The Niagara Falls Review

Kenya TV stations back on the air

- TOM ODULA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenya’s government on Monday restored transmissi­on to two major TV stations of the four it shut down seven days ago, as police fired tear gas on protesters demonstrat­ing against President Uhuru Kenyatta’s government for violating constituti­onal freedoms.

“We are back on air,” said Joe Ageyo, the managing editor of Kenya Television Network. Transmissi­on was also restored to Nation Television News, said its managing director Linus Kaikai, who said the two broadcaste­rs had been in talks with the government.

Service has not been restored to Citizen TV or Inooro TV, said Kaikia, who is also the chairman of the Kenya Editors Guild.

Police fired tear gas at a peaceful demonstrat­ion of about 100 protesters expressing outrage against the government’s “blatant violation of the constituti­on,” said rights activist Njonjo Mue.

The government had shut down transmissi­on of the four popular TV channels last week when they attempted to broadcast the mock inaugurati­on of opposition leader Raila Odinga as the “people’s president.” Odinga charges that President Uhuru Kenyatta is not legitimate because he won elections last year through fraud.

The government ignored court orders to restore the remaining two stations’ transmissi­on and to release opposition activist Miguna Miguna. Miguna was arrested after standing beside Odinga during the protest inaugurati­on and signing the document as a witness.

Odinga’s fake inaugurati­on last week was attended by tens of thousands of opposition supporters in the capital, Nairobi.

The government responded to Odinga’s event by declaring his opposition movement a criminal organizati­on and investigat­ing “conspirato­rs” in the ceremony.

Kenya’s Supreme Court nullified Kenyatta’s election in August after Odinga claimed that hackers infiltrate­d the electoral commission’s computer system and changed results in favour of Kenyatta. The ruling, citing irregulari­ties and illegaliti­es, was the first time a court had overturned a presidenti­al election in Africa. The court ordered a fresh election in October that Kenyatta won after Odinga boycotted it, claiming a lack of electoral reforms.

 ?? KHALIL SENOSI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kenya civil rights groups protest the government closure of four TV stations on the streets of Nairobi, Kenya, on Monday.
KHALIL SENOSI/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kenya civil rights groups protest the government closure of four TV stations on the streets of Nairobi, Kenya, on Monday.

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