against him and Musyoka "hogwash." Musyoka,
    who recorded a statement with police, has said he met the two briefly
    last year but never discussed money.

    "These people were being kept hidden by the government and these are
    very dangerous criminals," Odinga told Reuters.

    He declined to reveal where he had got their passport copies, saying he
    needed to protect a source "who was not from the government as such."

    Government spokesman Alfred Mutua said Kenya was not protecting the
    two Armenians. Police are probing all players in the puzzling drama,
    he said.

    "We are investigating these guys. We think there are a lot of politics
    involved in this," Mutua said.
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