A Kenyan court charged nine men
on Tuesday for their role in a protest against an electoral
oversight body, a lawyer said, after the fourth flare-up on the
streets in a month left three people dead and upset
international donors.
One demonstrator in the western city of Kisumu died from an
injury while fleeing the scene of a protest, while another two
died in violence in Siaya County related to the demonstrations,
also in the west, police said.
A government official earlier said only one person died.
Dozens have been arrested in protests that began on April 25
and have been held on virtually every Monday since then.
"We are deeply concerned by the escalation of violence
during the demonstrations in Kenyan cities," ambassadors from
the United States, Britain and other Western nations said.
In a statement, they called for an investigation into the
use of "excessive force" by the east African country's security
services and urged protesters to act peacefully.
After last week's demonstration, a senior police officer
said there would be an investigation to see if there had been
any violations in the conduct of the police.
The demonstrators want the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC) to be scrapped, saying it is not
impartial and cannot oversee fair presidential and parliamentary
elections due in August 2017.
The IEBC, which oversaw a vote the opposition disputed in
2013, denies being biased. The government says the opposition is
taking to the streets as it cannot win a vote.
The nine people charged on Tuesday were accused of unlawful
assembly, court documents showed. "My clients pleaded not guilty
and were released on cash bail pending hearing of the matter,"
lawyer Harun Ndubi said.
Fifteen people faced similar charges last week.
The protests have extended beyond Nairobi to cities such as
Kisumu, where there is strong support for opposition leader
Raila Odinga. He is expected to run again against President
Uhuru Kenyatta, now serving the first of a maximum two terms.
Police fired tear gas and water cannon at demonstrators in
Nairobi on Monday. A week earlier, officers had fought running
battles in the street with protesters, beating some of them with
batons and kicking them. Some demonstrators had thrown stones.
Western envoys have previously urged the government and
citizens to prepare carefully for the elections in a nation
where the 2007 vote was followed by ethnic blood-letting that
killed 1,200 people. The 2013 election result was unsuccessfully
challenged in court by the opposition.
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