Kenya's new electoral commission sworn in

22 Jan, 2017

Kenya's new electoral commission was sworn in Friday to replace a team forced to quit after violent protests by opponents who accused them of bias, mismanagement and corruption. The seven new commissioners have only seven months to organise presidential and parliamentary elections which already have emotions flying high in the east African country.
The new chief of the electoral commission (IEBC), lawyer Wafula Chebukati, promised to deliver a "free, fair and credible election" after taking the oath of office at the Supreme Court.
The previous nine-member commission resigned in October under pressure from the opposition which led violent protests in May and June.
The IEBC had been mired in controversy since its establishment in 2010, when it replaced a discredited body that had presided over the disputed 2007 election which triggered politically-motivated ethnic violence that killed over 1,100 people.
During the subsequent peaceful poll in March 2013, a host of hi-tech safeguards - including a biometric voter registration system - failed on the day leading many, especially in the opposition, to doubt President Uhuru Kenyatta's victory and the ability of the commission to deliver a credible election this year.
Corruption allegations have also dogged the body, with a UK court in 2014 finding two directors of British printing company Smith & Ouzman guilty of making corrupt payments worth $430,000 (380,000 euro) in order to win a contract to supply ballot papers.

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