Odinga – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com Your comprehensive news portal Tue, 30 Jan 2018 14:58:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.adomonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-Adomonline140-32x32.png Odinga – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com 32 32 Video: Kenya's Raila Odinga sworn in as 'People's President' https://www.adomonline.com/video-kenyas-raila-odinga-sworn-peoples-president/ Tue, 30 Jan 2018 14:58:16 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=885321 Kenyan authorities shut down TV stations to prevent live coverage of a swearing-in event by opposition leader Raila Odinga, who boycotted last year’s disputed presidential election.
He declared himself the “people’s president” in front of thousands of his supporters in the capital, Nairobi.
The result of the August general election was annulled following allegations of irregularities.
Related story: Tension in Kenya ahead of Odinga’s banned inauguration
Uhuru Kenyatta won a re-run in October, but Mr Odinga did not take part.
President Kenyatta was sworn in for a second term last November.
He warned the media not to cover Tuesday’s event and the attorney general said holding such a ceremony amounted to treason.
Watch the video below:

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Kenya: Odinga to be sworn-in on December 12 https://www.adomonline.com/kenya-odinga-sworn-december-12/ Wed, 29 Nov 2017 12:01:31 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=716691 Kenya’s main opposition leader, Raila Odinga has promised supporters that he would be sworn-in as president on December 12.
The announcement comes shortly after the inauguration of President Uhuru Kenyatta who was sworn in for a second term on Tuesday.
Experts say such a move would only deepen divisions opened by the extended election season in Kenya, a Western ally in a volatile region.
Months of acrimonious campaigns and sporadic clashes have already blunted growth in East Africa’s richest economy.
At a lavish inauguration attended by the heads of many African nations, Kenyatta did his best to paint a picture of a country moving beyond that divide.
“The elections are now firmly behind us, I will devote my time and energy to build bridges,” he told a rapturous crowd as he was sworn in for a second, five-year term in a sports stadium in the capital,Nairobi.
But, he warned, Kenyans needed to “free ourselves from the baggage of past grievances, and keep to the rule of law”.
Such words may ring hollow to citizens accustomed to the government ignoring detailed reports on corruption from the country’s auditor-general and documentation of hundreds of extrajudicial police killings every year from human rights groups.
Last year, Kenyatta angered many Kenyans by saying he wanted to tackle corruption but his “hands are tied”. His government has also promised to improve police accountability, but an independent watchdog has only ever managed convict two officers of murder despite thousands of brutality complaints.
Kenyatta won a repeat presidential election on Oct. 26 that was boycotted by Odinga, who said it would not be free and fair. The Supreme Court nullified the first presidential election, in August, over irregularities.
Supporters of Kenyatta who won the October poll 98 percent of the vote after Odinga`s boycott – want the opposition to engage in talks and move on.
But Odinga`s supporters see such talk of unity as tantamount to surrender. Many of them are drawn from poorer parts of the country, and feel angered because they say they are locked out of power and the patronage it brings.
 
 
 

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Kenya election set to go ahead after court no-show https://www.adomonline.com/kenya-election-set-go-ahead-court-no-show/ Thu, 26 Oct 2017 07:23:24 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=610181

Kenya’s controversial presidential election will go ahead as planned on Thursday after the Supreme Court couldn’t rule on a challenge because not enough justices showed up for a session on Wednesday.

Chief Justice David Maraga announced in televised remarks that the hearing on an emergency challenge to the vote could not proceed because only two justices were available, including himself.
Last month, the Supreme Court annulled the August 8 election following accusations of irregularities by the opposition, paving the way for a new vote scheduled for this week.
That vote has suffered a series of setbacks, including the withdrawal of the main opposition candidate, Raila Odinga, who again called on his supporters Wednesday to boycott the ballot.
Activists filed a petition Tuesday alleging that Kenya’s electoral commission was not in a position to conduct a free and fair vote. The petition said a majority of voters would not be part of the process because they were sitting out the election in line with the opposition’s call.
Opposition leader Raila Odinga, pictured October 9 in Nairobi, has urged supporters to boycott the election.

Minutes after Maraga said the Supreme Court would not be able to rule on the challenge, Kenya’s election authorities tweeted that the presidential election would go ahead as scheduled.
Wafula Chebukati, head of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), later told reporters he had discussed concerns over the safety of electoral staff and voters with political leaders and a police oversight body.
“Based on assurances given to this commission by the relevant authorities and security agencies, the election as scheduled will go ahead tomorrow,” he said. “All polling stations will open tomorrow at 6 a.m. for Kenyans to exercise their democratic right.”
Nonetheless, Chebukati deplored what he described as “police brutality” against Kenyan citizens. “Excessive use of force by the police is not an illusion, it’s a dark reality that some people have unfortunately had to experience in recent times,” he said.
Kenya remains on edge as campaigning has grown more heated and the candidates more defiant before the vote. Opposition supporters have clashed with police, and the government has banned demonstrations in certain areas.
President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner in the August vote with 54% of the vote against Odinga, and has said that Thursday’s election will be held despite concerns about its credibility. He called the Supreme Court justices who nullified the August vote “crooks.”

