The Sunday Guardian

Election effects: 11 dead in Kenya

- REUTERS

Kenyan police killed at least 11 people in a crackdown on protests as anger at the re-election of President Uhuru Kenyatta erupted in the western city of Kisumu and slums surroundin­g the capital, officials and witnesses said on Saturday.

The bodies of nine young men shot dead overnight in Nairobi’s Mathare slum were brought to the city morgue, a security official told Reuters, adding that the men had been killed during a police anti-looting operation.

Separately, a young girl in Mathare was killed by police firing “sporadic shots”, a witness said. The rundown neighborho­od is loyal to 72-year-old opposition leader Raila Odinga, whose party rejected Tuesday’s vote as a “charade”.

A Reuters reporter in Kisumu said tear gas and live rounds were fired. A government official said one man had been killed in the county.

The unrest erupted moments after Kenya’s election commission announced late on Friday that Kenyatta, 55, had secured a second fiveyear term in office, despite opposition allegation­s that the tally was a fraud.

In addition to the deaths, officials at Kisumu’s main hospital said they had treated 26 people since Friday night, including four people with gunshot wounds and others who had been beaten by police. One man, 28-year-old Moses Oduor, was inside his home in the impoverish­ed district of Obunga when police conducting house-to-house raids dragged him out of his bedroom and beat him with clubs.

More shooting was heard outside the hospital on Saturday morning. In Nairobi, armed police backed by water cannon moved through the rubble-strewn streets of Kibera, another pro-Odinga slum.

As with previous votes in 2007 and 2013, this year’s elections have exposed the underlying ethnic tensions in the nation of 45 million people, the economic engine of East Africa and the region’s main trading hub.

In particular, Odinga’s Luo tribe, who hail from the west, hoped an Odinga presidency would break the Kikuyu and Kalenjin dominance of central government since independen­ce in 1963. Kenyatta, the son of Kenya’s first president, is a Kikuyu.

In Kibera, a convoy of pickup trucks driving senior NASA officials into the slum was turned back by volleys of live police fire and tear gas, a Reuters witness said. It was not clear why the officials were going to Kibera.

Interior minister Matiang’i denied accusation­s of brutality, saying police were merely maintainin­g order.

“Let us be honest - there are no demonstrat­ions happening,” he told reporters.

Even before the declaratio­n, Odinga’s NASA coalition had rejected the outcome, saying the election commission’s systems had been hacked, the count was irregular and foreign observers who endorsed the poll and the count were biased.

NASA provided no evidence for any of its accusation­s but singled out former US secretary of state John Kerry and former South African president Thabo Mbeki for criticism.

Top Odinga lieutenant James Orengo said NASA would not challenge the results in court but hinted at mass action.

In addition to the thumbsup from foreign monitors, Kenya’s ELOG domestic observatio­n group, which had 8,300 agents on the ground, published a parallel vote tally on Saturday that conformed with the official results.

ELOG’s projected outcome put Kenyatta on 54% with a 1.9% error margin - compared to an official tally of 54.3%.

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