New York
The US and
the UN, despite having built a reputation globally as defenders of
freedom of expression, continue to maintain an unusual silence as the
Kenya government clamps down on independent journalists and media.
Both have so far not criticised the move to shut down NTV, KTN News and Citizen TV.
In the Kenyan case, UN and US have so far been unwilling to denounce the government's action of violating press freedom.
State
Department officials did not immediately respond to a request for
comment on Thursday — 48 hours after the three stations were silenced.
In
remarks to reporters on Wednesday, UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric did
not take issue with the Kenya government's apparent attack on press
freedom.
FREE ATMOSPHERE
“We would want
to see an atmosphere in which media is able to operate freely," Mr
Dujarric said in response to a journalist's question as to whether the
UN is “doing anything” about the TV shutdown.
Mr Dujarric had temporised less the previous day.
“We
do, of course, feel that it is critical for the media to be able to
operate freely and to report freely on these situations,” he said at a
press briefing in New York on Tuesday.
Then too, however, the UN spokesman avoided direct criticism of the kenya government's action against the three TV stations.
OBASANJO
Two
weeks ago, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres sent former Nigerian
President Olusegun Obasanjo to Kenya to help avert a political crisis
that analysts warned could be sparked by Mr Odinga's “swearing-in.”
Mr Obansanjo's mission ended unsuccessfully.
The US had earlier expressed opposition to Mr Odinga's initiative.
“Forming
a separate or parallel government is really unhelpful,” Donald
Yamamoto, the Acting Assistant Secretary of State for African affairs,
said in December.
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