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Kenya launches voter registration for 2017 polls

Published: 15 Feb 2016 - 03:11 pm | Last Updated: 08 Nov 2021 - 06:52 am
Peninsula

A Kenyan man (C), gets his hair cut at a local barber shop in Mathare slums in Nairobi, Kenya, 12 February 2016.

 

Nairobi: Kenya launched a voter registration drive Monday for elections in August 2017, in a bid to push numbers to a record 25 million voters.

"We are urging Kenyans to turn up in large numbers and register as voters," Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) chief Isaack Hassan said at the launch in Nairobi.

"Currently we have 14.3 million voters in the register," he said, adding the commission was holding a month-long drive to boost numbers but that registration would still be possible after that.

President Uhuru Kenyatta won the March 2013 polls by more than 800,000 votes ahead of his nearest rival, outgoing Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

Odinga and civil society groups filed legal challenges alleging the polls were marred by a series of irregularities that skewed the results.

The 2013 polls were peaceful apart from isolated incidents, avoiding a repeat of the ethnic killings and widespread violence that followed the 2007 polls, when more than 1,100 people were murdered and several hundred thousand forced to flee their homes.

Both Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto faced trial at the International Criminal Court over the violence.

However, crimes against humanity charges against Kenyatta were dropped in December 2014, in a case littered with allegations of witness intimidation, bribery and false testimony.

On Friday, Ruto celebrated an ICC ruling barring the use of recanted testimonies in the crimes against humanity case brought against him, which many believe will pave the way for the case to now also be dropped.

Kenya's next elections are due on August 8, 2017.

Only a handful of people have been prosecuted for the 2007-08 violence, and on Monday, Human Rights Watch released a report documenting the impact on the hundreds of victims of rape.

"Hundreds of women and girls raped during Kenya's 2007-2008 post-election violence struggle with devastating physical and psychological health conditions, poverty, and social exclusion," HRW said in the report, titled, 'I Just Sit and Wait to Die'.

Girls and women were gang-raped, while some men and boys were raped or forcibly circumcised or castrated.

"Next year Kenya heads to the polls again, while women who were brutally raped almost a decade ago have neither been compensated nor seen justice," said Agnes Odhiambo from HRW.

"We were shocked to find how many survivors are sick, living in poverty and stigmatized, ignored, and often rejected instead of helped by the government."

AFP