Kenya postpones voting in opposition areas after violence

Fears of further bloodshed led Kenya's election commission to postpone voting planned for Saturday in some opposition strongholds.
The rioters, some belonging to the Luo ethnic group, looted shops and set fire to a kiosk owned by an ethnic Kikuyu.
The rioters, some belonging to the Luo ethnic group, looted shops and set fire to a kiosk owned by an ethnic Kikuyu.

NAIROBI: Fears of further bloodshed led Kenya's election commission to postpone voting planned for Saturday in some opposition strongholds, citing safety concerns for staffers as deadly clashes continued between police and protesters.

It was the second voting delay in four out of Kenya's 47 counties, highlighting the bitter divisions and political uncertainty that have intensified after Thursday's repeat presidential election, which was boycotted by supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga.

At least six people have died in violence linked to the election, including a man who was shot and killed in the Nairobi slum of Kawangware as security forces moved to quell fighting between gangs from different ethnic groups late today, according to police.

Earlier in the day, stone-throwing protesters in Kawangware who support Odinga clashed with police who fired tear gas and water cannon.

The rioters, some belonging to the Luo ethnic group, looted shops and set fire to a kiosk owned by an ethnic Kikuyu. Gangs with machetes then moved into the area, seeking revenge for the kiosk attack. One man with a severe wound from a machete blow lay bleeding on the ground, witnesses said.

Many observers say Kenya's ethnic-based politics overshadow the promise of its democracy. President Uhuru Kenyatta, who got 54 per cent of the vote in an August 8 presidential election that was later nullified by the Supreme Court over irregularities, is from the Kikuyu community.

Odinga, who got nearly 45 per cent in the earlier election, is a Luo.

Odinga's legal challenge led to the nullification of the August vote. He then withdrew from the new election, saying the process was not credible because of the lack of electoral reforms.

Today's announcement by election commission chairman Wafula Chebukati that voting will not occur in several opposition areas tomorrow followed warnings from opposition leaders that they would not participate, fearing a police crackdown.

"This is our polling station here but we won't vote, come what may," said R Samson Odhiambo, a resident of Kisumu, Kenya's third-largest city and an opposition stronghold.

Peter Anyang' Nyong'o, the governor of Kisumu County, described the plan to open the polls tomorrow as a "joke." Church leaders and lawyers in Kisumu city also criticized the plan.

The election commission did not say when the voting will now take place in the four counties, increasing uncertainty about when final results from Thursday's election will be announced in the East African economic power.

Yesterday's vote had a sharply lower turnout because of the opposition boycott. About 6.5 million people, or one-third of registered voters, went to the polls, according to the election commission. Nearly 80 per cent of registered voters participated in the August election.

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