Annan says farewell after Kenya coalition deal
By Wangui Kanina
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya faces "a long road ahead" to make a success of a power-sharing agreement between government and opposition, mediator Kofi Annan said on Sunday as he left Nairobi after six weeks of gruelling negotiations.
President Mwai Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga signed a coalition government pact on Thursday intended to bring to a close two months of bloodshed and political upheaval following a disputed election on Dec. 27.
As calm has returned after violence that cost the lives of 1,000 Kenyans and forced 300,000 to flee their homes, politicians from both sides have now begun more detailed negotiations on how the coalition deal will be implemented.
Parliament reopens in Nairobi on Thursday, after which it will ratify the coalition deal, which gives Odinga the post of executive prime minister.
Attention will focus on whether he and Kibaki can overcome their often fractious relationship and work together.
"I am glad we have come this far but we still have a long road ahead. I would like all of you to remain engaged," Annan, who brokered the coalition deal, told reporters.
"We want to see Kenya return to the Kenya of old. Stable, peaceful, prosperous, welcoming," the former United Nations secretary-general said.
The violence devastated Kenya's tourist industry, its biggest foreign exchange earner which was worth nearly $1 billion last year, and the national currency, the shilling, only recovered after Thursday's deal was struck. Continued...













