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Kenya’s Supreme Court on Monday unanimously upheld William Ruto’s presidential win in a scathing judgment that blasted opposition leader Raila Odinga’s accusations of cheating.
Soon after, Odinga tweeted that he would respect the ruling even though he disagreed with it, easing fears that Kenya would see any repeat of the violence that followed disputed votes in 2007 and 2017.
Several public figures and anti-corruption campaigners – including some who had backed Odinga – welcomed the judgment, saying it bolstered the court’s reputation for independence.
“This decision is good for the judiciary. This election result is bad for Kenya. Two things can be true at the same time,” tweeted author Nanjala Nyabola, who had not backed either candidate.
There were no immediate signs of protest in Odinga’s stronghold of Kisumu city or the low-income neighborhoods of Nairobi that traditionally support the left-wing politician.
“There is nothing we can do, the judgment has been made,” Geoffrey Omondi, a 33-year-old electrical engineer who supported Odinga, said.
Ruto’s jubilant supporters danced and waved flags in his party colors of yellow and green.
East Africa’s most wealthy and influential nation had been on tenterhooks since the Aug. 9 elections, which pitted Ruto – a former chicken seller – against two of the nation’s two most powerful political families.
Similar accusations of cheating triggered deadly election violence, often with ethnic undertones, during the two previous polls.
Scathing judgment
Chief Justice Martha Koome, who heads the seven-member Supreme Court, left no ambiguity about the court’s position on key arguments brought by Odinga’s team and other complainants.
She dismissed some affidavits alleging that polling station results forms had been tampered with as “double hearsay” – and one as “no more than hot air … a wild goose chase”.
“Some of the (computer) logs presented as evidence … were either from logs arising from the 2017 election or were outright forgeries,” she said.
Koome raised the possibility of perjury, noting that two people who filed affidavits allegedly on behalf of polling stations agents had not spoken to the agents.
“Swearing to falsehoods is a criminal offense,” she said.
She also called for reforms at the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, saying that a “boardroom rupture” between the commissioners had undermined public confidence.
Four of the seven election commissioners had disowned Ruto’s win minutes before it was formally announced, saying the tallying process was opaque. But the dissenting commissioners had previously participated in the tallying without raising any concerns, Koome said.
“We uphold the Supreme Court decision,” dissenting commissioner Juliana Cherera told Reuters.
Personal politics
The history between Odinga, Ruto, and outgoing President Uhuru Kenyatta underscores the tangled ties between elite families and the primacy of personality over politics.
Ruto was Kenyatta’s vice president, but the two fell out and Kenyatta backed Odinga in the vote.
In a speech after the judgment, Ruto poked gentle fun at his predecessor and former ally, saying: “I’ve not yet spoken to my … friend Uhuru Kenyatta.”
Ripples of laughter spread through the audience before Ruto dissolved into uncontrollable chuckles at the podium.
Later he promised to respect both Kenyatta and Odinga and said he would stop law enforcement from mounting any politically-motivated corruption investigations – something he accused Kenyatta’s government of doing.
Ruto said he would not recruit Odinga to serve in his government, saying that the country needed a functioning opposition and such alliances created a “mongrel of a government.”
Kenyatta is the son of the country’s first president and Odinga is the son of the first vice president.
Ruto, now a wealthy businessman, portrayed himself as an underdog battling the elite – a message resonating with chronically underemployed youth and families squeezed by global inflation and rampant graft.
Ruto will be sworn in on Sept. 13.
Copyright 2022 Thomson/Reuters