Africa › Kenya       01.09.2011

Ex-ministers in world crimes court over Kenya bloodshed

Kenyans run past anti-riot police with their hands raised at Kibera slum during demonstrations in Nairobi. By Tony Karumba (AFP/File)

THE HAGUE (AFP) - Former Kenyan minister William Ruto faced the world crimes court Thursday as a hearing opened to confirm if he should stand trial for masterminding Kenya's deadly post-election violence in 2007-08.

"The confirmation of charges hearing is not a mini-trial. This chamber does not decide on guilt," International Criminal Court presiding judge Ekaterina Trendafilova said as the hearing opened in The Hague.

Former higher education minister Ruto, former industrialisation minister Henry Kosgey and radio executive Joshua arap Sang are facing charges of crimes against humanity before the ICC.

A potential presidential candidate in 2012, Ruto, 44, as well as Kosgey, 64 and Sang, 35, are supporters of opposition candidate, now Prime Minister Raila Odinga's Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) and are alleged to have targeted supporters of Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki after the disputed 2007 polls.

The hearings, during which prosecutors will try to convince the court they have enough evidence to go to trial, are scheduled to run until September 12.

A second set of hearings will start on September 21 for three other suspects, including Uhuru Kenyatta, son of Kenya's founding president and the country's finance minister.

Ruto's group faces charges including murder, forcible transfer and persecution committed against perceived supporters of Kibaki's Party of National Unity (PNU) following poll results.

The three men arrived earlier Thursday at the court's building in The Hague where Sang told some 20 journalists waiting at the entrance: "I am feeling good, I have just come to explain myself here today."

"I'm innocent, I'll always be innocent," he said.

Kenya was plunged into violence after the December 27, 2007 general elections in which then opposition chief Odinga accused Kibaki of having rigged his way to re-election.

They are believed to have been part of a plan "targeting members of the civilian population supporting (Kibaki's) Party for National Unity (PNU), in order to punish them and evict them from the Rift Valley with the ultimate goal of gaining power and creating a uniform ODM voting block".

Prosecutors said some 1,200 people were killed and more than 300,000 displaced in the east African country's worst outbreak of violence since independence in 1963.

© 2011 AFP

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