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Annan succeeds in Kenya! (UPDATE: They've signed!)

Thu Feb 28, 2008 at 04:52:32 AM PDT

As a measure of the political rollercoaster in Kenya, I will include what I wrote last night, and would have posted this morning. Instead, it's just wonderful news, as reported by the BBC:

Kenya's President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have reached a deal to end Kenya's post-poll crisis, ex UN head Kofi Annan says.

"We have come to an agreement of a form of coalition government," Mr Annan said after a four-hour meeting with them.

He said he could not give any further details as the men were going to consult with their political parties.

Annan says he hopes the agreement will be signed by the end of the day!

Update [2008-2-28 10:39:6 by Turkana]: They've signed! The BBC has this, and a picture of the signing:

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga have signed an agreement to end the country's post-election crisis.

At a ceremony in Nairobi, the two men put their signatures to a power-sharing deal brokered by ex-UN head Kofi Annan.

A coalition government comprising members of the current ruling party and opposition will now be formed.

As I've previously written, Annan's efforts may have been the final possible preventative against genocide. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is the only ever two-time winner of the Nobel Peace Prize; if this agreement holds, and if the rules allow, Annan deserves consideration to be the second.

Here's what I would have posted:

Just when it seemed Kofi Annan was on the verge of negotiating an end to the crisis in Kenya, things seem to be falling apart. As Agence France-Presse reports:

Kofi Annan suspended Tuesday talks with representatives of Kenya's government and the opposition, citing a lack of progress in seeking an end to a political crisis over a disputed election.

"Given the way the talks are going and the way mediators are relating to each other I believe it is important that I suspend the negotiations," Annan told reporters.

The former UN secretary general, who has spent more than a month in Kenya, said he would "take the matter up with President (Mwai) Kibaki and (opposition leader) honourable Raila Odinga.

If Kibaki and Odinga agree to direct talks, a peaceful resolution would still be possible. It is unknown if they will so agree. According to the Guardian, Britain is not optimistic:

Britain yesterday said that the Kenyan army is now "by far the best option" to stop a sectarian bloodbath as peace talks in Nairobi between the government and opposition were suspended.

The foreign office minister for Africa, Asia and the UN, Mark Malloch-Brown, said that there was a serious risk of renewed bloodshed if talks broke down irrevocably. About a thousand Kenyans have been killed since disputed elections in December and 600,000 have fled their homes after rival gangs, organised largely on ethnic lines, went on the rampage...

However, western observers believe that extremists on both sides have used the lull to regroup and prepare for another, and potentially bloodier, bout of violence in Kenya.

I don't see how it can be. The Kenyan military is controlled by Kibaki, and that doesn't bode for a balanced use of it.

This is a glorious and historic day!

Tags: Kenya, Kofi Annan, Mwai Kibeki, Raila Odinga, genocide, Recommended, good news (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

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