Kenya's opposition party, the Orange Democracy Movement (ODM), called a
three-day mass rally in 24 Kenyan cities next week to protest against
President Mwai Kibaki after international mediation talks failed, an
ODM spokesman said Friday.
The mass rally, originally scheduled for Tuesday this week was
cancelled to create a "peaceful frame" for mediation efforts by
Ghanaian President and African Union leader John Kufuor, and will be
held instead from Wednesday to Friday.
The government had not shown any willingness to hold talks, the spokesman added.
Kufuor left Nairobi Thursday evening for Accra without reaching an agreement.
Riot police last week broke up another mass rally against Kibaki using water cannon and teargas.
Further talks would be chaired by former UN secretary general Kofi
Annan, who is expected to travel to Kenya next week, Kufuor said before
departing.
Kibaki swore in his new cabinet, in which he also named opposition
politicians as ministers, on Thursday amid opposition demands for new
elections.
Kibaki said he wanted his cabinet to be broadly representative but
no members of opposition leader Raila Odinga's ODM have been named
therein.
All the key posts have already been filled, and even if ODM members
were to enter the new government, it would only be in a peripheral
role.
The new parliament, in which ODM has the most parliamentarians, is
to convene next Tuesday. An alliance of youth and human rights groups
has called for protests and spoke of the "blackest Tuesday in Kenya's
democracy."
Kibaki was declared winner of the December 27 presidential polls
three days after they were held. Odinga and his supporters, however,
have charged the incumbent with widespread vote-rigging and refused to
concede defeat.
So far, there have been no direct talks between Kibaki and the opposition.
A post-election crisis has led to the deaths of up to 600 people and the displacement of 250,000.
Humanitarian aid efforts for the displaced got under way Thursday
as the Kenyan Red Cross began distributing food in the slums of
Nairobi.
Nairobi's slums are among the largest in Africa, with most
residents dependent on casual labour and out of work since unrest
began.
However, many regions are inaccessible because of the precarious security situation.