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NEWS
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Kenya Leader Re-elected In Disputed Vote
December 30, 2007
President Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner Sunday of the closest presidential
election in Kenya's history, a contest marked by allegations of rigging and two
days of deadly violence.
Elections chief Samuel Kivuitu read the results on live television after other
media were expelled from the main vote headquarters. Kibaki beat Raila Odinga by
231,728 votes.
"This means Honorable Mwai Kibaki is the winner," Kivuitu said.
Black smoke billowed from Nairobi's sprawling Kibera slum, where thousands of
people have been on the streets for the past two days shouting "Kibaki must go!"
and claiming the vote was rigged. Violence around the country has killed at
least 15 people since Saturday, authorities said.
"These are our guns," said 24-year-old Cliff Owino, holding up a handful of
rocks in Mathare, a Nairobi slum where young men were setting up roadblocks and
building bonfires. "But a voting card is our atomic weapon."
Others were shouting "Kibaki must go!" and waving machetes in the air as buses
and shops burned.
Odinga had called on Kibaki to concede and asked for a recount, saying the
electoral commission "cannot possibly address the multiple levels of fraud
administered by this administration."
But Kibaki's camp urged patience for the official results, and accused Odinga's
Orange Democratic Movement of being behind the violence. "ODM is responsible for
all the incitement that is taking place right now," said Danson Mungatana, an
official with Kibaki's Party of National Unity.
The disputed campaign comes in one of the most developed countries in Africa,
with a booming tourism industry and one of the continent's highest growth rates.
Many observers saw the campaign as perhaps the greatest test yet of this young,
multiparty democracy and raised grave concerns as the process descended into
violence.
Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, chief European Union election monitor, said the
Electoral Commission of Kenya "has not succeeded in establishing the credibility
of the tallying process to the satisfaction of all parties and candidates."
Kivuitu, the electoral commission chairman, acknowledged problems, including a
constituency where voter turnout added up to 115 percent and another where a
candidate ran away with ballot papers.
Supporters of 76-year-old Kibaki say he has turned Kenya's moribund economy into
an East African powerhouse, with an average growth rate of 5 percent.
He won by a landslide in 2002, ending 24 years in power by the notoriously
corrupt Daniel arap Moi, who was constitutionally barred from extending his
term.
But Kibaki's anti-graft campaign has largely been seen as a failure, and the
country still struggles with tribalism and poverty. After the opposition took
most of the parliamentary seats, he may find it difficult to rule even if he
wins.
Odinga, a fiery 62-year-old former political prisoner, promised change and help
for the poor. His main constituency is Kibera, home to at least 700,000 people
who live in extreme poverty and the scene of many of Saturday's riots.
In recent months he has made it a priority to reach out to the country's middle
class and businessmen, many of whom belong to Kibaki's tribe, the Kikuyu. Odinga
belongs to the Luo tribe.
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Source: The Associated Press
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