Kenyan opposition says it has evidence Odinga won election

epa06475576 Kenya's opposition coalition National Super Alliance (NASA) lawyer James Orengo holds  documents during a news conference at a hotel in Nairobi, Kenya, 26 January 2018. According to reports, the opposition coalition presented its findings on the result of the 08 August 2017 presidential election, claiming  Raila Odinga was the winner, as they plan to have him sworn-in as the so-called people?s president on 30 January. President Uhuru Kenyatta was sworn in for a second term on 28 November.  EPA-EFE/DANIEL IRUNGU

Bloomberg

Kenya’s opposition National Super Alliance said it has evidence that former Prime Minister Raila Odinga won the nation’s Aug. 8 presidential election. The alliance has a document containing “authentic, unpolluted, unadulterated” data that shows Odinga and his running mate, Kalonzo Musyoka, were the legitimate winners of the vote, Nasa Senator James Orengo told reporters Friday in the capital, Nairobi. Odinga garnered 8.1 million ballots in the vote, compared with 7.9 million for incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta, Godfrey Osotsi, a Nasa lawmaker, said at the briefing.
“If anyone had any doubts as to why Raila should be sworn in as president of Kenya, if you go through this document you come to the conclusion” that Odinga won, Orengo said. “There was interference and manipulation of the results transmitted” by the country’s electoral commission, he said.
Kenya’s Supreme Court annulled the result of the August election in September, the first time an African tribunal has overturned the outcome of a presidential vote, after the electoral commission failed to disprove an opposition claim the ballot was rigged. Kenyatta was sworn in for a second term on Nov. 28, after winning a rerun in October that the opposition boycotted.
While the results, if authenticated, are unlikely to have any legal significance, their revelation may reinvigorate the opposition’s support base, which has dwindled since Odinga was declared the loser of the vote, said Dismas Mokua, an analyst at Nairobi-based risk advisory firm Trintari.
Nasa has called for the formation of a so-called People’s Assembly, effectively a shadow government, that will demand fresh elections. It plans to have Odinga sworn in as the so-called people’s president on Jan. 30. The government has said any such declaration would amount to treason. “They’re addressing their core supporters telling them that, in fact, they won the elections and they’re supposed to be in office,” Mokua said.

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