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The day was marked by early violence, high turnout, long lines and some technical problems.
GLOBALPOST LIVE BLOG: 2013 KENYA ELECTIONS
UPDATE: 3/4/13 2:58 PM ET
#KenyaDecides to flip the script with #PicturesforStuart and #SomeoneTellCNN
The hashtag #KenyaDecides united the election-focused Twittersphere during today's hours of poll watching.
But there were two more specific hashtags in the mix — both reflecting Kenyan takes on foreign media coverage of their election.
#PicturesforStuart sprang up in response to a tweet from Stuart Norval, a France 24 anchor who spoke of “dramatic pictures” out of Kenya showing “huge crowds fall[ing] over each other to vote." Tweets bearing #PicturesforStuart mocked the romance and drama Norval found in long lines and security threats.
#SomeoneTellCNN, which made the rounds on Twitter last year over a disputed report by the news outlet, also resurfaced. The Washington Post wrote that this time CNN was in hot water for reports focusing on the possible threat militants posed to the elections.
BREAKING Gun shots fired in #Nairobi #Kenya as huge crowds fall over each other to vote. Dramatic pictures on @france24_en in 15 min
— Stuart Norval (@stuartf24) March 4, 2013
Here's those dramatic images from #Kenya as voting begins in #Nairobi amid security fears f24.my/Y8eycq via @france24
— Stuart Norval (@stuartf24) March 4, 2013
Dramatic scenes witnessed in Nairobi as Archer brutally attacks a drumstick! Cc @stuartf24 #PicturesForStuart twitter.com/ArcherMishale/…
— Archer (@ArcherMishale) March 4, 2013
Dramatic scenes in Nairobi as ice cream JUMPS out of bowl and... melts, slowly @stuartf24#PicturesForStuart twitter.com/BrianFrancis_/…
— Brian (@BrianFrancis_) March 4, 2013
KOT, you've made my day with #PicturesforStuart hashtag. Favourite thus far is "Armed man destroys plate of rice." ow.ly/ilb68
— MissBwalya (@missbwalya) March 4, 2013
Dramatic! "@rimbui: Armed w/ MACHETE & spoons, Kenyan man destroys a plate of rice! Cc @stuartf24 #PicturesForStuart twitter.com/rimbui/status/…"
— Jackie Lebo (@lebo7) March 4, 2013
RT @viru5detected BREAKING: Shots fired on #TwitterStreets. Casualties include @stuartf24, @cnnbrk #KOT wage war on irresponsible journalism
— Njoki Ngumi (@njokingumi) March 4, 2013
"@too_junior: Breaking News: CNN closes its Kenyan offices after a peaceful election. #kenyadecideds #someonetellcnn"
— Duncan Zyl (@Zyl_zyl) March 4, 2013
RT @jobmutai: #SomeOneTellCNN that we are not Queuing for relief food. We are voting. > You could have fooled me ;-)
— coldtusker (@coldtusker) March 4, 2013
LOVE IT! This is the Kenya I believe in! RT @kkombani: #SomeoneTellCNN to also broadcast this picture! twitter.com/KKombani/statu…
— Eve D'Souza (@evedsouza) March 2, 2013
Here are a few more highlights from the #KenyaDecides conversation:
If the Kenyan elections were an exam, 50k+ Kenyans would have already being disqualified even before marking began. #KenyaDecides #civilEd
— Edwin Bosire (@edwinbosire) March 4, 2013
A long day of lines, patience & messages of peace, marred only by #Mombasa attacks. The story so far: bit.ly/XkWXCz #KenyaDecides
— Michelle Shephard (@shephardm) March 4, 2013
Media at the @iebcpage elections centre in #Kenya cover results as they are announced ow.ly/i/1CDhe #Kenyadecides
— IRI (@IRIglobal) March 4, 2013
Before you go lecturing Africans on democracy, think about the last time you waited in line for nine hours to vote. #KenyaDecides
— Laura Seay (@texasinafrica) March 4, 2013
UPDATE: 3/4/13 1:57 PM ET
Highlights:
- Early violence left 15 dead (earlier reports had said 17), but the day proceeded peacefully afterward
- High turnout and very long lines were reported around the country
- Technical difficulties: Problems with spoiled ballots reported, with the IEBC admitting to "multiple failures" of electronic poll books
With 10 percent counted, Kenyatta's in the lead — but it's far too early to name a winner
GlobalPost's Tristan McConnell filed this report at 9:24 p.m. local time:
NAIROBI, Kenya — Despite long queues — sometimes more than a kilometer in length during the middle of the day — polling finished more or less on time across much of the country. Early indications were that turnout was likely to have been high. In the Kibera slum, in the capital Nairobi, a sampleof eight different polling centers soon after the close of voting gave turnouts of 76 per cent and higher.
