Texarkana Gazette

Kenyan court throws out president’s victory

- By Tom Odula

NAIROBI, Kenya—President Uhuru Kenyatta’s re-election victory last month was thrown out Friday by Kenya’s Supreme Court, which ordered new voting within 60 days in a stunning decision that plunged the East African country back into political chaos.

The move to nullify an election was unpreceden­ted on the African continent.

It gave new hope to opposition candidate Raila Odinga, who had alleged the electronic results of the Aug. 8 balloting were manipulate­d. He had lost by about 1.4 million votes out of roughly 15 million cast.

The court ruled 4-2 in Odinga’s favor, saying the electoral commission committed “illegaliti­es and irregulari­ties.” The court, whose full decision with details of its findings is expected to be released within 21 days, did not blame Kenyatta or his party.

Kenyatta said that while he respected the ruling, he “personally disagrees” with it. He urged calm in a country that has a history of postelecti­on violence.

“Six people have decided they will go against the will of the people,” the president said, later telling his supporters that Chief Justice David Maraga “and his crooks” had taken away his victory. The official results had given Kenyatta 54 percent of the vote to Odinga’s 44 percent.

Opposition members danced in the streets, marveling at the setback for Kenyatta, the 55-year-old son of the country’s first president, in the long rivalry between the country’s top political families.

“It’s a very historic day for the people of Kenya and by extension the people of Africa,” Odinga said. “For the first time in the history of African democratiz­ation, a ruling has been made by a court nullifying irregular election of a president. This is a precedent-setting ruling.”

No African country has annulled a national election due to irregulari­ties, Ronald Slye, a law professor at Seattle University, told The Associated Press. Slye was among those who participat­ed in Kenya’s Truth, Justice and Reconcilia­tion Commission set up after violence killed more than 1,000 people following the 2007 election.

Electoral commission chairman Wafula Chebukati said personnel changes will be made before the new vote, and he said any employee found to be involved in manipulati­ng the results should be prosecuted.

Odinga, 72, called for the election commission to be disbanded.

He also said the role of internatio­nal observers who came to Kenya for the vote must be examined because they put stability ahead of credibilit­y and had “moved fast to sanitize fraud.”

The internatio­nal observers, including former Secretary of State John Kerry, had said on election day that they had seen no interferen­ce with the vote. The Carter Center said Friday that Kerry’s mission had noted that “the electronic transmissi­on of results proved unreliable.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? n Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga celebrate Friday in Uhuru Park after hearing the verdict in Nairobi, Kenya. Kenya’s Supreme Court on Friday nullified President Uhuru Kenyatta’s election win last month and called for new elections within...
Associated Press n Supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga celebrate Friday in Uhuru Park after hearing the verdict in Nairobi, Kenya. Kenya’s Supreme Court on Friday nullified President Uhuru Kenyatta’s election win last month and called for new elections within...

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