Dead heat for Kenya presidency as election results trickle in
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[August 11, 2022]
By Katharine Houreld and Duncan Miriri
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Two days after Kenya's
general election, officials had yet to announce who is leading the
presidential race in East Africa's regional powerhouse, as confused
citizens struggled to make sense of divergent tallies from the media in
a nail-bitingly close race.
Media houses are tallying results from images of forms that the election
commission uploaded from more than 46,229 polling stations, a mammoth
task that means their tallies lag far behind the amount of raw data
available.
Some citizens worried the media's differing tallies could inflame claims
of rigging, which have sparked violence in past elections. Many urged
fellow citizens to wait for the official results.
“There is so much impatience due to media reports, because they are
varying. Given the experience that we have in Kenya, we have to be
patient and just wait," said Ongao Okello, as he scrutinized newspapers
being sold on a street corner in the western town of Eldoret.
Results are being watched carefully: Kenya is the region's richest
economy, a stable nation in a volatile region and a close Western ally
that hosts regional headquarters for Alphabet, Visa and other
international groups.
Veteran opposition leader and former political prisoner Raila Odinga,
77, is making his fifth stab at the presidency. He is neck and neck with
Deputy President William Ruto, 55.
Outgoing President Uhuru Kenyatta has reached his two-term limit. He has
endorsed Odinga for president after falling out with Ruto after the last
election.
Kenyan election authorities have preceded with tallying cautiously, wary
of the mistakes that caused the Supreme Court to nullify the results
last time and order a re-run.
Media houses have filled the information gap by recruiting hundreds of
people to manually input results from the images of results forms into
spreadsheets.
Their tallies differ because results from polling stations were uploaded
as they came in, and so each media group is counting slightly different
portions of the vote.
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A general view shows polling agents and
sealed ballot boxes containing electoral materials at an Independent
Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) tallying centre after the
general election in Nairobi, Kenya August 11, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas
Mukoya
By 1000 GMT on Thursday, the privately-owned Nation group had
tallied results from three-quarters of polling stations and put
Odinga ahead with 50.90% of the vote and Ruto at 48.42%.
At the same time, privately-owned Citizen gave Ruto 49.48% of the
vote and Odinga 49.12%.
The winning candidate must get 50% of the vote plus one to win, and
at least a quarter of votes in 24 out of Kenya's 47 counties. If
there is no outright winner, there will be a second round of voting
without the two presidential candidates currently receiving
fractions of a point.
Many Kenyans, frustrated by the shifting alliances of the elites and
fed up of rising prices and corruption, didn't bother to vote at
all.
The commission said about 65% of registered voters turned out for
the legislative, local and presidential elections - a big drop from
2017 when voter participation was nearly 80%.
The elections have largely been peaceful so far; major protests and
clashes usually only follow result announcements. More than 1,200
people were killed after the 2007 elections, and more than 100 after
the 2017 polls.
Author and political commentator Nanjala Nyabola said the lack of
violence should not be the standard for a success.
"People are just looking for the absence or presence of violence and
as a Kenyan it's a really demoralising standard to be told we should
only aspire to the bare minimum," she said. "We are trying to hold
ourselves to a higher standard."
(Additional reporting by Duncan Miriri in Nairobi, Ayenat Mersie in
Eldoret, Daud Yussuf in Garissa; Writing by Katharine Houreld;
Editing by Toby Chopra)
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