Kenya's president and prime minister have signed a deal that will pave the way for an election violence tribunal.
They agreed to it within hours of a deadline set out in a report into the deadly clashes that erupted after last December's elections.
The court will seek to try the ringleaders of the violence.
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Parliament now has 45 days to set it up to begin hearings by March or a sealed list of suspects will be handed over to the International Criminal Court.
The deadline for Wednesday's agreement was set out by a commission of inquiry into the violence, chaired by Justice Phillip Waki, which reported in October.
That commission also handed over a list of suspects, some thought to be prominent politicians, to the mediator of the power-sharing deal, former UN chief Kofi Annan.
On Tuesday, Kenya's electoral commission was dissolved by MPs - a key recommendation of another inquiry into the election.
Some 1,500 people died in the post-election clashes and another 300,000 people fled their homes.
President Mwai Kibaki and Raila Odinga signed a power-sharing deal in February to bring an end to the violence and formed a coalition government.
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