Tag Archives: Prime Minister Raila Odinga

Kenya vote totals still secret 4 months later

The chairman of Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission has refused to be sworn in before a parliament committee and stormed out of the hearing, breaking a pledge made this week that the commission would release all vote totals to the lawmakers Thursday.

Four months after the March vote, vote totals still have not been made public, fueling conspiracy theories of rigging.

Kenya’s vote was largely peaceful, and though the reporting and tallying of votes was marred by irregularities, the country accepted the Supreme Court’s judgment that President Uhuru Kenyatta was legitimately elected.

The loser, former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, also accepted the Supreme Court’s decision, helping Kenya to avoid the vicious post-poll violence that killed more than 1,000 people in 2007-08. But Odinga maintains that the vote was rigged.

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Kenya Supreme Court: Election was not perfect

Kenya’s Supreme Court says the execution of the nation’s March presidential election wasn’t perfect but that petitions to overturn the result did not prove President Uhuru Kenyatta was illegally elected.

The court announced its ruling in late March but on Tuesday released its 113-page written decision. The court ruling said that petitions by former Prime Minister Raila Odinga and civil rights activist Gladwell Otieno do not disclose “any profound irregularity in the management of the electoral process.”

Kenyatta beat seven other presidential candidates with 50.07 percent of the vote. That slim margin over the needed 50 percent was challenged by Odinga — who got 43 percent — and civil society groups that complained of anomalies in the voting process.

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Kenya inaugurates Uhuru Kenyatta as president

Kenya is inaugurating a new president — Uhuru Kenyatta.

Leaders from across Africa have flown into Nairobi to watch Tuesday’s swearing-in, which is taking place at a sports stadium filled with tens of thousands of rowdy Kenyatta supporters.

Kenyatta, 51, is the son of Kenya‘s first president, Jomo Kenyatta. His March 4 election victory, with 50.07 percent of the vote, was upheld by the country’s Supreme Court after an election challenge from outgoing Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

Kenyatta — Kenya‘s fourth president — becomes the second sitting African president to face charges at the International Criminal Court over allegations he helped orchestrate the vicious tribe-on-tribe violence that marred Kenya‘s 2007 presidential election. That trial is scheduled to begin in July. Kenyatta’s deputy, William Ruto, faces similar charges at the ICC.

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Kenya Election Results: Uneasy Calm After Court Ruling On Vote

By The Huffington Post News Editors

NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenyan police deployed forces Sunday in the capital and the lakeside city of Kisumu to contain the continuing threat of violence after five people were killed in riots Saturday, officials said, but the country remained mostly peaceful after a court upheld Uhuru Kenyatta‘s election as president.

Rowdy youths in Nairobi’s slums were still trying to protest the Supreme Court‘s ruling against Prime Minister Raila Odinga‘s challenge to the validity of Kenyatta’s win, Nairobi police officials said Sunday.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Uneasy calm in Kenya after court ruling on vote

Kenyan police say they have deployed forces in the capital and in the lakeside city of Kisumu to contain the continuing threat of violence after two people were shot dead in protests following the Supreme Court‘s decision to uphold the election of Uhuru Kenyatta as the country’s next president.

Moses Ombati, the deputy police chief for Nairobi, said Sunday that rowdy youths in Nairobi’s slums were still trying to protest after the court ruled against Prime Minister Raila Odinga‘s challenge to the validity of Kenyatta’s win.

Although Odinga accepted the court’s decision, some of his supporters reacted angrily, taking to the streets and engaging the police in running battles. Nyanza police chief Ole Metito said two people were killed and five seriously injured in riots in Kisumu, Odinga’s home region.

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Tension in Kenya ahead of court's decision on vote

Lawyers and observers have started gathering inside the courtroom in the Kenyan capital where six Supreme Court judges are expected to deliver a judgment in the petition challenging the results of the March 4 election which declared Uhuru Kenyatta as Kenya‘s next president.

