Times of Suriname

Protesters demand rapid inquiry

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KENYA - Protesters marched on the offices of Kenya’s election commission on Tuesday, demanding a speedy investigat­ion of the murder of a senior official that has raised fears over the legitimacy of next week’s national elections.

Chris Msando, the election board’s head of informatio­n, communicat­ion and technology, was found murdered on Monday. He had been tortured before he was killed, authoritie­s said.

Msando oversaw the live transmissi­on of election results, a contentiou­s area that the opposition has said could be used to rig next Tuesday’s presidenti­al and parliament­ary polls. In a sign of public jitters, Kenya’s military spokesman was forced to go on national television on Tuesday evening and deny reports he was missing. Some media outlets suggested he had been abducted after leaking details of election-related security. The presidenti­al race is very close: Opposition leader Raila Odinga is favored by 49 percent of voters compared with President Uhuru Kenyatta’s 48 percent, according to a poll of 5,000 Kenyans across 47 counties released on Tuesday by Infotrak Research and Consulting. Another poll put Kenyatta in the lead with 47 percent and Odinga at 44 percent, according to a survey of 4,300 Kenyans released on Tuesday by internatio­nal polling firm Ipsos. The close race, the murder, and a history of malfunctio­ns of election equipment have raised tensions in Kenya and provoked a storm of speculatio­n on social media. “It is important that security agencies expedite investigat­ions as a matter of utmost urgency,” John Githongo, a prominent anti-corruption campaigner, said during the march by about 25 protesters. “The timing of his torture and murder serves to undermine Kenya’s election management body,” he added, as the group sang and held up banners denouncing the killing. Kenyatta issued a statement condemning the killing of Msando and Caro Ngumbu, a woman who had been shot in the head and whose body was found next to Msando’s. Kenyatta urged faith in investigat­ors and for the public to refrain from speculatio­n about the motives for the killings.

Both the United States and Britain offered to help Kenya investigat­e the murder, without saying how.

Odinga has said the last two elections were rigged. In 2013, he took his complaints to court and the elections were largely peaceful. But in 2007, he called for street demonstrat­ions, and the political protests and ethnic violence that followed killed more than 1,200 people and forced another 600,000 to flee their homes.

(reuters)

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