Kenyan MP Lewis Nguyai Testifies for Kenyatta

Member of Parliament (MP) for the Kikuyu Constituency in Kenya today testified for Kenyan Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, who is suspected of bearing responsibility for crimes against humanity committed during the post-election violence in Kenya  from late December 2007 to late January 2008.

Mr. Lewis Nguyai, elected to the Kenyan parliament for the first time in December 2007 under President Mwai Kibaki’s Party of National Unity (PNU) spoke expensively about Mr. Kenyatta’s effort to stop the violence that followed the announcement of elections results in 2007. He also spoke about the alleged role of the Mungiki, an outlawed organization in Kenya that prosecutors allege was directed by Mr. Kenyatta to attack supporters of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) who claimed that elections victory had been stolen from them.

Prosecutors claim that after the announcement of elections results on December 30, 2007, Mungiki members were present at the presidential office and residence—State House where they received instructions on how to attack ODM supporters who had already started demonstrations against the announcement of President Kibaki as winner of the presidential elections. Defense lawyers have argued that on that same day, President Kibaki was sworn in as president of Kenya and it was not possible for members of an outlawed gang to have been there at the same time. The witness confirmed the defense assertion today.

“I did not see any member of the Mungiki,” Mr. Nguyai told the judges, as he explained the presence of about 300 to 400 people at the swearing in ceremony and the security checks that guests had to go through before making it into the State House.

When the violence erupted in Naivasha District on January 27, 2008, the witness, alongside the Minister in charge of Internal Security, George Saitoti, flew to the township where they saw Kikuyus and non-Kikuyus divided in conflict against eachother. The people on the Kikuyu side of the divide did not look like Mungiki to him, he said.

The witness testified about efforts made by moderate members of both the PNU and ODM to stop the violence that was costing many lives and properties. Among the party members who made these efforts was Mr. Kenyatta, the witness told the court.

Defense lawyer for Mr. Kenyatta, Steven Kay QC, showed a video of the witness, standing by Mr. Kenyatta while he (Kenyatta) addressed a group of irate Kikuyu youths, urging them not to seek revenge against their opponents.

“Uhuru Kenyatta was trying to the best of his ability to pacify the group,” the witness told the judges in reference to the video that had been shown in court. The witness also addressed the group in the video.

He added that after pacifying that group, Mr. Kenyatta directed him to move to other locations and ensure that they were all peaceful.

The following day, Members of Parliament from the two parties created two groups which went in different directions to ensure that communities were peaceful. His group, he said, was led by Mr. Kenyatta.

Asked why they had made Mr. Kenyatta the leader of the group, the witness explained that “he was perceived as the most popular person after President Mwai Kibaki in Mount Kenya.”

“Many of us perceived him as a very good peacemaker, especially after what he had done the previous day,” the witness added, in reference to the Mr. Kenyatta’s address to the youths, a video of which was shown in court.

He further said that the Kenyan National Human Rights Commission report on the post-electin violence had made significant omissions by not including the tremendous amount of work done by Uhuru Kenyatta to ensure that there was peace in Kenya.

In response to prosecution allegations that Mr. Kenyatta was part of fundraising efforts to make payment and provide arms to Mungiki members in their attacks against ODM supporters, the witness said that such fundraising drives were only geared towards raising money and materials to provide humanitarian assistance to internally displaced persons.

The witness dismissed as false, prosecution allegations that Mr. Kenyatta was a member of the Mungiki organization. He told the court that Mr. Kenyatta had denounced the Mungiki organization on several occasions, saying that he did not need the group’s political support.

The witness told the judges how two Mungiki leaders had approached him at the entrance of a hotel and asked him to lead them to the PNU leadership, including Mr. Kenyatta. He exchanged phone numbers with the Mungiki leaders and continued to meet with them on eight separate occasions. On all these occasions, they sought money and access to the PNU leadership. The witness said that upon his election as a member of parliament, he was appointed to a Select Committee to combat organized crime and this included addressing the Mungiki menace. This also accounted for his meetings with the Mungiki leadership, he said.

The witness also spoke about two members of the Mungiki who had given exonerating statement to Mr. Kenyatta’s defense team and later turned out to extort money from the team as payment for their evidence. He spoke about receiving several text messages from the two witnesses, some of which were requesting money and some of which were threatening. These messages have been handed to the judges as part of the defense evidence. Defense lawyers have argued that the witness who attempted to extort money from Mr. Kenyatta’s defense later turned out to become prosecution witnesses when they could not get the money they wanted.

