Tag: ELECTION

  • Anambra youths urges INEC to conduct credible election

    No fewer than 1,000 Anambra youths under the auspices of the Coalition of Anambra Youth Assembly have protested against any acts of rigging or violence during the governorship in state scheduled to hold this Saturday.

    The youths who carried placards, marched to various places in Awka, the capital city, including the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), to register their aversion to the purported discovery of electoral materials in a certain hotel in Awka.

    Speaking to reporters, the leader of the group, Chief Ogoo Egolum, said Anambra youths want existing peace in the state to remain, with no acts of criminality.

    Egolum called on INEC and security agencies to do the needful to ensure that ‘unscrupulous elements did not hijack the election’ and called on youths to be vigilant during the polls.

    Responding, the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC), Dr Nkwachukwu Orji, re-assured the people of credible, free and fair election on the November 18 that would be acceptable to the generality of the people. He debunked rumours of police interception of two lorry loads of sensitive materials meant for the election, saying the sensitive materials had yet to arrive in Awka and could not have been delivered to a hotel room.

    Orji said there are laid down processes for delivery of sensitive election materials, which involve strict monitoring of the process by party agents, election observers, security agencies and the media.

    The REC who was represented by Head of Department, Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Leo Ikedife, said the materials allegedly found in a hotel room in Awka did not belong to the commission.

    On the alleged printing of the Register of Voters, Section 20 of the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) provides: “INEC shall publish the Register of Voters not later than 30 days before an election. It is customary for the commission to provide the register to political parties fielding candidates for an election.

    “This was done in a widely-publicised event in Awka on October 18, 2017 during which all the parties present collected the electronic register. However, it is pertinent to note that the register given to political parties by INEC does not have the same details as the one used for elections.

    “Indeed, several fields and security features are not included in the register given to political parties.”

  • Congo sets presidential election for December 2018

    Congo sets presidential election for December 2018

    Congo Independent Electoral Commission (CENI) has announced that the long-awaited presidential elections to replace President Joseph Kabila would take place on Dec. 23, 2018.

    Around 43 million voters have been registered for the vote so far, Corneille Nangaa told a news conference in Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, Kinshasa.

    The election will be held on Dec. 23, 2018, with the results to be published on Jan. 9, 2019, and the president to be sworn in on Jan. 13, another official from the CENI, Jean Kalamba, also told reporters.

    The election, originally scheduled for late 2016, has been repeatedly delayed.

    Those delays have triggered unrest and raised fears the central African nation could slip back into the conflicts that killed millions around the turn of the century, mostly from hunger and disease.

    The electoral commission had said in September that the presidential vote could not take place until April 2019 at the earliest, and the opposition had warned that the population would “take matters into its own hands”.

    Opposition leaders reacted furiously to the new date.

    “The predatory regime wants to prolong the instability and misery of the people. We do not accept this fantasy calendar,” exiled opposition leader Moise Katumbi tweeted.

    Civil society activist organization Lucha on Twitter also condemned the announcement.

    Read: Russia 2018: Egypt qualify after beating Congo

    Dozens died in protests against Kabila’s refusal to step down at the end of his constitutional mandate in December 2016.

    U.S. envoy Nikki Haley said during a visit to meet with Kabila in October that the vote must happen in 2018 or it will lose international support.

    With no imminent election in sight, a political crisis has set in that is fueling increasing militia violence and lawlessness in Congo’s east and centre.

    Clashes between Congolese troops and supporters of a renegade colonel in Congo’s eastern city of Bukavu killed seven people on Sunday before he surrendered and turned himself in to UN peacekeepers.

    Kabila has ruled Congo since his father was assassinated in 2001.

    He says delays are owing to problems registering millions of voters across the vast, forested country.

    Opponents say he is using them to eventually remove term limits that prevent him from standing again, as presidents in neighboring Rwanda and Congo Republic have done.

    He denies that, but has not categorically said he will step aside.

    Read Also: Presidential poll:Top Kenyan election official resigns, flees country

  • PDP sweeps Enugu local govt election

    PDP sweeps Enugu local govt election

    •Election is a sham, say Okechukwu 

    •Nwoye: we’ll challenge results

    •This is best council poll in Nigeria, says Ekweremadu

    Candidates of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have been declared winners of Saturday’s local government election in Enugu State.

    They won all the 17 local government chairmanship seats and all the wards’ councillorship seats.

    But the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) called the outcome of the poll a sham.