Odinga: Boycott ‘sham’ election

Addressing crowds of orange-clad supporters Wednesday at a rally in Nairobi, Odinga called for a “national resistance movement” to boycott the election.
“Do not participate in any way in the sham election,” he said. “Convince your friends, neighbors and everyone else not to participate.”
Odinga urged Kenyans who “value democracy and justice to hold vigils and prayers away from polling stations.” He also issued a call for peace within communities, saying: “Don’t look at your brother or sister with suspicion. He or she is as much of a victim as you.”
He had previously urged his supporters not to have anything to do with the election unless his demands were met, including the firing of some electoral commission officials, saying his coalition did not want to “facilitate another rigging of elections.”
Crowds of opposition supporters also marched to the IEBC building in Kisumu, one of Kenya’s main cities, in peaceful protest. Large numbers of security officers were in evidence.
The continued uncertainty has raised fears of wider unrest in the East African nation, where hundreds were killed in post-election violence between 2007 and 2008.
Raila Odinga, of the opposition National Super Alliance coalition, delivers a speech to supporters at a rally in Kisumu on Friday.

Raila Odinga, of the opposition National Super Alliance coalition, delivers a speech to supporters at a rally in Kisumu on Friday.

Opposition angered by court inaction

A lawyer for Odinga’s opposition National Super Alliance coalition (NASA) decried the Supreme Court’s failure to rule on the petition Wednesday.
“All in all, there is an attempt to undermine the authority of the institutional government, including independent institutions like the electoral commission and the Supreme Court,” said James Orengo, a NASA lawyer.
Orengo claimed the government’s late-notice decision this week to declare Wednesday a public holiday so people could prepare for the election was “part of a design to make sure these proceedings did not take place” in court. “It is not by coincidence or accident,” he said.
Presidential spokesman Manoah Esipisu told CNN that the opposition’s claim that the government was trying to undermine independent institutions was “rubbish” that he could not legitimize with a response.
“But what is important is that Kenya will hold fresh presidential elections tomorrow,” Esipisu said. “This will allow this process to end and for Kenya to move forward.”

Election chief’s warning

Chebukati, the IEBC chairman, warned last week that he had no faith the country would deliver a free and fair presidential election and pointed to political leaders as the greatest threat to a credible vote.
In Wednesday’s progress report, he said he had spoken about his concerns with both Odinga and Kenyatta in the past few days.
“The President gave assurance of protection for all Kenyans, whether they vote or not and regardless of what part of the country they come from,” Chebukati said.
Kenya’s police chief had also assured the electoral commission that Kenyans’ constitutional rights, including the right to take part in peaceful and lawful protests, would be respected, he said.
Last week, a senior member of the electoral commission, Roselyn Akombe, resigned over security fears and fled to New York. Akombe described the electoral commission as “under siege” and said it could not guarantee a credible election.
In another development, the driver of Deputy Chief Justice Philomena Mwilu was shot on Tuesday night. It was unclear if the shooting was political or criminal in nature.
The driver remains in stable condition, Interior Minister Fred Matiangi said on Twitter. The justice was not in the car at the time. Police did not return multiple requests from CNN to discuss the motive, and have not issued a statement.
CNN’s Farai Sevenzo and Briana Duggan reported from Nairobi and Laura Smith-Spark wrote from London. CNN’s Faith Karimi and Sarah Chiplin contributed to this report.
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Odinga rejects re-run date https://www.adomonline.com/odinga-rejects-re-run-date/ Tue, 05 Sep 2017 16:43:33 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=466231

Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga said on Tuesday his coalition would not participate in the re-run of a presidential election proposed for Oct. 17 unless it is given “legal and constitutional” guarantees.

Odinga’s conditions include the removal of some officials at the election board. He wants criminal investigations to be opened against them.

“You cannot do a mistake twice and expect to get different results,” Odinga told reporters.

Kenya’s Supreme Court ordered on Friday that the Aug. 8 vote be re-run within 60 days, saying President Uhuru Kenyatta’s victory by 1.4 million votes was undermined by irregularities in the process. Kenyatta was not accused of any wrongdoing.

On Monday, the election board said it would hold new elections on Oct. 17.

