Today's Headlines
- Two Exhibitions Are On At Ramoma, Nairobi
- Country to Review Tourism Law
- Econet Wireless Finally Rolls Out
- Odinga Warns of Civil Unrest
- Mulee Rules Out Harambee Stars U-Turn
- Taking Up a Women's Agenda
- More Than 6,000 Christian Youth Converge for Prayers
- Catholic Church Outraged By MPs' Refusal to Pay Tax
- Pope Benedict Praying for Release of Abducted Nuns
- Thousands Flee Amid Fears of Border Clashes
- Malaria Rates Plummet Among Children
- Winning Against HIV Stigma Behind Bars
- First Congress of Federation of African Journalists a Historic Milestone, Says IFJ
- Archbishop Lele Urges State to Act as Food Crisis Bites
- Regional Workshop Focus Border Management, Irregular Migration
- Silverbird Acquires Kenya's Nu Metro, Starts Operations in Ghana
- Raila is Evil, Says Minister
- Man Charged With Abduction of Two Catholic Sisters
- UN Censures State On Torture
- Agencies Seek $390 Million to Offset Climate And Food Risks
- UN-Backed Scheme Gives 3,000 Prisoners Clean Water and Sanitation
- Samosa Festival is On in Nairobi
- Heartstrings in Another Comedy
- Govts, Investors Engage RVR in Rail Bid
- Mwangi Replaces Mwebesa At NSE
- Riepa Hosts Business Association
- ICTR Petitions UN for Arrest of Kabuga
- UBA to Invest SH360 Billion in Kenya
- Free Movement of People Too, Not Just Goods and Capital
- Judges Running Out of Money?
The Nation (Nairobi)
September 5, 2008
News Article By Oliver Mathenge and Jami Makan
The team looking into last year's presidential poll results indicated Thursday that its report will show widespread and systematic incompetence throughout Kenya's electoral system.
Commission chairman Justice Johann Kriegler said that last year's election was marred by a series of errors that made it impossible to determine the true outcome. He fell short of saying whether massive errors in the contest were proof of fraud and rigging.
"Numerous mistakes were made," he said, "but it is for the commission to decide whether they are due to fraud or negligence."
He announced that his team will hand the report to President Kibaki on September 17, and will shortly thereafter present it to former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan, who will travel to Nairobi for the occasion.
According to the agreement that led to the establishment of the Independent Review Commission, the President will then have 14 days to make the document public.
Justice Kriegler further added: "We have arranged with Kofi Annan's office that he will be here later that week and we will formally present it to him."
He said that it would be impossible for him to determine the true outcome of the election, and that Kenyans should not look at this as a shortcoming, but rather as evidence of an election that was thoroughly flawed.
In particular, Justice Kriegler said that election staff were subjected to outside pressure from political parties, were not given proper training, lacked adequate arithmetic skills, and were overworked.
Outdated
The retired judge also said that the flaws were widespread throughout the country, suggesting that the final report will not single out any particular politicians or political parties.
He also said that election forms were outdated, and the manner in which the tallying took place was archaic.
But Justice Kriegler expressed confidence that his commission would be taken seriously, unlike many other commissions of inquiry in Kenya's history.
He offered insight into how the team was working, saying that the representatives from PNU and ODM appointed to the commission were getting along, despite the fact that "at times they have felt their party loyalties."


