emerging trend

Kenya: peace prospects?

Although a power-sharing deal has been announced, the threat of renewed violence in Kenya has not been eliminated. 

Earlier this week, former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan roundly criticised both President Mwai Kibaki’s Party of National Unity and Raila Odinga’s Orange Democratic Movement for dragging their feet on a political settlement, following weeks of post-election violence in which an estimated 2,000 died and hundreds of thousands were displaced.  Annan temporarily suspended the formal mediation process, and met with both leaders in order to pressure them directly. 

The two sides appear to have reached preliminary agreement on the formation of a ‘national unity’ government, including ODM members in the cabinet.  Most significantly, a prime minister’s post will be created, to be filled by Odinga.  However, the talks had broken down over what powers he would wield, with the ODM demanding a division of the president’s executive power, but Kibaki unwilling to cede any of the president’s considerable authority. 

The power-sharing deal is a significant step forward, but the details of how power will be divided between Odinga and Kibaki and within the cabinet will be contentious, and the coalition government will be fragile and prone to deadlock. Worse, the threat of violence -- in places motivated by issues beyond the disputed election -- does not disappear with the announcement of a deal.

Read more from the World Next Week

Please rate this article

Quality:

Relevance:

podcast

Jason Mosley, Senior Africa EditorHear Jason Mosley, Oxford Analytica's Senior Africa Editor, discuss the prospects for real peace in Kenya.

Listen or subscribe RSS or iTunes

Although a power-sharing deal has been announced, the threat of renewed violence remains real.

US Presidential Election 2008 Coverage

US presidential election coverage 2008

Read articles from The World Next Week about this year's presidential election