Africa

Early counts suggest tight Kenya presidential race

Provisional results suggest a tight presidential race in Kenya between Deputy President, William Ruto, and Raila Odinga, a former prime minister.

With more than 90 per cent of results posted from thousands of individual districts, local tallies of the raw data suggest little separates the pair.

However, it could be several days before the official result is known.

Tuesday’s vote followed a campaign dominated by debates about living costs, unemployment and corruption.

Turnout was estimated at around 64 per cent, well short of the 80 per cent in the last election five years ago.

However, Electoral Commission Head, Wafula Chebukati, has said this figure will go up once data comes in about voters who were verified manually, instead of via an electronic ID kit.

A largely peaceful election day was marred by logistical delays and a failure of these identification kits in some parts of the country.

At his latest briefing, Mr Chebukati said the commission had received 97 per cent of presidential results sent in electronically, but official tallying would not begin until the physical results were received for verification.

He also referred to one of the incidents of violence reported on voting day involving a Member of Parliament (MP) who is on the run for allegedly shooting dead his rival’s bodyguard at a polling station.

“A murder case is a matter to be dealt with by the police, the law will take its course and justice will be served,” he said.

The two frontrunners in the presidential race are seasoned politicians.

Mr Odinga, 77 – a long-serving opposition leader, nicknamed Baba (“father”) by his supporters – is running for president for a fifth time. Mr Ruto, 55, who has tried to emphasise his connection with ordinary Kenyans by calling himself a “hustler”, is taking his first stab at the Presidency.

Two other candidates – David Mwaure and George Wajackoya – are also in the race.

Outgoing President, Uhuru Kenyatta, is backing Mr Odinga, a foe turned ally, to succeed him, after a fall out with Mr Ruto, his deputy.

After counting the votes, local officials take a photo of the final tally sheet and send the image to both the Constituency and National Tallying Centres. -BBC

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