Armed police patrolled the area surrounding the court in Nairobi where crowds gathered Saturday afternoon to hear the decision. Tension mounted across Kenya in anticipation of the court’s ruling. The judges could uphold or invalidate the victory of Kenyatta, the son of Kenya‘s first president who faces serious charges at the International Criminal Court.

Lawyers for Kenyatta’s challenger, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, charged before the Supreme Court that the election was marred by irregularities and that Kenyatta did not win enough votes to avoid a runoff election.

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Anxiety ahead of Supreme Court judgment in Kenya

Kenya is on edge awaiting the Supreme Court decision Saturday on whether it will uphold or invalidate the election of Uhuru Kenyatta as president.

Lawyers for Kenyatta and lawyers for challengers Prime Minister Raila Odinga and a civil society group presented their closing arguments Friday. The Supreme Court judges began writing their judgment.

The court released a report on a partial recount of the results from 22 polling stations which found discrepancies regarding the number of votes cast in five polling stations. The report says discrepancies for the presidential elections were also found in 75 other stations.

Kenyatta won by a hair, with 50.07 percent of the vote, breaking the 50 percent mark by about 8,000 votes out of 12.3 million cast. Odinga says Kenyatta won fraudulently.

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Kenya vote commission cites Bush v Gore in defense

A lawyer for Kenya‘s election commission is citing the American presidential election court case Bush vs. Gore in his argument that Kenya‘s election result should stand.

Ahmednasir Abdullahi told Kenya‘s Supreme Court Thursday it should adhere to judicial restraint and uphold the March 4 election result showing that Uhuru Kenyatta won with 50.07 percent of the vote. Prime Minister Raila Odinga and civil society groups are asking the court to order a new election because it wasn’t free and fair.

Abdullahi quoted a U.S. Supreme Court justice who wrote that the appearance of a split court on such an important case risks undermining public confidence.

One justice told Abdullahi the court was not on trial and to return to arguing his case.

The court is expected to rule by Saturday.

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Vote numbers were changed, Kenyan court told

Kenya’s Supreme Court has heard that vote totals for Uhuru Kenyatta increased between the closing of the polls and when numbers were reported to the central vote counting center.

The court must rule on allegations by Prime Minister Raila Odinga and civil society groups that the vote was fraudulent and a new election must be held.

Kenyatta was declared the winner of Kenya’s March 4 presidential election with 50.07 percent. He cleared the crucial 50 percent barrier by some 8,400 votes of more than 12 million cast.

Kethi D. Kilonzo, an attorney for the African Center For Governance, played a video for the court Wednesday she said showed Kenyatta’s vote totals increasing between when the local polling station read an amount and when it reached the national tallying center.

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Kenyan court denies prime minister 2 requests

Kenya’s Supreme Court has denied two requests by the legal team of Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who has asked the court to order a new presidential election.

The court this week hears arguments from Odinga’s team and civil society groups on why the March 4 election should be re-run. Odinga’s team cites multiple failures, including an electronic voter ID system that didn’t work and an early vote return system that crashed.

Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner of the March 4 election with 50.07 percent of the vote.

The court Tuesday denied a request by Odinga’s team for access to computer data held by the election commission. The court also disallowed a more than 800-page affidavit.

The constitution says the court must rule on the case by Saturday.

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Kenya court: Partial recount in presidential vote

Kenya‘s Supreme Court has ordered the election commission to recount votes in some constituencies in regard to the country’s March 4 presidential election.

The court on Monday heard arguments from civil society groups and the legal team of Prime Minister Raila Odinga over what they say were failures by the election commission to conduct a free and fair election.

The court ordered the election commission to recount votes in 22 of the country’s 291 constituencies to see if any of the tallies exceed the number of registered voters, one of the complaints from Odinga’s team. The court also ordered scrutiny of the 33,400 forms which were used for to record election results.

The election commission named Uhuru Kenyatta the winner of the election with 50.07 percent of the vote.

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Former Bush lawyer fighting Kenyan election case

A former lawyer for President George W. Bush now representing Kenya‘s prime minister in his fight to win a new presidential election says he doesn’t think Kenya‘s election commission is impartial.

William Burck told The Associated Press that Kenya‘s election commission failed in its duty to ensure the March 4 presidential election was fair. Among the faults was what Burck called an inexplicable rise in the number of registered voters just before the vote.

Burck is representing Prime Minister Raila Odinga in his petition to Kenya‘s Supreme Court asking that the results be scrapped and a new election held. Uhuru Kenyatta — the son of Kenya‘s founding father — was named the winner with 50.07 percent.

The Supreme Court has until a week from Saturday to rule on Odinga’s petition.

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Kenya police tear gas supporters of prime minister

Police in Kenya have fired tear gas on crowds in the capital who gathered in support of Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

Odinga on Saturday planned to file a case with the Supreme Court over what he says is massive fraud that took place during the country’s March 4 election.

Uhuru Kenyatta won the election with 50.07 percent of the vote. Saturday is the last day Odinga can file a petition to protest the result.

Kenya‘s election has been largely peaceful, unlike the 2007 vote that sparked two months of violence that killed more than 1,000 people.

The police had warned Odinga supporters that they would not allow them to gather Saturday. An Associated Press reporter at the scene said the supporters were not demonstrating or being violent when fired on.

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Online insults erupt in Kenya after peaceful vote

Tribal lines are being drawn over who won Kenya‘s presidential election. Unlike the bloody violence that scarred the country five years ago, this time the only fighting is online.

Machete strikes and bows and arrows are being replaced by bitter Tweets and angry status updates.

The exchange of barbs between supporters of Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta — who was named the winner of the March 4 election with 50.07 percent of the vote — and top competitor Prime Minister Raila Odinga has degenerated into expletive-filled fights that have the government worried.

The Ministry of Information and Communications says it has been unable to contain “the ugly messages of hate and negative ethnicity” online. The ministry’s Bitango Ndemo said Thursday that officials are working on overdrive to control the problem.

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Election dispute big test for Kenya's top judge

Confidence was so low in Kenya‘s courts during the country’s deadly 2007-08 post-election violence people preferred to fight in the streets.

There has been no violence following this year’s election, in part because of the faith the country has in its highest ranking judge.

Chief Justice Willy Mutunga will soon hear the biggest case of his short judicial career. Last weekend the country’s election commission named Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta the winner of the March 4 presidential election with 50.07 percent of the vote. Prime Minister Raila Odinga is challenging that result, saying there has been massive rigging.

One quote from Mutunga may come to have bearing on the case. He is quoted in the 2006 book “Raila Odinga” as saying Kenya “needs Raila” as president.

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Cover-up of Kenyan vote rigging, Odinga team says

Officials from the party of Kenya‘s prime minister say they are not getting the co-operation they need from Kenya‘s electoral commission to prepare a lawsuit to challenge the results of the March 4 presidential vote.

Education Minister Mutula Kilonzo and Lands Minister James Orengo said Monday there was an effort to cover-up cheating that they alleged gave the election win to Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta.

Orengo, who backs Kenyatta’s top challenger, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, said the country’s electoral authority was ignoring their request to allow them to go through the register of voters.

Kenyatta, the son of Kenya‘s founding father, Jomo Kenyatta, was declared president-elect on Saturday. Kenyatta won 50.07 percent of the vote, just surpassing the 50-percent level needed to avoid a runoff with Odinga.

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Kenyan Millionaire Uhuru Kenyatta Officially Wins Presidential Election

By Mfonobong Nsehe, Contributor

Uhuru Kenyatta, one of Kenya’s richest men and the son of Kenya’s first president, Jomo Kenyatta, has won the presidential election despite facing charges by the International Criminal Court of financing post-electoral violence in 2007. Uhuru Kenyatta makes history by becoming the East African nation’s youngest president (he’s 51) and the first son of a president to take power in a competitive election in East and Central Africa. Kenyatta won 50.07% of the total votes cast, in comparison to his closest rival, incumbent Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who pulled 43% of the votes. Under Kenyan law, the winning candidate is required to win at least 50% of the total vote in order to avoid a second round runoff. Shortly after Isaack Hassan, the chairman of Kenya[/entity]’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, made the announcement on Saturday, an elated Kenyatta publicly thanked the country for electing him as the country’s new leader and promised to work for the benefit of everyone.[/entity] “We celebrate the triumph of democracy; the triumph of peace; the triumph of nationhood,” Kenyatta said. “Despite the misgivings of many in the world, we demonstrated a level of political maturity that surpassed expectations.” But while the wealthy Kenyatta enjoys a strong and favorable following, particularly among Kenya’s young population, Kenyatta’s victory is likely to upset international powers, because the International Criminal Court (ICC) has indicted him for instigating and financing violence in the aftermath of the presidential elections of 2007. Prime Minister Raila Odinga accused the government at the time of rigging the vote and this prompted widespread violence in which over 1,200 were killed and several other thousands displaced. Kenyatta denies any wrongdoing. Kenyatta has a bachelor’s degree in political science from Amherst College, in Massachusetts, U.S.A.  On returning to the country after his studies, he founded a horticulture business which he subsequently sold in order to focus on managing his family’s extensive business holdings. They include a commercial bank, luxury hotels and vast holdings of prime Kenyan land. Along with members of his family, Kenyatta owns at least 500,000 acres of prime land across Kenya. While it is documented that the land was legally acquired by his father in the 60s and 70s under a World Bank-supported settlement transfer funds scheme that allowed government officials to acquire land from the British colonialists at giveaway prices, Uhuru’s critics still maintain that the older Kenyatta unscrupulously grabbed land at the expense of ordinary Kenyans. The Kenyatta family land holdings alone are worth over $500 million and the family is renowned as one of the wealthiest families in Kenya. Kenyatta started his successful career in public service in 1999 when the Kenyan president at the time, Daniel Arap Moi, appointed him as chairman of the Kenya Tourism Board. In 2001, he was elected to the Kenyan parliament and was made minister for Local Government. In 2008 he was appointed Deputy Prime Minister under the coalition government and assumed position of Minister of Finance in 2009. Now, he is 4th President …read more
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Kenya: Jubilation after slimmest of election leads

Kenya‘s electoral commission is preparing to announce the final results of the nation’s presidential election Saturday after a final tally showed Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta with the barest of majorities.

Final numbers showed Kenyatta with 50.03 percent of the vote. Kenyatta needs more than 50 percent to win outright and avoid a runoff with Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who had 43.3 percent.

Eliud Owalo, Odinga’s chief campaign manager, said the prime minister would not concede defeat “because the process was fraudulent.”

Though Kenyatta appears to have just barely squeaked by the 50 percent hurdle, he solidly beat Odinga, one of eight candidates.

That fact may help prevent the violence that exploded in Kenya after its last presidential vote, in 2007, when more than 1,000 people were killed.

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In Kenya, jubilation for Kenyatta after slim win

Uhuru Kenyatta — the son of Kenya‘s founding father and a man accused by an international court of helping orchestrate the vicious violence that marred the nation’s last vote — was certified as the winner on Saturday of Kenya‘s presidential election by the slimmest majority — 50.07 percent.

Jubilant Kenyatta supporters dressed in the campaign’s color of red flooded streets in their Nairobi strongholds on Saturday. Kenyatta’s defeated rival, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, planned to hold a news conference to reveal his next step.

If Kenyatta’s victory holds, the son of Jomo Kenyatta will become the fourth president of Kenya since its independence from British colonial rule in 1963.

Kenyatta’s win could greatly affect Kenya‘s relations with the West. The president-elect faces charges at the International Criminal Court for his alleged role in directing some of Kenya‘s 2007 postelection violence. His running mate, William Ruto, faces similar charges.

The United States has warned of “consequences” if Kenyatta wins, as have several European countries. Britain has said it would have only essential contact with the Kenyan government if Kenyatta is president.

Government officials have been working for months to avoid the postelection violence that brought Kenya to the brink of civil war five years ago, when more than 600,000 people were forced from their homes. The election commission Saturday held a dramatic midday televised announcement where officials appealed to Kenyans to accept the results with grace.

“There can be victory without victims,” said Ahmed Issack Hassan, the chairman of Kenya‘s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission.

Francis Eshitemi, an Odinga supporter in Nairobi’s largest slum, Kibera, said it was clear his candidate had lost in a free and fair election and that he expected him to concede.

“The problem is that Raila doesn’t have the numbers. There were a few irregularities, but the gap between Raila and Uhuru is big,” he said.

Isaac Khayiya, another Odinga supporter, said: “This time we want postelection peace, not war. We will be the ones to suffer if there is violence. For them — Uhuru, Ruto, Odinga — they have security and they are rich.”

The final results showed that Kenyatta won 6,173,433 votes — 50.07 percent — to Odinga’s 5,340,546 — 43.3 percent. More than 12, 330,000 votes were cast, a record turnout of 86 percent registered voters.

Kenyatta’s task was not simply to beat Odinga, but to get over the 50 percent mark and avoid a head-to-head runoff. Eight candidates ran for president.

Odinga’s camp has indicated legal challenges could be filed. Monday’s presidential vote proceeded mostly peacefully, but the counting process has been stymied by a myriad of break-downs and errors.

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Controversial candidate is likely winner in tight presidential race in Kenya

Kenya faced a photo finish in its race for president on Friday as the last ballots were counted. The leading candidate, Uhuru Kenyatta, saw his percentage yo-yo around the crucial 50 percent mark, as officials told The Associated Press it appeared likely Kenyatta could win a majority.

The latest vote tally showed Kenyatta, the deputy prime minister, with 49.87 percent of the vote. A little more than 80 percent of voting locations had been tabulated. Earlier, Kenyatta briefly broke above 50 percent before the election commission gave another of its frequent updates.

Electoral expert Tom Wolf, a research analyst with the polling firm Ipsos Synovate, told The Associated Press that the outstanding votes coming in from Kenya‘s Rift Valley are a “very abundant vote basket” for Kenyatta. His running mate, William Ruto, is from the Rift.

“On a scale of zero to 10, it seems to be about a seven or eight that he’ll probably just get over” the 50 percent mark, said Wolf. “I would be a little bit more surprised if he didn’t get over 50 than if he did, but neither one on the face of it would be a complete surprise.”

The 50 percent mark is important for Kenyatta to avoid a runoff with the other top candidate, Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

A Western election observer said the international community was forming a consensus around the belief that Kenyatta was likely to win outright. The observer spoke on condition he wasn’t identified talking about internal diplomatic discussions.

There was also a belief that Odinga was not likely to protest the vote in a manner that would increase the chances of violence, the observer said, but rather honor his pledge to respect the result and petition the courts with any grievances.

The election commission announced late Friday afternoon it intended to finish the counting process by the end of the day, but as dark descended on Nairobi, some observers wondered if the election commission would really announce the results at night, when security forces would face a more difficult challenge containing any outbreaks of violence.

Kenya‘s capital, Nairobi, has been sleepy since Monday’s vote for president, the country’s first election since its 2007 vote sparked tribe-on-tribe violence that killed more than 1,000 people. But groups of security forces in riot gear took to the streets Friday in regions of the city that could turn tumultuous after results are announced.

The prime minister’s supporters took to the streets after Odinga in 2007 said he had been cheated. In Kibera, Nairobi’s largest slum and a bastion of Odinga support, many believe this year’s results have been rigged as well.

“If you look at the way the tallying is being done there is rigging,” said Isiah Omondi, 27. “If Uhuru wins and wins fairly, we don’t have a problem with him. He can be our president. But not like this.”

A Kenyatta win could have far-reaching consequences with Western relations. The son of Kenya‘s founding father, Kenyatta faces charges at the International Criminal Court for his role in directing some of …read more
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