    Both parties contested for 17 chairmanship and counsellorship seats.

    The State Independent Electoral Commission (ENSIEC) Chairman, Chief Mike Ajogwu (SAN), who announced the results at the commission’s headquarters at Independence Layout in Enugu, said the PDP cleared all the 17 chairmanship seats.

    Elections were not held at Eke, the ward of the Foreign Affairs Minister, Godfrey Onyeama and the Director General of Voice of Nigeria (VON), Ostia Okechukwu, and Abia, both in Udi Local Government Ardea.

    The PDP won at Awgu, Ezeagu and Udi, the local government of the former Governor Sullivan Chime.

    Ajogwu said the election was free, fair and credible.

    The ENSIEC chairman denied knowledge of any violence. He said: “I’m not aware of any bomb explosions, violence, rigging or malpractice during the election. This election is reliable and credible.”

    Also, an APC chieftain and the Director General of Voice of Nigeria (VON), Mr. Osita Okechukwu, described the outcome of the poll as shambolic.

    He said the results were the paradox of the quest for devolution of powers from the federal to the states.

    Okechukwu said the election was marred by late arrival of electoral materials and other irregularities.

    The APC chieftain expressed worry that since “our return to the Fourth Republic, most state governments have debased democracy by conducting shambolic local government council elections. The same shambolic election took place in Enugu on Saturday”.

    He added: “Take Enugu State as a case study. APC members, in 2016, first objected to the appointment of caretaker committees to administer the 17 local government areas in the state. Consequently, APC headed to court, citing a breach of Section 7 of the Constitution of Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “Regrettably, the election came after two years and in PDP electoral phobia tradition, the ENSIEC disqualified 50 councillorship and two council chairmanship candidates of the APC. Without any legally valid option, we headed to court again and they reversed the disqualification.

    “Then came the Election Day. Impunity reared its ugly head again. Result sheets were handed over to PDP leadership and their associates. Is this democracy?”

    On the danger the “shambolic” local government election posed to democracy, Okechukwu said: “It makes popular participation at the local government level impossible, hence it debases democracy. To compound matters, all state governments run rubber-stamp Houses of Assembly. Therefore, there are no oversight functions at the state level.

    “Consequently, the devolution of powers from the federal to the state seems a paradox in the sense that democracy cannot grow or survive without free and fair elections at the local government level. Imagine what could have happened to the opposition if there was state police. We could have been chased out of the polling precincts. To be honest, we, the patriots, have to review our support for devolution of powers.”

    Reminded that APC governors had also conducted “shambolic” local government elections, Okechukwu said his concern was about the growth and survival of democracy in Nigeria.

    He said: “To me, we must join hands to save democracy for the struggle. For free and fair local elections to be effective, it must bi-partisan.”

    Also, the Enugu State APC Chairman Ben Nwoye said the election was characterised by widespread violence in almost all the local government areas.

    Nwoye said APC’s governorship candidate in 2015, Okey Ezea, who hails from Igboeze South, was attacked and injured by suspected PDP thugs.

    The party chairman recalled that “as I speak to you now, he is currently receiving treatment in the hospital”.

    He said: “Like I predicted yesterday at a media briefing, ENSIEC Chairman Mike Ajogwu has rubbished himself with this sham he put together in the name of an election, just to satisfy his pay masters, the PDP.

    “It is quite unfortunate that there was widespread of violence and bloodbath in Enugu, simply because ENSIEC wants to please the PDP. There were no result sheets in all the polling units. Yet, Dr. Ajogwu called what he did today an election.

    “If you remember, I had severally called for the resignation of the ENSIEC chairman because of his open bias against APC.

    “Ajogwu breached all the electoral provisions, including disallowing opposition parties and other stakeholders from being present while ENSIEC takes delivery of sensitive electoral materials from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) few days to the election, as provided by law.”

    Nwoye, who urged APC supporters to remain calm in the face of provocation, said the party does not believe in violence.

    He said APC would seek redress in court at the appropriate time.

    Also, Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu yesterday described the local government poll as the best in Nigeria’s recent history.

  • Kenya election board CEO rejected by opposition goes on leave

    Kenya election board CEO rejected by opposition goes on leave

    Kenyan Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC)  said on Friday he was taking three weeks of leave ahead of the election.

    Opposition demanded that Chiloba must be fired before a repeat presidential election scheduled for Oct. 26,

    The first presidential vote in August, which gave victory to Kenyatta, was annulled because of procedural irregularities.

