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Western opposition to Kenyatta may have given him the edge
Category: International Written by Courier Newsroom

Uhuru Kenyatta supporters
(Kenya—Global Information Network)—Announced plans by an Amsterdam-based court to prosecute Uhuru Kenyatta for his role in the mayhem that convulsed Kenya in disputed polls in 2007, may have given him the edge to trounce his nearest rival, Raila Odinga, according to locally-based analysts.
Presidential candidate Kenyatta was proclaimed the winner of Kenya’s election with 50.07 percent of the March 4 vote.
Charges against Kenyatta by the International Criminal Court and warnings against his election by Johnnie Carson, U.S. Asst. Secretary of State, were widely viewed as interference in national affairs.
“They were the defining narrative” of the election,” said Aly-Khan Satchu, a Kenyan financier.
Also objectionable in the eyes of many Kenyans was the obsessive fixation of western media on outbreaks of violence. A recent piece by Cornell University professor Mukoma Wa Ngugi compared coverage in 2013 to the coverage of the air force-led coup attempt in Kenya in 1982.
At that time, he recalled, “we sat glued to our transistor radio listening to the BBC and Voice of America” The two services were “lifelines through which we learned what was happening in our country.” But in 2013, “I and many other Kenyans saw western media coverage of the elections as a joke, a caricature. Western journalists have been left behind by an Africa moving forward, not in a straight line… but forward nonetheless.”
Wa Ngugi cited descriptives such as “tribal blood-letting,” and “loyalists from rival tribes” (Reuters) and video images of five men playing warriors with homemade guns (CNN). “Very few Kenyans took it seriously,” he wrote. “Rather, it was slap your knee funny.”
A piece in The Daily Nation satirically titled “Foreign reporters armed and ready to attack Kenya” observed tongue in cheek – “The demand for clichés is outstripping supply.”
Wa Ngugi continued: “Africans are saying that (western) journalists are not representing the complex truth of the continent; that western journalists are not only misrepresenting the truth, but are in spirit working against the continent.
“When it comes to writing about Africa, journalists suddenly have to make a choice between extraordinary violence and ordinary life. It should not be a question of either the extreme violence or quiet happy times, but rather a question of telling the whole story… “
Elsewhere in Kenya, voters chose the country’s first female Maasai MP. Peris Pesi Tobiko was elected from the Maasai community, which is largely patriarchal and where women often struggle to be heard.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 03 April 2013 06:07
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Chinua Achebe, celebrated Nigerian novelist, dies
Category: International Written by Associated Press
ACCLAIMED NOVELIST DIES--Chinua Achebe, Nigerian-born novelist and poet poses his life at his home on the campus of Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.
NEW YORK (AP) — The opening sentence was as simple, declarative and revolutionary as a line out of Hemingway:
Last Updated on Sunday, 24 March 2013 14:14
Hits: 573
Half of girls in South Sudan forced to marry
Category: International Written by Associated Press

CHILD BRIDE--Zali Idy, 12, poses in her bedroom in the remote village of Hawkantaki, Niger. Zali was married in 2011. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay-file)
by Charlton Doki
Associated Press Writer
JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — The 17-year-old beaten to death for refusing to marry a man old enough to be her grandfather. The teen dragged by her family to be raped to force her into marrying an elderly man.
Last Updated on Monday, 11 March 2013 18:53
Hits: 812
UN adopts plan to combat violence against women
Category: International Written by Associated Press

PROTEST--An Egyptian protester shouts slogans as she holds an anti-Muslim brotherhood poster during a protest in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 2. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)
by Edith M. Lederer
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Conservative Muslim and Roman Catholic countries and liberal Western nations approved a U.N. blueprint to combat violence against women and girls, ignoring strong objections from Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood that it clashed with Islamic principles and sought to destroy the family.
Last Updated on Sunday, 17 March 2013 13:09
Hits: 550
SAfrica: former Pistorius detective quits force
Category: International Written by Associated Press

RESIGNS--Investigating officer Hilton Botha, sits inside the court witness box during the Oscar Pistorius bail hearing at the magistrate court in Pretoria, South Africa. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe, File)
by Christopher Torchia
JOHANNESBURG (AP) — The former lead detective in South Africa's investigation of the murder case against Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius has resigned from the police force, police said Thursday.
Last Updated on Thursday, 07 March 2013 21:10
Hits: 625
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