As dusk fell the counting began with each ballot paper held up and shown to observers before being placed in piles according to candidate.
By 8pm local time — just three hours after the official end of voting — provisional results were being tallied by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission at its center on Nairobi's outskirts. With just 10 percent of the vote counted at 9 p.m. local time, Uhuru Kenyatta was in the lead with 57 percent of the vote against Raila Odinga's 39 percent. But with many polling stations still to report, it was far too early to draw conclusions.
One potentially worrying sign in the day's voting was the apparently widespread failure of electronic devices intended to protect against fraud. The so-called "poll books" are laptops with attached thumb print readers and are supposed to be more difficult to tamper with then paper voter registers. But early on Monday, soon after voting began, the IEBC admitted to "multiple failures" of the poll books countrywide.
At a number of polling centers visited by GlobalPost just north of Nairobi, officials said the laptops had run out of batteries, so the old manual system was being used instead.
UPDATE: 3/4/13 12:40 PM ET
So...who's winning?
It's too early to say which candidate will end up Kenya's president, but we can tell you who the frontrunners are.
The leading candidates, Reuters wrote before the weekend, are Prime Minister Raila Odinga and Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, who were neck-and-neck in recent polls. Kenyatta is also known for being Kenya's richest man, while Odinga, a powerful poltical force, paints himself as a reformer.
Should a run-off vote be necessary, Deputy Prime Minister Musalia Mudavadi, also running for the seat, could serve as an important "king-maker," according to Reuters.
UPDATE: 3/4/13 12:27 PM ET
Obama is running for office in Kenya
But hold your horses, Donald Trump; it's not that Obama.
Apparently, politics is in the family genes. Reuters reports that Malik Obama, 54, was inspired by his half-brother — US President Barack Obama — to launch a bid for a governor's seat in rural Siaya county.
"If my brother is doing great things for people in the United States, why can't I do great things for Kenyans here?" Malik Obama said from Kogelo.
UPDATE: 3/4/13 12:15 PM ET
Electoral commission gets credit for efficiency
The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, thanks to Kenya's new 2010 constitution, is the official, independent body charged with administering elections. Prominent voices closely watching the elections praised the IEBC for their speed in sharing initial results:
IEBC has been very transparent & quick with the numbers. By midnight might be possible to call this thing. #KenyaDecides
— Charles Onyango-Obbo (@cobbo3) March 4, 2013
But take a moment to appreciate that we have provisional results via an API inless than an hour.#kenyadecides
— Ory Okolloh (@kenyanpundit) March 4, 2013
UPDATE: 3/4/13 11:55 AM ET
High turnout, long lines.... Now, we count
Poll workers in Kenya may have a long night of ahead. Early reports suggest voter turnout could have surpassed 85 percent.
GlobalPost's Tristan McConnell shot video of some very careful ballot-counting at a polling station in Kibera, Nairobi:
UPDATE: 3/4/13 11:37 AM ET
MRC denies involvement in attacks
Reports this morning fingered the Mombasa Republican Council for some of the fatal attacks that marred the early hours of Kenya's national vote. But the secessionist group later denied responsibility, with a spokesman telling Reuters, "We are not responsible for any attacks anywhere in this region."
UPDATE: 3/4/13 10:15 AM ET
'All good all round except for a horrible incident in Mombasa'
That's GlobalPost correspondent Tristan McConnell's Twitter-sized summary of election day in Kenya. McConnell shared highlights from his reporting throughout the day — follow him @t_mcconnell.
