Kenyas feuding leaders have agreed a plan to end the political and ethnic violence gripping the country, former UN chief Kofi Annan said Friday according to BBC online.
The deal was agreed by representatives of both President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga. The announcement came after fresh outbreaks of fighting left at least 18 people dead in the west of the country.
Mr Annan said the rival parties had agreed a four-point framework for talks which should end the violence within the next two weeks.
A BBC reporter in Nairobi says the deal is a good start which should have an impact on the level of violence on the ground. But the two parties were still very, very far apart, with Mr. Kibaki saying he won December’s disputed presidential election fair and square, and Mr Odinga claiming it was rigged.
The talks are due to last a month and items on the agenda include:
– ending the violence
– humanitarian situation
– resolving the political crisis
– land and historical injustices
– We believe within seven to 15 days, we should be able to tackle the first three agenda items. The first is to take immediate action to stop the violence, Mr Annan said.
Mr Annan said the parties had agreed on 18 action points to end the violence, including demobilising militia gangs, refraining from provocative speeches and ending text messages which have been inciting hatred.