Kenya calm a day after violent protests over presidential declaration

Violent protests erupted in Raila Odinga's stronghold of Kisumu and parts of Nairobi on Monday after he lost his fifth bid for Kenya's presidency to Deputy President William Ruto.

The turnout in last Tuesday’s vote dipped to 65 percent as Kenyans across the country of 65 million expressed frustration with rising prices, high unemployment and widespread corruption.
Reuters

The turnout in last Tuesday’s vote dipped to 65 percent as Kenyans across the country of 65 million expressed frustration with rising prices, high unemployment and widespread corruption.

Kenya is calm a day after the declaration of Deputy President William Ruto as the winner of the narrow presidential election over longtime opposition figure Raila Odinga – a vote closely watched in the East African country that has been crucial to regional stability.

There were protests by Odinga supporters in some cities Monday night after chaos around the declaration as a majority of electoral commissioners alleged the process was “opaque.” 

Those commissioners, appointed by President Uhuru Kenyatta last year, gave no details about their sudden objection after an election widely seen as the most transparent ever in Kenya.

The 77-year-old Odinga, who has pursued the presidency for a quarter-century, still has made no public statement or appearance. 

His campaign has signalled it might challenge the election result in court and has seven days after the declaration to do so. The Supreme Court would have 14 days to make a ruling.

The electoral commission chairman said Ruto won with almost 50.5 percent of votes while Odinga received almost 49 percent. 

A local electoral observer group on Tuesday will release the result of its parallel tally seen as an important check on the official process.

READ MORE: Violent protests erupt in Kenya after deputy president Ruto wins election

Odinga's campaign had expected victory after the outgoing president in a political twist backed his former rival Odinga instead of his own deputy president.

Rising prices, corruption

But the 55-year-old Ruto appealed to Kenyans by making the election about economic differences and not the ethnic ones that have long marked politics with sometimes deadly results. 

He portrayed himself as an outsider from humble beginnings defying the political dynasties of Kenyatta and Odinga, whose fathers were Kenya’s first president and vice president.

The turnout in last Tuesday’s vote dipped to 65 percent as Kenyans across the country of 65 million expressed frustration with rising prices, high unemployment and widespread corruption. 

The now-wealthy Ruto himself has faced and denied multiple allegations of land grabs and other graft.

READ MORE: Key faces, talking points: What to know about Kenya's presidential election

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