    Chiloba said he had taken a personal decision to take leave in light of the opposition’s demands, without giving more details.

    He said all arrangements were in place for the election, as ordered by the Supreme Court.

    “This is the first time I‘m taking leave since my son was born. He turns two years (old) in two weeks’ time,” he told Reuters.

    The court annulled the first election, held in August and in which incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner, over procedural irregularities.

    Read: Kenya Forfeits AFCON Hosting Right, CAF Shops for New Country

    The opposition, led by Raila Odinga, has said it will boycott the re-run unless several demands, including the sacking of Chiloba, are met.

    Odinga met the chairman of the IEBC board, Wafula Chebukati, on Thursday and later told reporters that if there were serious consultations and serious reforms, the opposition could review its boycott.

    The board has said the election will go ahead and Kenyatta, has insisted the vote must be held.

    On Thursday, the president snubbed an invitation to meet Chebukati, saying he would instead spend the time campaigning. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Presidential poll:Top Kenyan election official resigns, flees country

    Presidential poll:Top Kenyan election official resigns, flees country

    An election board commissioner in Kenya has resigned and fled the country a week before a re-run of the presidential vote, citing political intimidation and saying the election would be a “mockery” of democracy.

    The resignation of Roselyn Akombe, one of seven election board commissioners, is likely to be seized upon by the opposition to bolster its claim that the Oct. 26 poll will not be fair.

    The re-run was ordered by the Supreme Court on Sept. 1 after it nullified the Aug. 8 re-election of President Uhuru Kenyatta, following a petition by opposition leader Raila Odinga.

    Odinga withdrew from the repeat poll last week, saying the board had not carried out reforms demanded by the opposition.

    His move thrust the country, a key Western ally and also the richest economy in the region, deeper into political uncertainty.

    The board has said the poll will go ahead with seven candidates on the ballot, including Odinga.

    Akombe, a member of the board’s top panel, cited severe partisan political divisions among its eight members and the secretariat for her decision to leave.

    “The commission has become a party to the current crisis. The commission is under siege,” she said in a statement issued from New York and dated Tuesday.

    She told BBC radio she had fled from Kenya to New York after receiving numerous threats but did not identify who was threatening her.

    The upcoming election would not be credible, she added.

    “We need the commission to be courageous and speak out that this election as planned cannot meet the basic expectations of a credible exerrcise.”

    Kenyan law requires the repeat election to be held within 60 days of nullification of the original vote.

    Odinga has called daily demonstrations to protest against the electoral body.

    At least four people have been killed during protests following the court ruling.

    Kenyatta has accused Odinga of pulling out of the race after sensing defeat and trying to cause chaos to force a power-sharing deal, something the opposition strongly denies.

    No fewer than 1,200 people were killed in violence after a disputed presidential election in Dec. 2007.(Reuters/NAN)

  • Anambra poll: Parties sets record, as 37 field candidates

    Anambra poll: Parties sets record, as 37 field candidates

    The November 18 governorship election in Anambra state will be setting a national record in number of political parties participation, it was learnt.

    According to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), 37 political parties have fielded candidates for the election which is just 45 days away.

    There are 48 registered political parties in the country.

    The number of parties notwistanding, INEC Chair, Prof. Mahmood Yakubu said the commission is prepared for the election.

    He also noted that apart from the unprecedented number of parries that will be participating in the election, there were no court cases on party candidacy neither is there any party that has fielded two candidates.

    INEC Boss also revealed that electronic transmission of results will not be possible in the Anambra election.

    He however said the innovation will be put to use in the coming Ekiti and Osun polls.

     

  • Anambra election and charter of equity

    The November 18 governorship election in Anambra is fast approaching and the major political parties have produced their candidates. The candidates of major political parties contesting the election are, Osita Chidoka (UPP), Godwin Ezemo (PPA), Oseloka Henry Obaze  (PDP),Tony Nwoye (APC), and Governor Willie Obiano (APGA). It is a good omen that the party primaries have been concluded and ndi-Anambra are now faced with the opportunity of choosing their next governor. If they make a good choice, it will be for the betterment of our beloved state and if they make a bad choice, it will end in regret.

