The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tensions rise as Kenya poll campaign enters final stretch

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NAIROBI: Kenya’s election campaign enters a tense final week yesterday, with a tight race between incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta and his rival Raila Odinga leading to intensifie­d personal attacks and rigging accusation­s.

The longtime political foes face off at the polls for a second consecutiv­e time on Aug 8, and Kenyans are on edge after an acrimoniou­s campaign marked by the opposition’s deep distrust of the electoral commission.

The vote comes 10 years after Odinga claimed an election was stolen from him and the country plunged into two months of politicall­y-motivated ethnic clashes, which along with a police crackdown on protests left more than 1,100 dead and 600,000 displaced.

The violence in east Africa’s richest economy, seen as a bastion of stability, traumatise­d the nation and stunned observers.

Voting in Kenya largely takes place along communal lines, and both Kenyatta and Odinga are heading formidable alliances of different ethnic blocs with closely matched numbers, meaning turnout will be crucial to either side’s success.

While campaignin­g has largely been peaceful, the run up to the vote has been marred by the murder of a top election official charged with overseeing the electronic voting and tallying system.

Additional­ly months of attacks by pastoralis­ts invading private land in the Rift Valley has been blamed on politician­s seeking to displace population­s ahead of the vote.

In the same region – a hotspot after the disputed 2007 vote – hate speech flyers have been circulatin­g and some have already begun fleeing their homes in anticipati­on of trouble.

Elsewhere in the country Kenyans have moved from cities to their hometowns, both to vote and as a measure of security.

Many foreign companies have temporaril­y closed down, advising expat staff to head out of the country.

“The anxiety that has engulfed the country in the countdown to the elections is unhealthy,” read a recent editorial in the Daily Nation newspaper.

“Businesses are holding back, tourism is slackening worse some foreign embassies have sent out travel advisories to their nationals against visiting Kenya.”

Somalia’s al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab has also stepped up attacks in northeaste­rn Kenya ahead of the election.

An unpreceden­ted 180,000 members of the security forces will fan out across the country to secure the poll in which Kenyans will elect a new president, governors, lawmakers, senators, county officials and women’s representa­tives.

Constituti­onal reforms after the 2007 violence decentrali­sed power to the country’s 47 counties in the 2013 vote.

While this removes the winner-takes-all aspect from the presidenti­al race, it has raised the stakes – and potential for violence – at the local level.

However all eyes remain on the battle between Kenyatta and Odinga, whose fathers Jomo Kenyatta and Jaramogi Oginga Odinga were rivals in the independen­ce era and the decades that followed.

Odinga, 72, who is flag bearer for the National Super Alliance (NASA) of five major opposition parties, is running for office for the fourth time.

He claims that elections in 2007 and 2013 were stolen from him and that Kenyatta is planning to rig this year’s election.

In 2013 a biometric system of voting and tallying results partly collapsed, stoking Odinga’s suspicions the poll was rigged in favour of Kenyatta, who won by just 800,000 votes.

However he took his complaints to the courts instead of the streets, and while there were some riots and looting, the election largely went off peacefully.

In the run up to this year’s election Odinga has disputed the company chosen to print presidenti­al ballots, the process in which results will be announced and the presence of dead people on the voters register.

During a frenzied final push of campaignin­g around the country, Kenyatta has accused Odinga of trying to stoke violence, while having ‘no credible agenda’. — AFP

 ??  ?? Kenyan police officers guard a plane transferri­ng a shipment of presidenti­al election ballots, ahead of Kenya’s August 8 election, at the Jomo Kenyatta internatio­nal airport in Nairobi, Kenya. — Reuters photo
Kenyan police officers guard a plane transferri­ng a shipment of presidenti­al election ballots, ahead of Kenya’s August 8 election, at the Jomo Kenyatta internatio­nal airport in Nairobi, Kenya. — Reuters photo

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