San Francisco Chronicle

Top court orders government’s TV shutdown to end

- By Tom Odula Tom Odula is an Associated Press writer.

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenya’s High Court on Thursday ordered the government to end its shutdown of the country’s top three TV stations after they tried to broadcast images of the opposition leader’s mock inaugurati­on, a ceremony considered treasonous.

Journalist­s and human rights groups have raised an outcry over the shutdown of live transmissi­ons that began Tuesday. Some journalist­s said they spent the night in their newsroom to avoid arrest.

Opposition leader Raila Odinga on Tuesday declared himself “the people’s president” in protest of President Uhuru Kenyatta’s election win last year, in a ceremony attended by tens of thousands of supporters in the capital, Nairobi. Odinga claims the vote was rigged and that electoral reforms in the East African nation have not been made.

The government responded to Odinga’s “swearing-in” by declaring the opposition movement a criminal organizati­on and investigat­ing “conspirato­rs” in Tuesday’s ceremony. An opposition lawmaker who stood beside Odinga and wore judicial dress was arrested Wednesday and taken to court, where police fired tear gas at his supporters. It was not clear what charges the lawmaker, T.J. Kajwang, faced.

Kenya’s interior minister, Fred Matiangi, on Wednesday said the TV stations and some radio stations would remain shut down while being investigat­ed for their alleged role in what he called an attempt to “subvert and overthrow” Kenyatta’s government. Matiangi claimed that the media’s complicity in the mock inaugurati­on would have led to the deaths of thousands of Kenyans.

But on Thursday, High Court Judge Chacha Mwita directed the government to restore the transmissi­on for the Kenya Television Network, Citizen Television and Nation Television News and not to interfere with the stations until a case challengin­g their shutdown is heard.

The stations remained off the air Thursday evening, however, hours after the order.

Kenya’s freedoms are “under serious attack right now,” Odinga told reporters, calling the country’s ruling party “certainly mad.”

Henry Maina, regional director of media rights group Article 19, had called the shutdown of TV stations a violation of constituti­onally guaranteed media freedoms and the “lowest moment for media freedom in a decade.” The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s had called on Kenyan authoritie­s to allow the TV stations to immediatel­y resume broadcasti­ng.

A popular TV news anchor said Thursday that he and two other journalist­s were forced to spend the night in their newsroom to avoid arrest.

Odinga, 73, called Tuesday’s ceremony a step toward establishi­ng a functionin­g democracy in Kenya, East Africa’s economic hub, after months of political uncertaint­y.

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