    Already some selfish politicians have started telling anybody that cares to listen that there is nothing like zoning and that they don’t mind the consequence of working against zoning. They don’t give a damn about public interest; rather they are devilishly scheming to subvert public interest for their own selfish interest. But one thing that is certain is that public interest will always over-ride personal interest. Our people are now politically aware and cannot be misled by selfish politicians. I remember vividly that in 2013 when Mr Peter Obi was leading the campaign for power shift to Anambra North, it was being aired on radio stations across Anambra State that anybody that was not in support of power shift to Anambra North is indirectly supporting Igbo marginalisation in Nigeria. I concur with the referred opinion. We Igbo cannot be crying of marginalisation in Nigeria and back home in our various states, we are supporting marginalisation. Some people are attempting to shift the goal post in Anambra State and they must be stopped for the betterment of the state.

    Dr. Chris Ngige governed Anambra State for three years. Peter Obi governed Anambra State for eight years and Governor Obiano will complete his first term on March 17, 2018.

    Osita Chidoka hails from the same Anambra Central Senatorial zone with Ngige and Peter Obi. Tony Nwoye is from the same local government and senatorial district with Governor Obiano. Oseloka Obaze hails from Ogbaru and the same Anambra North senatorial zone with Obiano. Godwin Ezemo hails from Aguata in Anambra South senatorial zone. Among all these governorship candidates, Governor Obiano is the only person that is constitutionally bound to go for only one term in completion of his mandate for the people of Anambra north. The rest are constitutionally eligible to go for two terms.

    As at 2013, when ndi-Anambra voted for zoning, it was done with the understanding that power can only stay in Anambra North for eight years and return to Anambra South by 2022. It is said whatever that is worth doing is worth doing well hence the reason behind my advocacy for the entrenchment of sense of belonging in Anambra State political system. Anybody trying to wave Anambra charter of equity aside in the forthcoming November 18 governorship election is an enemy of progress because anybody that wants the progress and betterment of his state will support the implementation of good initiatives in his state.

    Ndi-Anambra will make a regrettable mistake, if they fail to return Governor Obiano for second term because the governor’s candidature represents equity, fairness and justice. Outside this, Obiano has performed beyond the expectations of ndi-Anambra and keen watchers of events in the state. He assumed office when Nigeria economy went into recession and he deployed his private sector wealth of experience in navigating ndi-Anambra out of recession. Other states in Nigeria felt the effects of the national economic recession but in Anambra, Governor Obiano cushioned its effect with the rolling out of tax stimulus package for our people. He did this as a leader that knows when his followers are in pain.

    Today Anambra is being referred to as the safest state in Nigeria, courtesy of Obiano administration’s zero tolerance for criminality in Anambra State. His administration received applause for doing well in the agricultural sector.

    Tony Nwoye and Oseloka Obaze are candidates of godfathers. Our people will not forget in a hurry the horrible experience our state passed through in the hands of godfathers in between 1999 to 2006. That era of brigandage and lawlessness is gone for good and must not be allowed to return to our state. It is very painful seeing Peter Obi, the man that led the struggle for power shift to Anambra North, plotting to shift the goal post at the middle of the game. His support for Obaze’s governorship ambition is fraught with a vendetta mission against Governor Obiano because of Obiano’s refusal to be at his beck and call. He wants to be the political alpha and omega in Anambra State with the sole power to make and unmake a governor in the state.

    The Bible made me to understand that only God crowns kings and not humans. So I am of the belief that God made Obiano governor and claiming otherwise is tantamount to the arrogation of God powers to Peter Obi thereby making him to play god. No reasonable Anambra southerner should support the ambition of Obaze, Nwoye and Chidoka because their candidature violates the Anambra equity charter. The best option for the people of Anambra South is to support Obiano’s re-election for the shift of power to their zone in 2022.

    Anambra as light of the nation must lead by example, if truly we want the actualisation of Igbo Presidency in Nigeria. We cannot be advocating for rotational Presidency in Nigeria whereas we are doing otherwise back home. Nigerians are watching us to know if we are going to do the right thing and our failure to do the right thing will have a dire and regrettable consequence on us politically. Peter Obi enjoyed the opportunity of second term because ndi Anambra thought it wise to vote him for a second term, so that the people of Anambra Central will not feel short-changed. An adage says that “when you treat children well and equally they will be happy “. In the case of Governor Obiano, the general public and ndi-Anambra acknowledges his performance in all sectors of governance and the people of Anambra North don’t want to feel short-changed hence the reason why voting him is a necessity for the betterment of our State.

