Kenya's PM urges African troops for Zimbabwe
NAIROBI, June 29 (Reuters) - The African Union (AU) should deploy troops in Zimbabwe to resolve a crisis that has become an embarrassment to the continent, Kenya's Prime Minister Raila Odinga was quoted on Sunday as saying.
"What is happening in Zimbabwe is a shame and an embarrassment to Africa in the eyes of the international community and should be denounced," Odinga said in Swahili during a visit to his home province Nyanza in west Kenya.
"So we are saying we want the African Union to send troops to Zimbabwe. The time has come for the African continent to stand firm in unity to end dictatorship," he said in the speech on Saturday, carried by Kenyan newspapers and broadcasters.
Odinga -- a former opposition leader whose power-sharing agreement with President Mwai Kibaki after Kenya's disputed election is touted by some as a possible model for Zimbabwe -- has been one of Africa's most vocal critics of Mugabe.
The Zimbabwean leader was declared the winner on Sunday of a widely condemned one-candidate presidential election.
Critics are calling for action to end Mugabe's 28-year rule after he went ahead with Friday's presidential run-off despite opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai's withdrawal because of killings of his supporters.
"President Mugabe went ahead with the fake elections in which he competed against himself. That was a fake election and we do not recognise it," Odinga said.
"You cannot say you have won an election in which you arrest your opponents, where you beat and kill your opponents, where people cannot campaign because you have locked them in jail."
Odinga also responded to media reports that Mugabe had said the Kenyan premier was persona non grata in Zimbabwe.
"Mugabe says that Raila is his enemy number one. I do not need to go to Zimbabwe ... I don't intend to do so under Mugabe's leadership," he said. (Writing by Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Charles Dick)
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