Focus shifts to the Supreme Court on Monday where the
battle over last week’s presidential election will be fought after the Cord
candidate, Mr Raila Odinga, said he would challenge the results. (Read: The intrigues surrounding Jubilee victory). Mr Odinga was on Sunday evening assembling a
team of lawyers to build a case against the election of Mr Uhuru Kenyatta as
Kenya’s fourth President as declared by the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC) on Saturday.
The advisory team comprising senators-elect Amos Wako,
Moses Wetang’ula, James Orengo, Mutula Kilonzo and Budalangi MP Ababu Namwamba
was on Sunday working with other lawyers to prepare the legal battle in a case
expected to file with the Supreme Court later on Monday. (Read: Raila to challenge Uhuru's victory in court). The case by Mr
Odinga is likely to be heard before the Supreme Court which is composed of
Chief Justice Willy Mutunga and Judges Smokin Wanjala, Philip Tunoi, Jackton
Boma Ojwang’, Mohamed Ibrahim and Njoki Ndung’u. Cord’s national campaign
coordination committee co-chairman Franklin Bett on Sunday said that the team
had been appointed in readiness for the petition. “We cannot give specific
details of the issues we will be raising but they will be available in court,”
said Mr Bett.
The suit is expected to rely on Cord’s assertion that
the equipment that IEBC had deployed for the election — ranging from poll
books, computer servers, electronic transmission of results and electronic
voter identification — had not worked as planned. In the final tally on
Saturday, the IEBC declared Mr Kenyatta as winner of the presidential election
with 6,173,433 votes out of 12,330,028 votes cast. Mr Kenyatta’s figures
surpassed the 50 per cent mark plus one vote mark required to avoid a run-off. “Let
the Supreme Court determine whether the results announced by the IEBC are
lawful. We are confident that the court will restore the faith of Kenyans in
the democratic rule of law,” Mr Odinga had said when he rejected the outcome of
the results on Saturday. (Read: PM’s unfulfilled ambition to become president)
Mr Odinga, addressing the public after the results were
announced, said voter registration numbers were reduced in Cord strongholds and
added to Jubilee strongholds. He further said that some constituencies saw the
number of registered voters inflated. Mr Odinga’s running mate, Mr Kalonzo
Musyoka, had on Thursday last week claimed that vote tallying at Bomas of Kenya
was compromised and demanded that it be stopped. On Sunday the IEBC published a
Gazette notice certifying the election of Mr Kenyatta as President and Mr
William Ruto as Deputy President. “The Independent Electoral and Boundaries
Commission (IEBC) certifies that the candidate who has been duly elected the
President of the Republic of Kenya under the provision of Article 138(4) and
(10) of the Constitution in the presidential election held on 4th March 2013 is
Mr Uhuru Kenyatta,” read the notice. “The IEBC subsequently declares Mr William
Samoei Ruto elected as the Deputy President under the provision of Article
148(3) of the Constitution.”
The National Alliance (TNA) party said it is prepared
to contest a petition challenging the election of Mr Kenyatta as President. TNA
secretary-general Onyango Oloo said the party will engage lawyers to respond
once they have been served with court papers. According to the constitution, a
petition challenging the election of a president should be filed within seven
days after the declaration of results. The Supreme Court will then have to
settle the petition within 14 days and its decision will be final. Should the
court declare the election invalid, a fresh election shall be held within sixty
days.
Courtesy: Nation Media
Courtesy: Nation Media
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