    Nwoye is contesting to retire old politicians in Anambra State. When he emerged APC candidate for the November 18 governorship election, his supporters while jubilating in social media were saying that his victory at the APC primary is tantamount to the political retirement of Andy Ubah and that when they win the main election, they will retire other prominent politicians from Anambra State.

     

    • Obigwe is National Co-ordinator APGA Media Warriors Forum.
  • Still on Kenya’s election debacle

    SIR: Recently the Kenya’s Supreme Court nullified the presidential election in which the Kenya Independent Electoral and Boundary Commission (IEBC) had declared the incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta as winner. President Kenyatta had scored a total number of votes representing 54% against votes representing 45% scored by his rival Raila Odinga of the opposition party. The election which was monitored by both foreign and local observers including the former U.S Secretary of State John Kerry and former South African President Thabo Mbeki among other eminent personalities was adjudged as free, fair and transparent. Kenya’s Supreme Court saw things differently hence their verdict.

    It is heartwarming that wise counsel prevailed as leaders across the political divide passionately appealed for calm among their supporters.

    As the campaigns for the fresh Presidential election get underway, it is hoped that Kenyans would continue to maintain the peace and stability as they exercise their franchise once again to elect the President of their choice. The world is already watching and it is incumbent on the Kenyan people either to re-confirm their earlier decision to re-elect Uhuru Kenyatta or switch over their votes in favour of Raila Odinga this time around. The Kenyan electorate will definitely prove in the coming weeks whether Uhuru Kenyatta’s victory was a mere fluke or whether Raila Odinga was actually denied victory through the manipulation of the electoral process as he claimed. Whatever happens, the will of the Kenyan people must be respected whenever the outcome of the re-scheduled election is eventually announced by the electoral commission.

    Developing nations particularly Nigeria that is already looking forward to her next Presidential election in 2019 should borrow a leaf from the Kenyan experience and take adequate and effective measures that would guarantee free, fair, transparent and credible election in their various countries. As the countdown to the 2019 General Elections begins in earnest, it is expected that the electoral umpire, INEC should take necessary measures to plug all loopholes in order to checkmate or prevent desperate and unpatriotic politicians bent on wresting power by illegitimate means from carrying out their anti-democratic designs.

    The litmus test already awaits INEC as it prepares for the forthcoming Anambra State gubernatorial election of November 18.

     

    • Nze Nwabueze Akabogu (JP)

    Enugwu-Ukwu, Anambra State.

  • Supreme Court annuls Kenya’s presidential election

    Supreme Court annuls Kenya’s presidential election

    Kenya’s Supreme Court yesterday cancelled the result of last month’s presidential election on grounds of  irregularities committed by the election board.

    It ordered a new vote in 60 days.

    The decision to cancel the result, the first of its kind in Kenya’s history, sets up a new race for the presidency between Kenyatta and veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga.

    Kenya has a history of disputed elections. A row over the 2007 poll, which Odinga challenged after being declared loser, was followed by weeks of ethnic bloodshed in which more than 1,200 were killed.

    “The declaration (of Kenyatta’s win) is invalid, null and void,” said Judge David Maranga, announcing the verdict backed by four out of the six judges and drawing cheers outside the court from Odinga supporters.

    “The first respondent (the election board) failed, neglected or refused to conduct the presidential election in a manner consistent with the dictates of the constitution,” the judge said.

    International observers had said they saw no sign of manipulation of voting and tallying at polling stations. Several observers said the opposition did not conduct a parallel tally and had not challenged results with complete data of their own.

    Many voters in the west of Kenya, Odinga’s stronghold, and along the coast, where there is traditionally large support for the opposition, feel neglected by the central government and shut out of power.

    “This indeed is a very historic day for the people of Kenya,” Odinga said after the decision. For the first time in the history of African democratization, a ruling has been made by a court nullifying irregular elections for the president.”

    A lawyer for Kenyatta, Ahmednasir Abdullahi, said the decision was “very political” and the election board had “done nothing wrong.” But he said the decision had to be respected.

    Odinga had contested the last three elections and lost each time. After each one, he claimed the votes were marred by rigging. In 2013, the Supreme Court dismissed his petition.

    This time, his team focused on proving that the process for tallying and transmitting results was flawed, rather than proving how much of the vote was rigged.

    Residents in the western city of Kisumu, where Odinga has strong backing, celebrated in the streets. Motorcycle drivers hooted their horns.

    “Today is a special today and I will celebrate until I am worn out,” said 32-year-old Kevin Ouma.

