New York
Kenya's
ambassador to the US Robinson Njeru Githae has challenged opposition
leader Raila Odinga's claim that he would have been declared the winner
of the August 8 presidential election had the results not been hacked.
Ambassador
Githae took issue with the computer hacking assertion during the public
comment period at a Washington think-tank forum focused on the Kenya
election results.
The envoy wondered how Mr Odinga's
claim of rigging could be reconciled with the outcomes of the August 8
voting for positions below the presidential one.
Mr
Githae pointed to “the fact that the Jubilee Party had an absolute
majority in members of Parliament, governors, senators, MCAs and even
women reps.”
OTHER POSITIONS
He asked the think-tank panellists if they were suggesting that
President Kenyatta also rigged the results of those other offices.
But
while Mr Githae claimed that "not a single member of Parliament,
governor, senator, MCA who has disputed those results”, several losers
in the elections have disputed the results and vowed to go to court.
In
Embu, for example, outgoing Senator Lenny Kivuti, who vied for
governorship on Maendeleo Chap Chap ticket, has disputed the win by his
rival, Jubilee's Martin Wambora and has taken the case to the High
Court.
GITHAE'S REMARKS
Mr
Githae directed his remarks to two Voice of America journalists —
Vincent Makori and Mwamoyo Hamza — who had covered the election.
Mr
Makori, host of Voice of America's Africa 54 programme, and Mr Hamza,
chief of the US-funded network's Swahili service, were taking part in
the session at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies along
with Mark Bellamy, a former US ambassador to Kenya who was moderating
the event.
ELECTION OBSERVERS
He
said election observers said that the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC) conducted free and fair elections
Jubilee and Nasa, he further noted, had their own agents in polling stations around the country.
Mr
Githae said that none of these 40,000 agents have claimed that the
results they recorded at the polling places were different from those
announced by the IEBC.
NASA UNHAPPY
However,
Nasa leaders have criticised the observers for giving the election a
clean bill of health despite concerns raised by the opposition.
The
opposition's deputy chief agent James Orengo said the observers were a
great disappointment following their remarks regarding the polls.
In
response to Mr Gitahae's comments, Mr Makori said that neither he nor
Mr Hamza “as journalists, have made any judgment on the claim of
rigging”.
“We report on what opposition candidate Raila Odinga has said,” Mr Makori added.
“We don't have any evidence whatsoever that there was any rigging.”
Mr Githae was appointed Kenya’s ambassador to the US by President Kenyatta in August 2014.
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