Kenyan opposition demands its candidate be ‘declared president’
NAIROBI: Kenya’s main opposition coalition demanded on Thursday that its candidate Raila Odinga be declared president, claiming it had evidence he had won an election that has already led to angry protests over fraud claims.
The latest allegations by the National Super Alliance (NASA) are likely to further ratchet up tensions in the country where a disputed 2007 poll left 1,100 dead.
While President Uhuru Kenyatta has an unassailable lead in near-complete provisional results, Odinga insists these are a “sham”, produced by a massive hacking attack on the electronic vote tallying system.
Foreign observer missions from the European Union, African Union, Commonwealth and the Carter Center urged party leaders to be patient and refrain from inflaming tensions, expressing confidence in the election commission (IEBC).
Shortly after they spoke however, one of NASA’s leaders Musalia Mudavadi gave a televised press conference unveiling new claims from “confidential sources” within the IEBC saying their servers showed Odinga was the true winner. Mudavadi said he would provide data and screenshots showing that on the IEBC servers, Odinga had 8.04 million votes, leading Kenyatta on 7.75 million.
The IEBC public website, which is publishing results as they stream in electronically from polling stations, shows Kenyatta with 8.1 million votes, ahead of Odinga with 6.7 million.
According to the website, results are in from 98 per cent of polling stations, however the IEBC has urged patience as it cross-checks results with scanned forms.
IEBC chief Wafula Chebukati had earlier urged parties to “exercise restraint” as results were being finalised. “We are working hard to ensure that we get the final results within the shortest time possible. We expect that all the presidential results... will reach the national tallying centre by 12 noon tomorrow (Friday).” The results would be validated and that a final decision would be announced “soon thereafter”, he added.
Odinga, 72, who claims elections in 2007 and 2013 were stolen from him, on Wednesday charged that hackers had broken into the IEBC’s systems and rigged the count. They had used the log-in details of top IT official Chris Msando, found murdered and tortured last month, he said.
Published in Dawn, August 11th, 2017