Cord principals Raila Odinga, Kalonzo Musyoka and Moses Wetang'ula join
their supporters in a march along University Way on May 9,2016 as they
head to Anniversary Towers to demonstrate against IEBC commissioners,
whom they want removed from office. PHOTO | EVANS HABIL | NATION MEDIA
GROUP
Cord leader Raila Odinga has renewed calls for a structured and
inclusive national dialogue to discuss challenges facing the country.
In
a formal letter to President Uhuru Kenyatta calling for the talks, Mr
Odinga revisited the June 20, 2014 invitation to the Head of State to
initiate a dialogue with all stakeholders to discuss inclusivity and
national unity, electoral reforms, devolution, corruption and
insecurity.
“It is about 22 months now since I
wrote to you regarding the need for structured national dialogue on
various matters of grave national interest that faced this country
then,” reads Mr Odinga’s latest letter.
He
expressed regret that to date, Mr Kenyatta had not responded to his
concerns and that he had instead received “flippant and deriding
remarks” from senior members of the Jubilee coalition.
As a result, Cord members have resorted to using demonstrations to voice their concerns, he said.
Mr
Odinga noted that the issues he had raised had assumed a “calamitous”
dimension over time setting in motion a repeat of Kenya’s tragic
history.
“On behalf of the Cord fraternity, I
hereby renew this call and restate the commitment of the members of Cord
to an orderly and peaceful deliberation on our challenges,” he added.
READY FOR TALKS
Mr
Odinga had on Tuesday said Cord was open to talks with the government
and all stakeholders including the political class, trade unions and the
civil society to primarily discuss ways of reforming the Independent
Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC).
However,
he maintained that Cord leaders and their supporters would continue
holding countrywide protests every Monday to push for the resignation of
IEBC commissioners.
The commissioners last week
insisted that they would not resign until Mr Odinga showed evidence
that they are planning to rig the 2017 election in favour of President
Kenyatta.
In his 2014 letter to Mr Kenyatta,
the Cord leader had made it clear that he had chosen dialogue as the
lawful and sensible way of dealing with problems facing the country.
“There
are obvious signs that if we do not confront these problems and
challenges now through a structured process of national dialogue then
the road to peace will be thorny and difficult,” he had said.
He
had also stated that he did not seek any office or reward and neither
did Cord want to share power with the Jubilee administration.
“I
offer the hand of peace and an olive branch so that we may dwell in
unity, peace and liberty and in happiness and prosperity,” he had said.
On
inclusivity and national unity, Mr Odinga had warned of a growing trend
where most communities were feeling discriminated against in
appointments to high offices.
“Less than a year
after the last general elections, several communities are feeling
excluded on the basis of ethnicity, identity or gender," he said.
On
devolution, Mr Odinga said that counties had lost nearly Sh600 billion
between 2012 and 2014 because the National Treasury used outdated
accounts to share revenue between the two levels of governments.
Mr
Odinga also warned that corruption was getting out of hand and called
for a national dialogue to discuss ways of containing the vice.
“Major
questions are being raised about the probity and accountability of
several pork-barrel and ‘sweetheart’ deals in the energy, oil, mining
and agricultural sectors. Mega projects have become the handmaiden of
grand corruption,” he warned.
Mr Odinga also called for an overhaul of the electoral body to ensure that future elections are credible.
“It
is not my wish to contest the results of the presidential elections
held in 2013. Rather, I want Kenya to develop a political culture based
on the proposition that elections should not be remembered through the
repulsive images of disputes and even conflicts that arise after every
election but rather by the power and might of the ballot exercised and
cast in freely contested democratic election,” he said.
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