By Neville Otuki
In Summary
- The mission led by Alojz Peterle said that discrepancies during tallying affected less than one per cent of the votes cast.
- The observers described the Supreme Court ruling on the Raila Odinga petition as commendable, attributing it to judicial reforms.
- They recommended review of policies to encourage more women to run for elective posts
The European Union has given a clean bill of
health to the March 4 General Election, saying the anomalies witnessed
were too negligible to influence the outcome.
The mission led by Alojz Peterle said in a report
released on Wednesday that discrepancies during tallying affected less
than one per cent of the votes cast.
“Our analysis did not find any evidence to
discredit the exercise,” said Mr Pertele, adding that the polls won by
President Uhuru Kenyatta met international standards.
He said there were concerns over transparency
after some party agents and election observers were denied access to the
Bomas of Kenya tallying centre.
He said about three million Kenyans who were
eligible to vote did not register because of lack of identity cards and
inadequate window of 30 days for enlisting given by the Independent
Electoral and Boundaries Commission.
The observers described the Supreme Court ruling on the Raila Odinga petition as commendable, attributing it to judicial reforms.
However, the report recommended review of policies
to encourage more women to run for elective posts. It also said the
election cycle should be managed better to avoid the last minute hitches
that affected the procurement of voter registration kits, eventually
leading to collapse of the voter identification system.
The observers said civil society groups and the
media conducted themselves well during the electioneering period. The EU
gave Kenya Sh2.1 billion for the elections.
However, the National Civil Society Congress said
the EU mission report lacked credibility. “The report has not explicitly
covered the areas alleged to be marred by irregularities,” the
secretary Ndolo Asasa said.
The lobby group cited systems failure in the
electronic transmission of results and delayed release of results as key
areas the observers should have focused on.
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