My report on #KenyaDecides so far: all good all round except for a horrible incident in Mombasa bit.ly/ZgXrr4 for @globalpost
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
Count about to begin #KenyaDecides twitter.com/t_mcconnell/st…
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
Before dawn this polling centre was rammed with thousands of people. As polls close this is the scene #KenyaDecides twitter.com/t_mcconnell/st…
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
At one Nairobi polling station officials say turnout was close to 90% of 766 registered #KenyaDecides
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
I've posted some of my photographs from today's election, taken this morning on.fb.me/12o45Cf #KenyaDecides
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
UPDATE: 3/4/13 9:37 AM ET
It's 5:34 p.m. in Nairobi; poll lines are closed, but the vote's not over
Lines persisted after the official 5 p.m. close of voting stations in Kenya. Those in line by the deadline are still permitted to vote — it could take hours longer for the country to finish.
Half hour after polls shut last voter casts ballot at this Nairobi polling station #KenyaDecides twitter.com/t_mcconnell/st…
— Tristan McConnell (@t_mcconnell) March 4, 2013
UPDATE: 3/4/13 7:25 AM ET
Why this is a 'watershed' vote
"The last time Kenyans voted the results were disputed and ethnically-aligned gangs took to the streets," GlobalPost's Tristan McConnell writes from Nairobi.
"More than 1,100 people died during weeks of violent unrest, which is why there is so much attention on this vote. If peaceful, it will lay the ghosts of the last election to rest, but if it again descends into violence Kenya’s reputation as a stable, thriving corner of Africa will be dealt a heavy blow."
UPDATE: 3/4/13 6:07 AM ET
Long lines, early violence
NAIROBI — Voting began in Kenya’s watershed election on Monday with long queues of patient voters lining up long before dawn in many parts of the country, including the capital Nairobi, GlobalPost's Tristan McConnell reports.
But the start of the polls were marred by two separate deadly attacks on police in the coastal region. Read McConnell's full report here.
At least 15 people were killed in separate attacks as voting opened, McConnell said.
The violence took place near the coastal town of Kilifi and in Mombasa, and has "cast a shadow over a vote seen as vital to repairing the country's image" after the violent 2007 election, in which more than 1,200 people died.
Those clashes, between tribal loyalists of rival candidates, shattered Kenya's reputation as one of Africa's most stable democracies and brought its economy to a standstill.
On Monday, security officers, civilians and attackers were among those killed — reportedly by a group of 200 secessionists from the Mombasa Republican Council (MRC) armed with guns, machetes and bows and arrows, the Associated Press said.
However, the MRC officially denied responsibility for the attacks, according to Reuters.
One of attacks reportedly took place outside Mombasa, in Changamwe, and another in Kilifi, about 80 miles to the north of Mombasa.
In addition, the BBC reported three explosions in separate polling stations in Mandera, a town on the border with Somalia, that killed one person.
The MRC had in recent weeks tried to have the national vote scrapped and a referendum held on secession instead.
The MRC attack was condemned by the country's top two presidential candidates, Prime Minister Raila Odinga and Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta.
The AP cited Kimaiyo as saying:
"People with ill intent must be stopped by all means."
He said police had been ordered to use their guns to stop further loss of life.
Up to 400 more police officers were flown to Mombasa, while the UN reportedly restricted the movement of its staff on the coast.
More from GlobalPost: Kenya's coast feels a sea away from national elections
The US and other Western countries have expressed concern over stability in the country, seen as a vital ally against militant Islam in the region.
Al Shabaab militants, who have battling Kenyan peacekeeping troops in Somalia, also issued threats before the vote.
Meanwhile, voting produced long lines around the country early Monday, with new — and apparently bug-ridden — anti-fraud fingerprint voter ID technology further frustrating delayed voters.
Polls suggest Odinga and Kenyatta will struggle to secure enough ballots for an outright victory in the first round, setting the stage for a run-off on April 11.
This article has been corrected to reflect a revised death toll of 15, earlier reported as 17.
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/africa/kenya/130304/kenya-presidential-elections-mombasa-machete-attacks-MRC-secession
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