Arab News

Kenya court blames polls commission for botched vote

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NAIROBI: Kenya’s Supreme Court on Wednesday placed the blame for last month’s annulled presidenti­al vote firmly on the election commission, in its full ruling detailing the judges’ decision.

Deputy chief justice Philomena Mwilu described “disturbing, if not startling, revelation­s” about the conduct of the Independen­t Elections and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) and singled it out for ignoring a Supreme Court order to open up its computer servers after opposition allegation­s of hacking.

The judges also said the election commission had failed to verify the numbers before declaring President Uhuru Kenyatta winner.

Computer hacking allegation­s were at the heart of the legal challenge from the opposition, led by Raila Odinga.

“Our order of scrutiny was a golden opportunit­y for the IEBC to place before the court evidence to debunk the petitioner’s claim,” Mwilu read from the court’s detailed judgment on Wednesday.

“If IEBC had nothing to hide it would have readily provided access to ICT (informatio­n and communicat­ions technology) logs and servers to disprove the petitioner’s claim. But what did IEBC do with it? It contemptuo­usly disobeyed the court orders in these very critical areas.”

Lawyers for Odinga’s National Super Alliance (NASA) coalition, last month challenged Kenyatta’s reelection, alleging rigging, hacking and tampering with results.

Chief Justice David Maraga declared the Aug. 8 presidenti­al election, and Kenyatta’s victory, “invalid, null and void” on Sept. 1.

Mwilu said that following the IEBC’s refusal to comply with the court order, judges were left with no choice but to determine that the election commission’s “ICT system was infiltrate­d and compromise­d and the data therein interfered with, or IEBC officials themselves interfered with the data, or it had bungled the transmissi­on system and were unable to verify the data.”

The IEBC was also heavily criticized for failing to prove it had received tally sheets, known as forms 34A, from all 42,000 pollings stations before declaring the final result on Aug. 11, awarding Kenyatta victory with 54 percent of the vote.

Judges described the obscurity around the forms 34A as a “mysterious puzzle” that has not been solved.

They also questioned the absence of legally required security features, stamps and signatures on those forms that were eventually made public days after the declaratio­n of results.

Judges on Wednesday also faulted the failure of the electronic transmissi­on system, which relied on the availabili­ty of 3G or 4G mobile phone network to send scans of tally sheets as well as typed in figures.

The IEBC blamed network failures for missing and delayed tally forms, but the judges dismissed this excuse saying they should have been prepared.

“Failure of the electronic system was a direct violation of the law,” Mwilu said.

“We find that the 2017 presidenti­al election was neither transparen­t nor verifiable,” leading to the unpreceden­ted decision to nullify the vote, she concluded.

The election commission is due to hold a new presidenti­al vote between Kenyatta and Odinga on Oct. 17.

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