ODM party leader Raila Odinga says he will not apologise for his remarks regarding the TJRC report he made during the burial of former minister William ole Ntimama on Wednesday.
Raila said he raised fundamental issues touching on historical injustices that communities and individuals have suffered in Kenya and which need to be brought to the fore through the implementation of the Truth, Justice, and Reconciliation report.
"My sentiments at the burial and at the church service earlier were in line with the ideals the late Ntimama fought for all his life… the ideals of fairness, equity, justice and freedom…after decades of seeing the Maasai being dispossessed, tossed around and overran, first by the colonialists then by successive post-independence regimes," said Raila Friday in a statement from Germany.
He said Ntimama’s Iltaaroosero Clan, representatives of his Ilnyankusi age group and the Maa community, had raised the matters of Maasai lands with him and that it was important for him (Raila) to remind the national leadership of his unfinished agenda that must be acted on.
Raila further said the TJRC report also addresses legal and institutional reforms; land reforms; tackling poverty and inequality as well as combating regional development imbalances; tackling unemployment, particularly among the youth; consolidating national cohesion and unity; transparency, protection of indigenous communities, addressing accountability and impunity.
"These matters are critical to our future as a nation. This report has always bee shrouded in controversy. Foreign members of the TJRC committee refused to sign it when some sections were expunged on instructions of some influential figures in government who were fingered by the report. Still, Jubilee remains uncomfortable even with the redacted report, hence the failure to table it for debate."
The former prime minister said the report touches the hearts of many Kenyans especially in regions where land grabbing, massacres, disappearances, marginalisation and other injustices have occurred since independence.
"That is why I reminded the Jubilee leadership, particularly in Parliament, that Kenyans are waiting for the tabling of the TJRC report in its original form and full implementation thereafter."
"The Jubilee administration is now claiming the President was provoked and that we are somehow disrespectful in raising this matter. I raised the TJRC issue as a matter of conscience. I did it as a duty to my country and as part of my deep belief that historical injustices have occurred in Kenya and they need to be addressed as recommended in the original TJRC report," said Raila.