| By Bogonko Bosire | Nairobi, Kenya,
on January 13 2008 04:29
|
Favoured : 31 |
The death
toll from Kenyan post-election violence soared to 693, officials
said Sunday, amid pressure on rival leaders to acknowledge election
irregularities that spurred the violence and drop all preconditions
for talks.
"We have recovered 89 more
bodies from the bushes in the last five days in the Rift Valley and
Western provinces," said a top police commander.
An official from the Kenya Red Cross
Society (KRCS), which last week warned that several bodies may have
been devoured by animals in the bush, confirmed the figure of
recovered bodies.
In fresh acts of violence two people were
killed in the Rift Valley's districts of Rongai and two others in
Molo, a police commander added.
The latest deaths bring to 693 the number
of victims of post-election violence as compiled by Agence
France-Presse from medical sources, police officials and mortuary
attendants across the country.
The newly recovered bodies prompted the
KRCS to increase its official toll from 486 to 575 people dead as a
result of the violence following the contested December 27
election, according to its statements.
Nearly 260 000 people have been displaced
-- mainly in the Rift Valley region -- after violence flared on
December 30 when President Mwai Kibaki was declared re-elected and
immediately sworn into a second term of office despite protests of
irregularities in the vote count by the opposition and
international observers.
The nationwide rioting rapidly degenerated
into bloody tribal vendettas, raising fears that more violence
could lead to events spilling out of control.
On Saturday, United States Assistant
Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer urged Kibaki
and opposition chief Raila Odinga to acknowledge poll
irregularities and quickly move towards talks.
Frazer, who was in the
country for nearly a week to mediate, said in a statement that it
was "imperative" for Kibaki and Odinga to sit down together
"directly and without preconditions".
"Both should acknowledge serious irregularities in the
vote tallying which made it impossible to determine with certainty
the final result," said Frazer, who left the country on
Friday.
Odinga says he was robbed of victory in
the chaotic election by a rigged vote count, and he has refused to
recognise Kibaki's re-election or sit down with him until he
admits to fraud.
Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM)
has announced fresh protest rallies this week after African
Union-mediated talks ended Thursday with no sign of any
breakthrough.
Police have banned the three days of
rallies slated to start on Wednesday, raising fears of more
confrontations across major cities in the east African nation.
The government and church leaders have
urged the opposition to call off the demonstration.
Kenya was once considered a beacon of
democracy and stability in region and the latest crisis has rattled
the country's image and its economy, raising fears that the
country may plunge into conflict that has blighted its neighbours.
- AFP |