Daily Dispatch

Kenya election rerun date a challenge

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DOUBTS are growing over Kenya’s ability to hold a rerun of its presidenti­al election in just one month as key players remain unable to agree on how to conduct a credible vote, analysts say.

Bickering on all sides and confusion over the process have only increased as the clock ticks down to the October 17 vote, called after the supreme court annulled the initial election, citing widespread irregulari­ties.

The opposition has vowed to boycott the election if its list of demands is not met, including staff changes at the electoral commission (IEBC), which it accuses of rigging the poll.

“The challenges are pretty extrao said John Githongo, a prominent anti-corruption campaigner in Kenya, who said he believed the election date “does not seem feasible because we are asking people who have failed calamitous­ly to run an election after such a short time”.

A key hurdle is that the supreme court has yet to deliver its full judgment detailing why exactly it decided to annul President Uhuru Kenyatta’s victory.

Chief Justice David Maraga mentioned only “irregulari­ties and illegaliti­es“, notably in the transmissi­on of election results.

The court has until Friday to deliver the full ruling, which would give the IEBC little time to make changes.

“It is very uncertain,” a professor of African politics at the University of Birmingham, Nic Cheeseman, said.

“We don’t know if the supreme court is going to say something about technology, we don’t know if they are going to directly impugn any of the individual­s in the IEBC. Will they have to be replaced? If so, how will that be done in the time frame?”

In the absence of the judgment, the electoral commission has pushed forward with plans for a new election, dismissing opposition calls to sack its top officials.

“It was expected that the IEBC would move swiftly to undertake farreachin­g reforms. So far this has yet to happen,” the Daily Nation newspaper said in an editorial on Saturday, denouncing a “stalemate which has created paralysis and is confusing the public”.

Fissures within the IEBC, meanwhile, were exposed when a leaked memo showed chairman Wafula Chebukati outlining a raft of irregulari­ties in the election to the commission’s chief executive Ezra Chiloba.

Kenyatta, for his part, has insisted that the election go ahead as planned, accusing his longtime rival Raila Odinga of seeking to block the vote as a way of forcing the president to accept a coalition government.

On Thursday, the National Super Alliance (NASA) of opposition parties addressed a letter to the IEBC with a list of demands, including the dismissal of certain officials, a change in the procuremen­t of election materials and live media coverage of the declaratio­n of results at tallying centres.

“We hereby reiterate there will be no elections on October 17 unless these conditions are met,” the alliance said.

The opposition alleges the August 8 election was rigged through the hacking of an electronic vote-tallying system.

French biometrics firm OT-Morpho, which provided the results transmissi­on system, has said that an audit of its system showed no hacking or manipulati­on of data.

But the IEBC has yet to comply with a supreme court order to allow independen­t access to its servers.

Cheeseman said that with the IEBC suffering from lost legitimacy, an ideal solution would be for rival parties to sit down and negotiate an election which could be acceptable to all.

Increasing­ly bitter rhetoric, however, has driven them further apart.

“A lot of the language has been really worrying,” Cheeseman said.

He pointed in particular to comments by Kenyatta saying he would “fix” the supreme court if re-elected, and threatenin­g to impeach Odinga if he wins. — AFP

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