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(31 Dec 2007) 1. Set-up of opposition leader Raila Odinga on the phone 2. Mid shot of Odinga 3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Raila Odinga, opposition leader: "My message to him is that he should be a gentleman and accept the verdict of the people, pack up from State House and go home because the people of Kenya will not tolerate his five years again. Now they feel nothing but contempt for him. He has lost an election and he wants to rule. There is no difference between him and Idi Amin or any other military dictator who assumed power through the barrel of the gun." 4. Wide shot of Odinga talking to journalists 5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Raila Odinga, opposition leader: "We can be arrested anytime. It will not be the first time that I have been arrested. To be exact it will be more than twenty times that I have been arrested. So we are not intimidated by the prospect of arrest, prosecution, or detention. Democracy is expensive and we are prepared to pay the ultimate price to liberate this country from the shackles that (inaudible) the dictators that have no respect or regard for the rights of the people in this country." 6. Cutaway of Odinga and Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) spokesperson William Ruto on phone 7. Mid of Odinga on phone STORYLINE: Opposition leader Rail Odinga compared President Mwai Kibaki on Monday to a military dictator as a third day of deadly violence raged over allegations that Kibaki rigged the vote. Since Kibaki's re-election was announced heavily armed police have been firing tear gas and bullets into the air to try to stop angry protesters in Nairobi's slums. On Monday Kenyan police told AP they now have orders to shoot-to-kill to quell post-election riots. "There is no difference between him and Idi Amin and other military dictators who have seized power through the barrel of the gun," Odinga said, one day after Kibaki was declared winner of a second five-year term. Asked whether he feared arrest Odinga said, that if it happened, it would not be the first time. "It will be more than twenty times that I have been arrested. So we are not intimidated by the prospect of arrest, prosecution, detention. Democracy is expensive and we are prepared to pay the ultimate price to liberate this country," he said. Kenya's election related violence has killed at least 34 people since Saturday across the country, police and witnesses said, although the tally was likely higher. Kibaki, 76, was sworn in almost immediately after the results were announced on Sunday. Within minutes, the slums - home to tens of thousands of opposition supporters who believe the election was rigged - exploded into fresh violence. Odinga had been leading early results and public opinion polls, rejected the results. He was planning a ceremony to be declared "the people's president" later on Monday in Nairobi's Uhuru Park - where protesters seeking multiparty democracy used to gather in the early 1990s. The rally was then postponed after police banned the event and hundreds of riot police were deployed around the park. While Kibaki won the presidency, the opposition took most of the parliamentary seats in Thursday's vote. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...