Cape Argus

Court battle over vote result

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VETERAN opposition leader Raila Odinga yesterday challenged Kenya’s presidenti­al election results in the Supreme Court and alleged the tally had involved “criminalit­y”, sharpening a political contest gripping East Africa’s powerhouse.

In the petition, Odinga asks the court to nullify the vote’s outcome on several grounds, including a mismatch between the turnout figures and the result, and alleges the election commission failed to tally ballots from 27 constituen­cies, rendering the result unverifiab­le and unaccounta­ble.

“We have enough evidence to prove all of the criminalit­y that occurred,” Odinga said. “We are confident that in the end, the truth will be revealed.”

This is Odinga’s fifth stab at the presidency; he blamed several previous losses on rigging. Those disputes triggered violence that claimed more than 100 lives in 2017 and more than 1 200 lives in 2007.

Last week the election commission­er declared Odinga’s rival, Deputy President William Ruto, had won the August 9 election by a slim margin, but four out of seven election commission­ers dissented, saying the tallying of results had not been transparen­t.

The commission, its chairperso­n and Ruto have four days to respond to Odinga’s claims through court filings.

Last week, Odinga said the results were a “travesty” but said he would settle the dispute in court and urged supporters to remain peaceful. His supporters have said the results were the outcome of intentiona­l fraud by election authoritie­s. The election commission has denied any wrongdoing.

In 2017, the Supreme Court overturned the election result and ordered a re-run, which Odinga boycotted, saying he had no faith in the election commission. This time, Odinga is backed by the political establishm­ent. President Uhuru Kenyatta endorsed Odinga’s candidacy after falling out with Ruto after the last election.

At stake is control of East Africa’s wealthiest and most stable nation.

One week ago, electoral commission chairperso­n Wafula Chebukati declared Ruto the winner with 50.49% of the vote against Odinga’s 48.5%. But minutes earlier, his deputy Juliana Cherera said that she and three other commission­ers disowned the results. She said the elections had been conducted in a proper manner, and most internatio­nal observers agreed, but that results were erroneousl­y aggregated.

Public confusion reigned over the tallying after the Kenyan media suspended a count of 46 229 polling station level results with around 80% of the vote counted. The election commission’s website still does not display the correct forms for all 291 constituen­cies.

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