San Francisco Chronicle

Main opposition candidate rejects ‘manipulate­d’ vote

- By Kevin Sieff and Rael Ombuor Kevin Sieff and Rael Ombuor are Washington Post writers.

NAIROBI — A day before Kenya is due to announce the official outcome of its recent presidenti­al election, the country’s longtime opposition leader on Thursday reasserted his conviction that the results have been rigged.

NASA, the party led by Raila Odinga, declared that he had won Tuesday’s vote by a wide margin, even though provisiona­l results indicate that the incumbent, President Uhuru Kenyatta, won by a margin of nearly 10 percent. That message laid the groundwork for a potentiall­y explosive reaction when the official results are announced Friday.

In a nation with a recent history of solid economic growth and relative political stability, Kenya’s elections nearly always expose the tense, fractured tribal politics that lie just under the surface here. In 2007, a disputed election led to about 1,400 deaths, and charges were brought at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court — including against Kenyatta and his running mate, William Ruto — that were dropped for lack of evidence.

This time, much will hinge on the direction Odinga, 72, gives his followers, who have already taken to the streets in periodic bursts, confrontin­g police who have responded with tear gas and, less frequently, live ammunition. Internatio­nal election monitors, including former U.S. secretary of state John Kerry, have encouraged Odinga and Kenyatta to advocate a peaceful response by their parties and supporters.

But at a news conference Thursday, Odinga’s team described what it said was a vast coverup by the country’s Independen­t Electoral and Boundaries Commission, citing as its source an anonymous whistleblo­wer inside the commission. According to Musalia Mudavadi, one of Odinga’s advisers, the “authentic and legitimate results” were manipulate­d or hidden by the body.

The commission’s unofficial results showed Kenyatta, 55, leading with 54.3 percent of the votes, ahead of Odinga’s 45 percent. By Odinga’s count, those figures would be roughly reversed.

Given Kenya’s wide political divisions, analysts worry that another disputed election will only increase tensions between ethnic groups and further diminish faith in the central government.

“If you have a leader that commands only half the country, you will have many disgruntle­d people and low confidence in public institutio­ns,” said Murithi Mutiga, a researcher with the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

On Wednesday, Odinga made a different set of allegation­s against the electoral commission, claiming that its system had been hacked and results were manipulate­d using stolen log-in credential­s. On Thursday, the chairman of the commission, Wafula Chebukati, acknowledg­ed that there had been a hacking attempt but said it “did not succeed.”

 ?? Ben Curtis / Associated Press ?? Protesters in Nairobi celebrate after hearing details from a news conference that they interprete­d as meaning opposition leader Raila Odinga will become president.
Ben Curtis / Associated Press Protesters in Nairobi celebrate after hearing details from a news conference that they interprete­d as meaning opposition leader Raila Odinga will become president.

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