Business Day

Tension mounts in Kenya before poll

• Fears of violence rise as incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta, from the Kikuyu ethnic group, faces opposition rival Raila Odinga, from the Luo

- Agency Staff Nairobi

Kenyans head to the polls on Tuesday to vote in a knife-edge contest between President Uhuru Kenyatta and his rival, Raila Odinga.

Kenyans head to the polls on Tuesday to vote in a knife-edge contest between incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta and his rival Raila Odinga, which has heightened claims of vote rigging and fears of violence.

The final days of campaignin­g have been marred by the murder and torture of a top election official, opposition claims that one of its vote tallying centres was raided by police and a feverish atmosphere of conspiracy and suspicion.

The election is seen as a crucial test of Kenya’s progress since a disputed poll a decade ago led to 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.

Kenyans will cast ballots in six different elections, but all eyes are on what is set to be the last showdown of a dynastic rivalry between the Kenyatta and Odinga families that has lasted more than half a century.

The men belong to two of the country’s main ethnic groups, Kenyatta from the Kikuyu, the largest, and Odinga the Luo.

Both men have secured formidable alliances with other influentia­l communitie­s in a country where voting takes place largely along tribal lines.

Polls are so tight the vote is seen as too close to call and turnout will be crucial to either side’s success in the 48-millionstr­ong East African nation.

Odinga, at the head of the National Super Alliance coalition, is taking his fourth — and what many suspect will be his last — stab at the presidency. He claims both elections in 2007 and 2013 were stolen from him and is adamant Kenyatta’s Jubilee Party is trying to do the same this time around.

Mounting opposition distrust of the electoral commission has seen Odinga crying foul and urging his supporters to “protect their vote”.

Both candidates are so certain of victory that Nic Cheeseman, professor of African politics at Birmingham University, warns they may have “talked themselves into a corner” in which defeat is not an option.

“It seems almost inevitable that whoever loses will question the result. The question is not whether or not they will accept the result but what they will do when they don’t accept it.”

Observers agree that the most critical aspect to the election’s success is whether a biometric system of voter identifica­tion and tallying works on the day. This system was introduced in a bid to counter rigging and boost confidence in the process after the marred 2007 election. However, in 2013 electronic glitches forced polling officials to resort to manual counting.

Odinga claimed there was rigging, however, he took his complaints to the courts instead of the streets and despite scattered riots after he lost his case, the process ended peacefully.

The tension around the electronic system reached breaking point last weekend after the poll commission’s top IT manager, Chris Msando, was found strangled and tortured in a forest on the outskirts of Nairobi.

The Independen­t Electoral and Boundaries Commission said a dry run of the tallying process went off without a hitch last week. But on Friday the opposition claimed its main parallel tallying centre — which had been a point of dispute with the governing party — was raided and its equipment stolen.

The same evening, a US and a Canadian working with the National Super Alliance on its poll strategy were detained before being deported the next day. Cheeseman said both these events looked “like an attempt by a political faction to prevent the opposition from verifying and checking results. It is highly suggestive they intend some form of manipulati­on.”

Pre-election jitters have seen foreigners and Kenyans leaving the country or main cities and stocking up on provisions in case of trouble.

Up to 180,000 members of the security forces will help to secure the poll in which Kenyans will also elect governors, legislator­s, senators, county officials and women’s representa­tives in local races.

The two presidenti­al candidates’ fathers, Jomo Kenyatta and Jaramogi Odinga, were allies in the struggle for independen­ce, but later became bitter rivals, setting the stage for decades of political rancour.

Kenyatta is seeking reelection after a first term in which he and his Jubilee Party were credited with a huge infrastruc­ture drive and overseeing steady growth. But polls show voters are concerned about soaring food prices and corruption scandals.

More than 19-million Kenyans are registered to vote.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Call to make a mark: A supporter of the Kenyan opposition National Super Alliance coalition’s presidenti­al candidate, Raila Odinga, displays a placard during its final campaign rally at the Uhuru Park grounds in Nairobi on Saturday. Odinga is making...
/Reuters Call to make a mark: A supporter of the Kenyan opposition National Super Alliance coalition’s presidenti­al candidate, Raila Odinga, displays a placard during its final campaign rally at the Uhuru Park grounds in Nairobi on Saturday. Odinga is making...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa