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Kenyatta wins 98 percent of vote in repeat Kenya election — commission

October 30, 2017
Kenya's president-elect, Uhuru Kenyatta (R) holds his certificate of election on October 30, 2017 at the national tallying centre at Bomas of Kenya where they were announced winners of a repeat presidential poll by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission chairman. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared victor of the country's deeply divisive elections on October 30, taking 98 percent of the ballots cast in a poll boycotted by his rival Raila Odinga, sparking fears of further violence in flashpoint opposition strongholds. / AFP / TONY KARUMBA
Kenya's president-elect, Uhuru Kenyatta (R) holds his certificate of election on October 30, 2017 at the national tallying centre at Bomas of Kenya where they were announced winners of a repeat presidential poll by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission chairman. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared victor of the country's deeply divisive elections on October 30, taking 98 percent of the ballots cast in a poll boycotted by his rival Raila Odinga, sparking fears of further violence in flashpoint opposition strongholds. / AFP / TONY KARUMBA

NAIROBI — Incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta won 98 percent of the vote in a repeat presidential election in Kenya, although only 39 percent of voters turned out due to an opposition boycott, the electoral commission said on Monday.

The announcement touched off small protests in a few opposition strongholds, but also celebrations in pro-Kenyatta areas of the east African country. Veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga had already branded the election a farce.

Given the deeply polarized atmosphere, some Kenyans fear that the violence seen so far — for the most part protesters clashing with police — is starting to take on ethnic overtones after two deaths in clashes between rival groups at the weekend.

On Monday, the US ambassador said Washington was "profoundly concerned" by the outbreaks of violence in Kenya — east Africa's biggest economy and a key security ally of the West against militancy — since the Oct. 26 re-run election.

In his victory speech, Kenyatta repeated his belief that his victory in the original Aug. 8 election — later nullified by the Supreme Court due to a string of irregularities — was legitimate and said dialogue would have to wait if the opposition was going to lodge court cases again.

"My victory today is just part of a process that is likely to once again be subjected to a constitutional test through our courts ... I will submit to this constitutional path regardless of the outcome," Kenyatta said. "Those who are going to ask me: 'Are you going to engage in dialogue?' ... Let them (the opposition) first and foremost exhaust all their constitutional options."

Kenyatta took 98 percent of the vote, results from 266 out of 291 constituencies showed. The electoral commission said 7,616,217 valid votes were cast, representing 39 percent of the 19.6 million registered voters. Protests by Odinga's supporters prevented polling stations from opening in 25 constituencies.

The election commission said that poor security prevented balloting in those areas but the final announcement could go ahead as it would not "materially affect" the result. As the election commission began reading results on Monday, around 100 youths listening through their mobile phones gathered in Nairobi's Kawangware slum, chanting "No Raila No Peace".

As soon as the outcome was announced, protesters lit a bonfire in the middle of the street and began taunting riot police with cries of "the people want tear gas".

Earlier in the day, police dispersed protesters there with teargas when they tried to block a visit to Kawangware by Interior Minister Fred Matiang'i. In another Nairobi shanty town, Mathare, the scene of deadly clashes between police and protesters immediately after the August vote, social worker Ann Mbuthia, 58, told Reuters before the results were known that women were hurrying home.

"We are afraid because here in Mathare youth are ready to fight if Uhuru is announced (the winner)," she said. "Women are afraid to come out of their houses." And in the western city of Kisumu, Odinga's political heartland, around 50 youths began to block the road at the Kondele roundabout, the epicenter of protests, while others banged metal poles together.

But the protest was small. "What can I do? They've already announced it. Even if I burn tires, nothing will change," said 25-year-old laborer Kennedy Omondi as he watched young men set a barricade alight. Odinga pulled out of last week's vote, saying the electoral commission had failed to institute reforms to forestall the kind of "illegalities and irregularities" that scuppered Kenyatta's victory in the August election.

Kura Yangu Sauti Yangu, a coalition of civil society organizations with 2,000 election observers, said there were "multiple" cases where results from polling stations differed from results on the forms posted on the election portal after last week's vote.

In a report, they supplied a photo taken by their observers of the tally sheet for Bashaal market center in Garissa. It showed 133 votes for Kenyatta while the form displayed online showed 433 votes. Another form posted on the election website, from Tumbeni primary school in Kakamega, showed four votes for Odinga and two for another minor candidate but recorded the total number of votes cast was 77 votes cast. — Reuters


October 30, 2017
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