Austin American-Statesman

Kenyan president named winner in troubled vote

Rival’s angry backers skirmish with police in opposition areas.

- By Christophe­r Torchia

President Uhuru Kenyatta on Monday was declared the overwhelmi­ng winner of a rerun election boycotted by Kenya’s main opposition leader, collecting 98 percent of the vote but also exposing the divisions roiling this East African country.

While Kenyatta’s backers celebrated his re-election, angry supporters of his rival, Raila Odinga, skirmished with police in Nairobi slums and burned tires in Kisumu, one of the opposition stronghold­s in western Kenya.

Kenya’s election commission said the turnout of registered voters in Thursday’s election was about 40 percent, compared with roughly twice that in August balloting that was nullified by the Supreme Court because of what it called “irregulari­ties and illegaliti­es.”

The rerun was marred by deadly clashes between police and Odinga supporters in the days that followed.

Kenyatta said he expected Odinga followers to mount new legal challenges, indicating the long saga that has left many Kenyans weary of conflict and has hurt business in East Africa’s economic hub is not over.

“My victory today was just part of a process that is likely to once again be subjected to a constituti­onal test through our courts,” Kenyatta said at the election commission headquarte­rs after results were announced that gave him a second term. “I will submit to this constituti­onal path.”

Kenyatta said he would consider dialogue with the opposition after the outcome of any court proceeding­s. He also described his victory as a validation of his win in August, saying the 7.5 million votes that he received this time amounted to 90 percent of what he got earlier.

Odinga, who dismissed the repeat election as a sham and told his supporters not to participat­e, remained on the ballot and still got 73,000 votes, or just under 1 percent. In August, he received 45 percent to Kenyatta’s 54 percent.

At least nine people have died in violence since the rerun election. Some were shot by police; several died in fighting between Kenya’s different ethnic groups, highlighti­ng the loyalties that drive Kenyan politics. Mobs have also looted shops and burned property in some areas.

Late Monday, crowds in the Nairobi slums of Kibera, Mathare and Kawangware — areas where Odinga has strong support — confronted police, set fires and blocked roads. Security forces used tear gas.

Tires were set ablaze in the western town of Kisumu.

“It was not an election that involved everyone,” said Peter Musundi, a Kawangware resident. He called the vote as a “nomination exercise” for the ruling Jubilee party.

Some Kenyatta backers celebrated his victory with song and dance. “We wait for Kenya to move forward,” said supporter Ann Njoki, speaking near the election commission headquarte­rs.

Voting did not take place in two dozen of Kenya’s 290 constituen­cies due to opposition protests, although the election commission cited an election law that says final results can be announced if the outcome is not affected by the tally in areas that didn’t vote.

Wafula Chebukati, chairman of the election commission, said before Thursday’s vote that he could not guarantee its credibilit­y. Before announcing the results, however, he said he was confident it was a “free, fair and credible election.”

Odinga has said he will form a “resistance” movement to oppose the government, which has in turn accused opposition leaders of fomenting violence with incendiary rhetoric. He also said he wants another election to be held.

U.S. Ambassador Robert F. Godec said Washington is deeply concerned by the recent violence and urged Kenyans to engage in dialogue “to resolve the deep divisions that the electoral process has exacerbate­d.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal alleged that police used “unlawful force” against opposition supporters and bystanders after the rerun election.

 ?? JOHN MUCHUCHA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta hold up posters as they celebrate his victory Monday in Nairobi, Kenya. Kenyatta collected 98 percent of the vote in an election that exposed the East African country’s divisions.
JOHN MUCHUCHA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta hold up posters as they celebrate his victory Monday in Nairobi, Kenya. Kenyatta collected 98 percent of the vote in an election that exposed the East African country’s divisions.

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