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  Kenya: Govt Hires Top U.S. Image Firm
19-Aug-2009
 
 

New York — The Kenyan government has retained a top Washington public relations firm to improve its image in the United States at a reported cost of Sh129 million ($1.7 million) over the next two years.

Officials at CLS & Associates confirm that the Kenyan Government has been added to its list of high-powered clients.

But the lobbyists declined to comment further on the grounds that the campaign on behalf of the Grand Coalition had not yet been fully formulated.

Kenya's ambassador to the United States Peter Ogego also said he had no comment on the CLS contract.

The Paris-based Indian Ocean newsletter reported recently that the deal with CLS was made jointly by the office of the President and the Kenyan embassy in Washington.

In the initial phase of its work, CLS has compiled a series of eight fact sheets on Kenya for distribution to the US media, government officials in Washington and American corporate executives.

These brief releases attempt to put a positive spin on Kenya's efforts at national reconciliation, its fight against corruption and the country's security ties to the United States.

This strategy appears designed to highlight considerations that are already at the forefront of the Obama administration's relations with the Grand Coalition.

Terror threat

While sharply criticising aspects of the Kenyan Government's performance, senior State Department officials have also been emphasising Kenya's importance to the United States in containing the threat of terrorism from Somalia and from individuals linked to al Qaeda.

CLS' clients include corporations such as Pfizer; elite educational institutions such as Harvard University; and half-a-dozen governments in Europe, South America and Africa.

In a fact sheet entitled "A Stable Government," CLS says Kenya has made significant strides toward reconciliation and reform in the past year.

Sources: AllAfrica Global Media

 
  UN tribunal for Rwandan genocide transfers nine prisoners to jail in Benin
01-Jul-2009
 
 

1 July 2009 – The United Nations tribunal set up to try those responsible for the worst crimes committed during the Rwandan genocide in 1994 has announced that it has transferred nine prisoners to Benin to serve the remainder of their jail sentences.

The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR), based in Arusha, Tanzania, said in a statement issued yesterday that the prisoners were transferred at the weekend from the UN Detention Facility in Arusha to Benin, where they were later moved to a prison in the capital city of Porto-Novo.

The nine convicted criminals – nearly all of whom were given lengthy sentences – are Georges Rutaganda,

Gerard Ntakirutimana, Juvenal Kajelijeli, Emmanuel Ndindabahizi, Jean-Bosco Barayagwiza, Aloys Simba, Juvenal Rugambarara, Athanase Seromba and François Karera.

Mr. Rutaganda, Mr. Ndindabahizi, Mr. Seromba and Mr. Karera are all serving life terms for their crimes, while Mr. Kajelijeli was sentenced to 45 years in prison and Mr. Barayagwiza to 32 years. Both Mr. Ntakirutimana and Mr. Simba were given 25-year jail terms, while Mr. Rugambarara is serving an 11-year sentence.

The ICTR was set up by the Security Council in the wake of the genocide, in which an estimated 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and Hutu moderates were killed, mainly by machete, during a period of less than 100 days starting in early April 1994.

Souces: UN  News Center

 
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