Kagame wants army to take over in Kenya

Jan 30, 2008

RWANDA President Paul Kagame wants the army to intervene and halt Kenya’s ethnic bloodshed. Unrest in Kenya since President Mwai Kibaki’s disputed re-election last month has killed about 850 people.

By Vision reporter
and agencies

RWANDA President Paul Kagame wants the army to intervene and halt Kenya’s ethnic bloodshed.

“This is a case of emergency where certain things have to be done very quickly to stop the killings that are going on. There’s no time to go into niceties and debates when the killings are taking place,” Kagame told Reuters.

Rwanda suffered a genocide in 1994 in which about 800,000 people were killed.
Unrest in Kenya since President Mwai Kibaki’s disputed re-election last month has killed about 850 people.

Kagame said the Kenyan army might have to take over before things get worse. “I know that it is not fashionable and right for the armies to get involved in such a political situation. But in situations where institutions have lost control, I wouldn’t mind such a solution,” he said.

“I tend to believe that the Kenyan army is professional and has been stable,” he added in the interview on Tuesday.
Kagame said he backed mediation efforts headed by former UN head Kofi Annan, and that any military takeover should only be temporary.

Kagame said Kenya ought to learn a lesson from the Rwanda’s bloody history.
“It starts with five deaths, then 10, then 50, shortly it grows to 100, then it goes to thousands. By the time you realise, it has a dimension that is wiping out life in villages and communities and is getting out of control and the whole political situation is in a mess,” he noted.

Kagame said he knew his suggestion of military intervention was a radical one.
“I might sound controversial but in the wake of such senseless killings with no immediate solution, if anybody suggested that (military) option to me, I would say I agree with it,” he said.

“It is not too late for Kenyans to look back and see how our country went down the drain in the past and I don’t think we would wish a similar thing for any country.”

The UN special adviser on preventing genocide and mass atrocities on Tuesday warned leaders responsible for post-election violence in Kenya they could be held to account for violations of international law.

Francis Deng told Reuters he was sending a staff member to look into the situation. The official, Marylene Smeets, was due to leave on today, Deng said in a telephone interview.

Deng explained that what was happening in Kenya so far did not amount to genocide. “We’re not talking the g-word at this point, but the kind of atrocities we’re seeing could easily escalate to dangerous levels,” he said.

In Nairobi, a police commander said Wednesday they had been given orders to shoot to kill to stem violence, a day after Annan started crisis talks between the feuding leaders.

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