  • Election: Kenyan girl shot dead by police in protest over

    Election: Kenyan girl shot dead by police in protest over

    A young Kenyan girl was shot dead by police during operations to quell protests against the re-election of President Uhuru Kenyatta, a witness said on Saturday.

    “The girl was hit by a stray bullet while she was on a balcony as police were firing sporadic shots,” the witness, who only gave his first name, Eric, told Reuters.

    NAN reports that Kenyatta secured a second term in office, results showed on Friday, setting off wild street celebrations by his supporters and protests in opposition strongholds in the capital and the west of the country.

    Speaking after the result of Tuesday’s election was announced, Kenyatta offered an olive branch to the opposition, urging national unity and peace with rivals who have rejected the result and raised the prospect of street protests.

    Many Kenyans fear a repeat of the violence that followed the 2007 disputed election, when about 1,200 people were killed and hundreds of thousands displaced as protests over the result led to ethnic killings.

    Kenyatta got 54.3 per cent of the vote, ahead of rival Raila Odinga who secured 44.7 per cent, according to election commission figures.

    Nearly 80 per cent of the 19 million registered voters cast their ballots.

    “To my worthy competitor Raila Odinga, I reach out to you, I reach out to your supporters, let us work together,” Kenyatta, 55, said, shortly after being declared winner.

    “Let us be peaceful, let us share together,” he said.

    “Reach out to your neighbour, shake their hand. Say this election is over, let us move on.”

    In Nairobi and other towns in Kenya his supporters took to the streets to celebrate, honking car horns and blowing whistles.

    However, there were also protests.

    Police fired tear gas and gunshots were heard in the Nairobi slums of Mathare and Kawangware, where young men took to the streets as police helicopters buzzed overhead.

    In Kisumu, an Odinga stronghold in the west, youths banged drums and tyres burned in the streets in the Kondele district.

    As election officials prepared the final results, the NASA opposition coalition, led by 72-year-old Odinga, who has lost the last two elections amid complaints of fraud, said it rejected the process after its complaints had not been addressed.

    “We raised some very serious concerns. They have not responded to them. As NASA we shall not be party to the process they are about to make,” senior opposition official Musalia Mudavadi told reporters.

    James Orengo, one of Odinga’s top lieutenants, said the process had been a “charade”.

    He stopped short of calling for protests but praised the Kenyan people’s history of standing up to stolen elections and said there were “constitutional alternatives” to challenging any result.

    “Going to court, for us, is not an alternative. We have been there before,” he said.

    “The Kenyan people have never disappointed … every time an election has been stolen, the Kenyan people have stood up to make sure changes are made to make Kenya a better place.”

    Earlier, Orengo had called for the candidates and observers to be given access to the election commission’s computer servers so there could be a transparent audit of data from 41,000 polling stations across the country.

    Yakub Guliye, election commissioner in charge of information technology, said the opposition had not made a formal request and it would not act on a verbal request.

    Normal procedure calls for the commission to release final results after cross checking electronic tallies with paper forms.

    Odinga’s camp has said figures released by the commission since Tuesday’s vote were “fictitious” and that “confidential sources” within the commission had provided figures showing Odinga had a large lead in the race.

    The election commission rejected the claims, pointing out they contained basic mathematical errors.

    Police had beefed up security across much of Kenya, particularly in opposition strongholds in the west and parts of Nairobi, in anticipation of the announcement of the result.

    Kenya is the leading economy in East Africa and any instability would be likely to ripple through the region.

    Odinga is a member of the Luo, an ethnic group from the west of the country that has long said it is excluded from power.

    Kenyatta is from the Kikuyu group, which has supplied three of four presidents since Kenya gained independence from Britain in 1963.

    International observers have given the thumbs-up to the vote and U.S. Ambassador Robert Godec issued a statement on behalf of the diplomatic community calling for any complaints to be channelled through the courts, not street protests.

    “If there are disputes or disagreements, the Kenyan constitution is very clear on how they are to be addressed. Violence must never be an option,” he said on Friday.

    But the opposition criticised foreign observer missions, which included former South African president Thabo Mbeki and former U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, saying they should have been “vetted” ahead of the vote.

    “The observers largely served the interests of the government,” Orengo said.

    As well as a new president, Kenyans also elected new lawmakers and local representatives.

    Some of those races have also been disputed, leading to violence in Garissa and Tana River counties.(Reuters/NAN)