Deputy President William Ruto was
accused, on Tuesday, of pushing for the release of suspects arrested for
participating in the 2007 post-election violence.
A
prosecution witness at the International Criminal Court said Mr Ruto
called for the release of the Orange Democratic Movement youths, and
businessman Jackson Kibor, from jail.
The suspects had been arrested during the violence and were set to be tried for their role.
The witness said Mr Ruto and other senior ODM politicians pressed the government to release the suspects
.
.
However, Mr Ruto’s lawyer, Mr Karim Khan, denied the claim.
The
defence showed the witness a television clip showing ODM leader Raila
Odinga demanding the release of Mr Kibor from a Nakuru jail.
Although the witness watched the footage in private, Mr Khan posed questions to him in public.
Mr
Khan read to the court a script from the video indicating that Mr
Odinga said Mr Kibor should be released after being detained for 10 days
without being taken to court.
The lawyer and the witness were in agreement that Mr Ruto was not in the video clip.
But the witness said Mr Ruto addressed other meetings where he called for the release of Mr Kibor.
“Ruto called for the release of Mr Kibor and youths arrested during the post-election violence,” he said.
The
witness, who confessed spending two months in jail for theft last
Friday, finished giving his evidence allowing the prosecution to
cross-examine him.
Tuesday's proceedings were characterised by lengthy private sessions as the witness and defence sought time to explore details.
Witness
P0356 has testified for almost one-and-half weeks. The prosecution
hoped to use him to show judges that Mr Ruto planned the violence that
rocked North Rift after the announcement of the disputed presidential
election results.
Two witnesses are expected to give
evidence before the court breaks on January 31. The sessions will then
resume on February 17.
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