But Odinga said he wanted elections held on Oct. 24 or 31 instead.

“There will be no elections on the seventeenth of October until the conditions that we have spelt out in the statement are met,” he said.

Odinga has contested and lost the last three presidential elections in Kenya. Each time, he has said the vote was rigged against him.

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Kenya: 5 dead in protests over election fraud claim https://www.adomonline.com/kenya-5-dead-protests-election-fraud-claim/ Thu, 10 Aug 2017 12:45:44 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=379991 At least five people have been killed in post-election violence in Kenya after opposition leader Raila Odinga claimed “massive” fraud in Tuesday’s vote.
Two people were shot dead in the capital Nairobi on Wednesday, said the city’s police chief Japheth Koome, claiming they took advantage of the protests to steal.
At least one more person was shot dead earlier in the day in South Mugirango constituency in Kisii County, around 300km west of Nairobi, during a clash with the security forces, according to Leonard Katana, a regional police commander, the AP news agency reported.

In the southeastern Tana River region, police said five men armed with knives had attacked a vote tallying station and stabbed one person to death.
“Our officers killed two of them and we are looking for others who escaped,” said regional police chief Larry Kieng.
“We have not established the motive yet, we don’t know if it is political or if it’s a criminal incident but we are investigating and action will be taken.”
In the port city of Kisumu, the hometown of Odinga, police used tear gas and shot at supporters of the opposition leader, said demonstrator Sebastian Omolo.
“He is not accepting the results and that is why we are on the streets, but police have started shooting,” Omolo said.
Kisumu shopkeeper Festus Odhiambo said he was praying for peace even as protesters blocked roads into city slums with bonfires and boulders.
The contest between President Uhuru Kenyatta, a wealthy 55-year-old businessman, and Odinga, 72, a former political prisoner and son of Kenya’s first vice president, has been a hard-fought election that stoked fears of possible violence.
Odinga rejected the partial results of the presidential polls, saying hackers infiltrated the database of Kenya’s election body to manipulate the “democratic process”.
 

Alleged hacking

The opposition leader said that he could not reveal his sources on how he got the information on the alleged hacking.
In a press briefing that took place in the capital Nairobi, the presidential candidate said his party’s results are “completely different” from those published on the election commission website.
Al Jazeera’s Fahmida Miller, reporting from Mombasa, said that Odinga was alleging that important forms have not materialised from the tallying stations.
“Once the votes are tallied and transmitted electronically, these forms are meant to back up exactly how many votes were given to each particular candidate to validate what exactly has gone on,” she said.
Wafula Chebukati, the head of Kenya’s electoral and boundaries commission, said at a news conference: “As a commission we shall have our own investigative system to kick in. We shall come up with a methodology to find out whether or not those claims are correct.”
On Wednesday morning, the election commission website showed Kenyatta leading with 54.4 percent of the votes against 44.8 percent for Odinga, a margin of nearly 1.4 million votes, after 94 percent of the votes were counted.
READ MORE: Kenyan elections – The ethnicity factor
The roads of the country’s biggest slum in Nairobi, Kibera – an opposition stronghold – remained empty on Wednesday afternoon.
Simeon Otieno, a 33-year-old father of three, stood near his house looking tense.
“Everyone is staying home. Baba [Odinga] asked people to be calm but it is very difficult. We hope he wins but they always changed the result to deny him victory,” Otieno, a labourer, told Al Jazeera.
“This election is the same as 2007. They stole his votes and that caused a lot of problems. I hope nothing happens but we are all tense.”
At the other end of the slum, Nancy Odongo sat in front of the shop where she works. The door, however, was locked.
“I hope this ends quickly because we need to go back to work and feed our families,” the mother of two said.
“Elections are always bad news for us poor people. I have to pay bills and feed my children. I don’t care who wins.”
Hussein Ibrahim, another resident of the area, pointed to the long line of shops that were closed.
“There is tension after every election. That’s why all these shops are closed and why no one is coming out of their homes,” Ibrahim said.
“No one is going out because they don’t know what could happen next.”

Kenyatta camp denies claims

Raphael Tunju, secretary-general of Kenyatta’s Jubilee party, earlier shrugged off the fraud allegations made by the Odinga camp.
“I don’t expect anything else from NASA,” he said, referring to Odinga’s National Super Alliance party.
“Let’s put it this way – if the results which are being streamed showed that they were leading, what would they be saying now?”
Election officials on Tuesday acknowledged the opposition objection but defended their actions.
During the 2013 polls, Odinga alleged fraud but quelled unrest by taking his complaints to the courts.
This time, the government deployed more than 150,000 security personnel, including wildlife rangers, to protect 41,000 polling stations.

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