Arab News

Kenya opposition leader urges boycott of repeat elections

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NAIROBI, Kenya: The leader of Kenya’s main opposition party urged his supporters to boycott a rerun of the country’s disputed presidenti­al election scheduled for Thursday amid rising political tensions and fears of violence.

Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga urged his political coalition to become a “resistance movement” and called on them to boycott Thursday’s repeat presidenti­al election.

“Do not participat­e,” he said at a rally in Nairobi’s Uhuru Park of Thursday’s re-run of the presidenti­al election.

The country’s Supreme Court on Wednesday failed to muster enough judges to hear a last-minute petition to postpone the elections.

Supreme Court Chief Justice David Maraga appeared alone in the courtroom and said that only he and one other judge had shown up for the hearing. The shooting of one judge’s driver the evening before raised fears about intimidati­on of the judiciary.

Outside the court, hundreds of women in white scarves gathered to call for peace amid rising uncertaint­y and fears of violence. Jubilant supporters of President Uhuru Kenyatta celebrated the news that the elections will proceed.

In Uhuru Park hundreds of opposition supporters gathered to hear Odinga speak. Police had earlier banned the rally, but stood back and allowed it to take place.

The Supreme Court hearing was to hear a petition filed by three Kenyans, including a human rights activist, who urged the court to postpone Thursday’s election, arguing that electoral officials have said they cannot ensure the polls will be free, fair and credible.

Harun Ndubi, a lawyer for the petitioner­s, suggested that some judges who did not attend the hearing may have violated their constituti­onal duties.

“The justices must forever be available,” said Ndubi, though he acknowledg­ed that the deputy chief justice whose police driver was injured in a shooting Tuesday evening may have been genuinely troubled.

“For the others, I don’t buy their explanatio­n,” he said. “I don’t see a credible or legitimate election happening tomorrow,” Ndubi said, adding that the vote, if it occurs Thursday, “would be a farce.”

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