Slim majority for Kenyatta

Candidate indicted for crimes against humanity wins Kenya election by tiny margin

A supporter of Kenya's deputy prime minister and presidential candidate Uhuru Kenyatta stands on a street lamp at the last campaign rally in the Uhuru Park grounds in the capital Nairobi. Photograph: Marko Djurica/Reuters
A supporter of Kenya's deputy prime minister and presidential candidate Uhuru Kenyatta stands on a street lamp at the last campaign rally in the Uhuru Park grounds in the capital Nairobi. Photograph: Marko Djurica/Reuters

Uhuru Kenyatta, indicted for crimes against humanity, won Kenya's presidential election by a tiny margin with 50.03 per cent, provisional results showed today, avoiding a run-off after a race that has divided the nation along tribal lines.

Mr Kenyatta, the son of Kenya's founding president, faces trial after the disputed 2007 presidential vote that unleashed a wave of tribal blood-letting.

If he is declared the winner by the election commission, which has still to announce the official result, Kenya will become the second African country after Sudan to have a sitting president indicted by the International Criminal Court.

Supporters of Kenyan presidential candidate Uhuru Kenyatta celebrate on the outskirts of Nairobi. Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters
Supporters of Kenyan presidential candidate Uhuru Kenyatta celebrate on the outskirts of Nairobi. Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/Reuters

The United States and other Western powers, big donors to the east African nation, said before the vote that a Kenyatta win would complicate diplomatic ties with a nation viewed as a vital ally in the regional battle against militant Islam.

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From the early hours today after provisional results emerged, Mr Kenyatta's joyous supporters thronged the streets of Nairobi and his tribal strongholds, lighting fluorescent flares and waving tree branches and chanting "Uhuru, Uhuru".

The mood was tense but calm in the heartlands of Kenyatta's rival, Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who also lost in the disputed 2007 vote and trailed this time with 43.28 per cent.

"No Raila, no peace," Odinga supporters chanted as security forces stood by in Kisumu, a city where violence flared in 2007.

A close adviser to Mr Odinga said his candidate would challenge the result if Kenyatta was declared winner.

"He is not conceding the election," Salim Lone told Reuters, speaking on behalf of Mr Odinga.

"If Uhuru Kenyatta is announced president-elect then he will move to the courts immediately."

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, plagued by technical problems that slowed the count, had said it would announce the result this morning. But the planned declaration was running about three hours late.

Choirs sang at the election commission centre as a prelude to the result's announcement.

Mr Odinga's camp had said during tallying that the ballot count was deeply flawed and had called for it to be halted. But they promised to pursue any disputes in the courts not the streets.

Tribal Support

International observers broadly said the vote and count had been transparent so far and the electoral commission, which replaced an old, discredited body, promised a credible vote.

To win in the first round, a candidate needed more than 50 percent votes. Mr Kenyatta, the deputy prime minister, achieved that but with a margin of only 4,100 votes of the more than 12.3 million ballots cast.

Provisional figures displayed by the electoral commission showed Mr Kenyatta won 6,173,433 votes out of a total of 12,338,667 ballots cast. Mr Odinga secured 5,340,546 votes.

The first-round win means Kenyans who waited five days for the result will be saved the uncertainty of a run-off.

Both sides relied heavily on their ethnic groups in a nation where tribal loyalties mostly trump ideology at the ballot box. Mr Kenyatta is a Kikuyu, the biggest of Kenya's many tribes, Mr Odinga is a Luo. Both had running mates from other tribes.

John Githongo, a former senior government official-turned-whistleblower, urged the rival coalitions, Mr Odinga's Cord and Mr Kenyatta's Jubilee, to ensure calm. "Jubilee and Cord, what you and your supporters say now determines continued peace and stability in Kenya. We are watching you!" he said on Twitter.

How Western capitals deal with Kenya under Mr Kenyatta and the extent they would be ready to work with his government will depend heavily on whether Mr Kenyatta and his running mate William Ruto, who is also indicted, cooperate with the tribunal.

"It won't be a headache as long as he cooperates with the ICC," said one Western diplomat. "We respect the decision of the majority of the Kenyan voters."

Both Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto deny the charges and have said they will work to clear their names, though Kenyatta had to fend off jibes during the campaign by Odinga that he would have to run government by Skype from The Hague.

"Until now, Kenyatta has been cooperating with the court and we do hope this will continue," said Fadi El-Abdallah, spokesman for the Hague-based court. "This is part of Kenya respecting its legal obligations under international law."

Defusing tension

Kenyans hope this vote, which has until now passed off with only pockets of unrest on voting day, would restore their nation's reputation as one of Africa's most stable democracies after killings last time left more than 1,200 dead.

Many Kenyans have said they are determined to avoid a repeat of the post-2007 chaos that brought the economy to a halt.

Church leaders in Kisumu, in the west of Kenya that was devastated five years ago, sought to defuse tension this time.

"Our vote was stolen and we're angry," said Denis Onyango, a 28-year-old mechanic, as hundreds of supporter gathered with members of the security forces nearby. "Why did they bring such huge security here if the vote was to be free and fair."

Some said it was time to move on. "I urge our candidate to forget the presidency and let the will of God prevail," said cloth vendor Diana Ndonga.

Many shops stayed closed as a precaution in the port city of Mombasa, another Odinga stronghold, but streets were calm.

"We are heading for a bleak future where the economy goes down and international relation sour because of the ICC case," said Athumani Yeya (45) a teacher in the city.

Others were hopeful that Kenyatta could bring change.

"We are celebrating. Even with the ICC case in Holland, the people of Kenya still have faith in him," said Thomas Gitau (25) a bare-foot car washer on a main Mombasa street. "We hope he can fix infrastructure and security so we have more jobs."

Mr Odinga's camp had said even before the result that they were considering a court challenge. In 2007, he said the courts could not be trusted to handle the case. Kenyatta's camp had also complained about counting delays and other aspects of the vote.

But many Kenyans said this race was more transparent. Turnout reached 86 per cent of the 14.3 million eligible voters.

Reuters