Under cross-examination by the prosecution, the witness admitted that he was one of the organizers of a big ceremony to welcome the six suspects toKenya after they had made their initial appearances in The Hague in April 2011. He also agreed with the prosecution that he had made a proposal for the 2012 presidential elections in Kenya to be put on hold until the completion of the ICC processes in The Hague.

Prosecutors also sought to know why the witness had not reported the two Mungiki leaders to the police after they had first met him in 2008 asking for money and ammunition to attack ODM supporters. The witness said he did inform the Provincial Police Officer in Nairobi, but the prosecutor was quick to point out that he had not said so when he made his earlier statement to defense lawyers.

Prosecutors also asked the witness about a meeting at Kikuyu Country Club in the witness’s constituency, which according to the Commission of Inquiry into the Post-Elections Violence in Kenya (CIPEV) report, was organized by businessmen to raise funds for violent attacks against perceived ODM opponents. The witness said that he was invited to a meeting at the same venue but did not attend as he did not know the persons who had called the meeting.

The common legal representative for victims, judges, and other defense teams also asked the witness several questions.

The end of the witness’s testimony marked the conclusion of Mr. Kenyatta’s defense evidence. When court resumes on Monday, the third suspect, former Police Commissioner and Post-Master General, Mohammed Hussein Ali will commence his defense.

12 Comments

  1. With due respect to the honourable court ,Iam surprised at how the Icc can be turned into a drama by one Mr Ocampo . I thank God that the truth will be known in the end.

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  2. I did not attend a law school but my feeling is that the kabete MP gave a lot to Ocampo than he gave to the defence team.

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  3. At the height of the violence Raila Odinga and I visited City morgue and other morgues only to find hundreds of dead bodies including men and women, these were Luhyas Luos and Kalenjins badly murdered and the killers were mungiki gangs that had been hired and paid by these accused men by the blessings from the State house. Uhuru bears criminal responsibility.

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    1. how can you know waht tribe a dead person is?

      Kenyans have become more tribalistic through and after the hague proceedings than we were before.

      saying you were with Raila , is that supposed to authentisise what you are trying to say? Raila hinself is mostly dishones how can we believe you?

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      1. Do you remember how people identified their family members who perished at the August 7th 1998 blast in Nairobi? The city morgue was most undesirable place to visit at the time, yet immediate victims had no choices but jump over corpse looking for the charred bodies of (their )beloved relatives. Even so, you will always find records at the morgues. However, those who receive corpses keep record of where these dead were found. Of course, if a highly mutilated body was picked at kibera, then there was high probability (at-least more than half) that the deceased was a Luo. How did we know that those innocent souls razed by fire at Kimabaa church in Eldoret were Kikuyus. Fellow Kenyan, it was not about tribes, but this heinous crime was aimed at destroying a natural communities of a kind, what we must agree on: is that every person should be allowed to enjoy or exercise his inalienable rights at all corners of this country. Remember, Kenya is not a nation state like France, in which one community comprises about 90% of the population. We should not crudely or subjectively drag him(Raila) in this debate, just for our egos sake -it would not help this nation at all. Back to your reference on Kane’s comment.Perhaps he had intended to show us how grave the situation was at the time. Just make your point and tell us what is wrong of belonging to a certain community, remember “dada”nations do not just form from without. Besides, our Constitution acknowledges this diversity and am please it echoes for peaceful and mutual co-existence. And lastly, lets use lenses that would help see the world differently, Ocampo and ICC is not nailing a Uhuru as a Kikuyu or Ali as a Kenyan Somali, but as individuals who bore the highest responsibility in post election violence.

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  4. The aim of Kabete MP evidence was to show that the testimony by the two alleged testimony of Mungiki 11 and 12 is not trustworthy
    Kikuyus Luo Luiya and other Kenyans died but UK was not responsible.
    Okcampo should pro ute the right criminals after thorough investigations

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    1. Who are the right criminals here Bw Mwaura? Occampo got to the bottom of the cases and found that Uhuru was fully responsible. Cant we let the cases end so that the judges can throw the cases out for us to tell Occampo to do a proper investigation here. The confirmation of the cases is not through you people are making noise that Occampo did a shoddy job. Let ICC complete its work. That is when your theorem of a shoddy job can hold water.

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        1. when the kiambaa church was burned those visited the morgues did not raise there political voices. what they wanted was power

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  5. The prosecution knows what happens in Africa and Kenya for that matter,The facts as well known are that state house is a big and once you align yourself with the party in power you can tow in friends and groups to state house without bating an eyelid.
    Remember that during mois regime you simply talked of Kanu to the police voila you receive or do what you wanted or do what you feel like.

    Reply

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