Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Kenyan poll is declared null and void

New election ordered within 60 days

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NAIROBI: A fresh contest for the presidency in Kenya is about to begin in the wake of the country’s Supreme Court yesterday nullifying President Uhuru Kenyatta’s election win, citing irregulari­ties, and ordering a new poll within 60 days.

The ruling, broadcast to a stunned nation on national television, sets up a new race between Kenyatta, 55, and veteran opponent Raila Odinga, 72. Kenyatta called for calm and respect for the ruling, while Odinga’s cheering supporters paraded in the streets of his western Kenyan heartland. Last month’s election results sparked protests and sporadic violence that killed at least 28 people.

Kenya, a trade gateway to east Africa, has a history of disputed votes. A row over the 2007 poll, which Odinga challenged after being declared the loser, was followed by weeks of ethnic bloodshed that killed more than 1 200 people. Kenya’s economy, the biggest in the region, slid into recession and neighbouri­ng economies wobbled.

Judge David Maraga announced the Supreme Court’s verdict that was backed by four of the six judges, saying the declaratio­n of Kenyatta’s victory was “invalid, null and void”. Details of the ruling will be released within 21 days. In the courtroom, a grinning Odinga pumped his fist in the air. Outside, shares plummeted on the Nairobi bourse amid the uncertaint­y, while Kenyatta’s supporters grumbled. But there was no sign of frustratio­ns spilling over into anger on the streets. The judge said the election board “failed, neglected or refused to conduct the presidenti­al election in a manner consistent with the dictates of the constituti­on”.

Kenya’s judiciary went through sweeping changes after 2007 election violence, on a continent where many Africans complain of judiciarie­s that rubber-stamp government or presidenti­al decisions.

“The court has made its decision. We respect it. We don’t agree with it. And again, I say peace,” Kenyatta told the nation in a televised address. “That is the nature of democracy.”

Official results had given Kenyatta 54.3% of the vote, compared to Odinga’s 44.7%, a lead of 1.4 million votes. Kenyatta’s ruling party also swept the legislatur­e.

“For the first time in history of African democratis­ation a ruling has been made by a court nullifying irregular elections for the president,” Odinga said, adding that members of the election board “belong in jail” for their conduct.

An election board official said there would be personnel changes, but it was not clear if that would be enough for the opposition. Sweeping out the whole board would complicate efforts to hold a new poll within two months. Inter- national observers had said they saw no sign of manipulati­on of voting and tallying at polling stations. But the election board was slow posting forms showing polling station results online. Thousands were missing when official results were declared, so opponents could not check totals. Court experts said some documents lacked official stamps or had figures that did not match official tallies.

“It’s historic and it could potentiall­y be a moment that consolidat­es Kenya’s democratic credential­s,” said Crisis Group analyst Murithi Mutiga, adding that the fate of the election board could “trigger a crisis” if there was no consensus.

In a nation of more than 40 ethnic groups, tribal loyalties often trump policy at election time. Kenyatta’s Kikuyu is the biggest of Kenya’s tribes but still a minority. Odinga is a Luo. Many voters in the west of Kenya, Odinga’s stronghold, and on the coast, where many of the nation’s Muslims live and traditiona­lly another region of opposition support, feel neglected by central government. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Uhuru Kenyatta
Uhuru Kenyatta
 ??  ?? Raila Odinga
Raila Odinga

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