Politics
Thursday
May 24, 2012
May 24, 2012
By BOZO JENJE bjenje@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Monday, May 21 2012 at 22:30
Posted Monday, May 21 2012 at 22:30
In Summary
- Secessionist movement demands that the ban on it be lifted before it can consider offer of dialogue and tells leaders: you are wasting your time and money, you will get no votes
The outlawed Mombasa Republican Council has rebuffed
offers of dialogue made by Prime Minister Raila Odinga and his deputy,
Mr Musalia Mudavadi.
The two presidential aspirants made the offers during separate rallies in Mombasa at the weekend.
On Monday, MRC spokesman Mohammed Rashid Mraja accused them of playing politics.
MRC, he said, will not engage in any dialogue for as long as it remains banned by the government.
“MRC leadership does not dispute the idea of having
talks with the politicians or government but worldwide there is no
government that talks to outlawed groups,” he said.
“MRC wants the outlawed tag to be removed before talks commence,” he added.
In the meantime, the group will not give up its secession bid and vow to boycott next year’s General Election.
“Over the years, political leaders eyeing the
presidential seat have been giving empty promises to Coast residents,
but we shall not allow that to happen this time round,” he said.
Presidential aspirants campaigning at the Coast, he added, ‘‘are
just wasting their time and money as nobody will vote for them’’.
He said the region will not participate in the General Election since MRC believes it is not part of Kenya.
Last month, members of the group disrupted a mock
election by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission in one
station in Kilifi county.
A policeman was injured in the attack and his gun stolen.
Last week, two watchmen were killed in an attack on
an IEBC office in Kwale county although police have said there was no
evidence linking the group to the raid in which computers were stolen.
Internal Security minister George Saitoti has vowed
there will be no talks with the group until it renounces its secession
bid. And in his state of the nation address to Parliament this month,
President Kibaki reiterated that the Coast region is an integral part of
Kenya.
While addressing a rally in Kisauni on Sunday, Mr
Odinga said ODM will convene a forum for stakeholders from the region
that will bring on board MRC to tackle injustices that had not been
addressed by successive governments.
And, speaking at Tononoka grounds on the same day,
Mr Mudavadi said his party, the United Democratic Forum, will move a
motion in Parliament this week to set up a select committee to
investigate MRC’s grievances.
But Mr Mraja said politicians out to convince MRC to drop its secession bid were wasting their time and resources.
“We will not allow the various party leaders to try
and use MRC to gain popularity. MRC leadership is not ready to be
compromised and the movement will at no time be a political tool,’’ he
said.
He said Mr Odinga and Mudavadi should look for other ways to
market themselves at the Coast. He cautioned Coast residents to be wary
of greedy and selfish leaders.
“These leaders will use money to confuse and divide
the people. As MRC, we are tired of them and their rhetoric. These
politicians are not liberators as they claim, but are hungry for
power,’’ he said.
Mr Mraja said MRC will continue to press for
secession for Coastals to govern themselves. “Coast problems will only
be solved by people from the region,” he said.
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