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Kenya Counts On Technology To Ensure Fair, Peaceful Vote
Kenya has rolled out new technology in an
attempt to ensure Monday’s presidential election is transparent and
proves the east African nation can rebuild its image after a disputed
2007 poll unleashed weeks of ethnic killing.
Independent monitors have routinely reported “ghost” voters, stuffed
ballot boxes and other violations in Kenyan votes. But the 2007 race was
the bloodiest with more than 1,200 people butchered in fighting between
loyalists of rival candidates.
Kenya cannot afford a re-run of the mayhem that brought east Africa’s
largest economy to standstill and damaged trade routes to nearby
states. Western donors worry about the stability of a regional ally in
their fight against militant Islam.
This time, once votes are counted, the results from each polling
station will be electronically transmitted to the central election
commission, as well as being publicly displayed.
The new system, similar to the one used in Ghana’s smooth 2012 vote,
aims to eliminate errors and prevent accusations of foul play.
Voting will still be on paper ballots, but voter identification will
be electronic. Mobile devices at polling stations will not be able to
send out any result where total votes exceed registered voters, a common
fraud complaint before, the election commission said.
The two top contenders in the presidential poll, Raila Odinga and
Uhuru Kenyatta – who have joined the other candidates in calling for a
peaceful vote – held final rallies in Nairobi on Saturday before
thousands of chanting supporters in a final push before a campaign
blackout on Sunday.
“We have put in a significant number of controls to make sure things
that happened previously don’t happen,” said Dismas Ong’ondi, director
of information and communication technology at the Independent Electoral
and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), which replaced the body that oversaw
the last vote.
“People become anxious when you delay releasing results,” he said,
after delays were partly blamed for the eruption of violence following
the 2007 vote.
This time provisional results could emerge within hours of polls
closing, although the IEBC has seven days to announce the official
outcome.
Supporters of Odinga, who contested the 2007 vote against outgoing
President Mwai Kibaki, were outraged when they were told after a long
wait that their candidate had lost, and some alleged voting fraud.
Kibaki was sworn in at night away from the public eye in another move
that angered rivals.
CLOSE RACE
Polls suggest another close race this time. Odinga, from the Luo
tribe, and Kenyatta, a Kikuyu, are way ahead of their six rivals but
polls suggest there may not be an outright winner on Monday, so it may
go to a run-off, provisionally set for April.
The commission has been widely praised for far greater impartiality
and professionalism than its predecessor. But it is the first time such
technology is being used across the nation, although they have been used
for smaller scale votes.
Some observers worry that the commission has been cutting it fine to
put all the systems in place in time, while Odinga has criticised the
body for registering fewer of his supporters than for his rivals.
Two days before the vote, Odinga told Reuters the commission had not
sent enough biometric voter registration kits to strongholds of his
Coalition for Reform and Democracy (CORD), so his voters were
under-represented on voter lists.
IEBC chief executive James Oswago denied the charges, saying that all
areas received the same treatment although some politicians had been
better at drumming up registration. He said the 30-day registration
period had not been extended, which Odinga said he had requested,
because of a tight schedule.
But many of the 14 million eligible voters are more confident this
time with the new system, even if some still fret about violence. They
are also encouraged because of a reformed and more independent judiciary
to adjudicate in any disputes.
“It looks like there will be no cheating. This system is good,” said
Isaac Muturi, a taxi driver in Nairobi’s central business district.
“This year the system looks better than in 2007, when there was a lot of
cheating.”
Results will be transmitted over a purpose-built mobile application on the Safaricom network.
As a further safeguard, Ong’ondi said the system stopped vote tallies
being altered once they had been sent from polling stations and
publicly displayed at the IEBC headquarters, on its website and in
regional and other centres.
Dismissing worries equipment was not ready, IEBC chairman Ahmed
Isaack Hassan told Reuters, “We know the concerns, but we are working
round the clock to make sure everything is in place. We have been
assured that they are ready and functioning.”
Alongside a new president, voters will also choose senators, county
governors, members of parliament, women representatives in county
assemblies and civic leaders.
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