Toronto Star

Kenya’s opposition calls for election boycott

President says security forces will ensure order and urges citizens to vote Thursday

- CHRISTOPHE­R TORCHIA AND TOM ODULA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NAIROBI, KENYA— The leader of Kenya’s main opposition party urged his supporters to boycott a rerun of the disputed presidenti­al election scheduled for Thursday amid rising political tensions and fears of violence in East Africa’s economic power.

Jubilant supporters of President Uhuru Kenyatta, who seeks a second term, celebrated the news that the election would proceed after a lastminute petition to the Supreme Court seeking to postpone the vote couldn’t go forward.

Kenyatta said security forces will be deployed nationwide to ensure order and he urged Kenyans to vote while respecting the rights of those who don’t.

His rival, opposition leader Raila Odinga, called on his political coalition to become a “resistance movement,” accusing the president of moving a country known for relative stability and openness toward authoritar­ian rule.

“Do not participat­e,” Odinga told a rally of thousands in Nairobi’s Uhuru Park on the eve of the vote. The gathering was mostly peaceful, though police fired tear gas to disperse some groups of opposition supporters who occupied roads after the demonstrat­ion ended.

Protesters also set fires and blocked roads in part of Nairobi’s Kibera slum, and police and demonstrat­ors clashed throughout the day in some neighbourh­oods in Kisumu, Kenya’s third-largest city and an opposition stronghold.

The United States urged Kenyans to remain calm on Thursday and reject violence, saying it was deeply concerned about the efforts of “both parties to interfere with and undermine the independen­t operation of the electoral commission, the judiciary and other essential institutio­ns.”

Kenya’s Supreme Court failed Wednesday to muster enough judges to hear the last-minute petition that sought to postpone the vote, a repeat of the August election won by Kenyatta but annulled last month by the court due to what it called irregulari­ties and illegaliti­es.

Chief Justice David Maraga appeared alone in the courtroom and said only he and one other judge were able to attend the hearing. The driver for the court’s deputy chief justice had been shot Tuesday evening, raising fears about intimidati­on of the judiciary.

Outside court, hundreds of women in white scarves called for peace, concerned that violence might break out as it had following the disputed election in 2007 that left more than 1,000 dead.

 ?? PATRICK MEINHARDT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Supporters of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta celebrated the news that the vote would proceed after a last-minute petition to postpone it failed.
PATRICK MEINHARDT/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Supporters of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta celebrated the news that the vote would proceed after a last-minute petition to postpone it failed.

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