After promising an outcome within 48 hours, officials now say it might take up to a week to announce the final tally
After waiting in queues to cast their votes on Monday, Kenyans face a longer wait for the results. Photograph: Riccardo Gangale/AP
Bomas has, for the last two days, been the official location of Kenya's
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission for its coordination
and announcement of election results. A large tourist-focused "cultural
attraction" in the Nairobi suburb of Langata, its website describes it
as a centre to:
"Preserve, Maintain and Promote the Rich Diverse cultural values of various ethnic groups of Kenya and to act as a tourist attraction ... to preserve the authenticity of the Kenya's Cultural values and to portray them in the pure form".
On 4, 5 and 6 March national and international media have descended on Bomas to watch another Kenyan tradition unfold – the tight and tense election count. Five years ago the process was disastrously bungled by the now disbanded Electoral Commission of Kenya, partly blamed for the ensuing post-election violence that claimed over a thousand lives.
This time Kenyans have been repeatedly asked to trust the IEBC's processes. Every few hours an IEBC representative will explain various technical difficulties associated with the now tortuously slow progression of the count. On Monday night journalist Charles Onyango Obbo tweeted that it might be possible to call this thing by midnight. That pronouncement now seems wildly optimistic.
From promising to deliver the results within 48 hours, the IEBC now says that it is only legally required to deliver results within a week.
Around 40% of the result has been "provisionally" released. However, the IEBC has strongly maintained that these are not the final results. We must wait patiently for them. This morning we have been told that the final counts will be delivered to Bomas by the country's 290 returning officers. Essentially this has now become a manual, rather than highly technological process – the electronic transmission of the votes seems to have ground to a halt and no one really knows why.
As many have said before, Kenya now seems to be in a strange state of stasis. Few people are going to work, matatus largely did not run yesterday and all Nakumats (a supermarket chain) are closed. Nairobi seems calm still, but the long watching and waiting won't be doing nerves any good in potential hot spots like Kisumu in Nyanza Province.
Among all the talk of process, the provisional results are gaining little coverage. Uhuru Kenyatta of the Jubilee Alliance currently leads with about around 53% to Raila Odinga's 42%. It is difficult to interpret what this actually means as Odinga's strongholds in the west of the country do not seem to have been added to the tally. Odinga's VP candidate Kalonzo Musyoka yesterday declared that the Cord coalition was still confident of victory. Yesterday afternoon, Odinga's percentage of the vote slowly ticked up, the gap between him and Kenyatta remaining at a steady 700,000 votes.
Today I'm not sure what to do – venture back to Bomas (where I spent eight hours yesterday) or to wait it out in Westlands until something happens. My taxi driver seems to be the only person enjoying the whole experience as he cheerfully offers to ferry me across Nairobi again at great expense.
Magnus Taylor is the editor of African Arguments. He is reporting from Nairobi over the election period
"Preserve, Maintain and Promote the Rich Diverse cultural values of various ethnic groups of Kenya and to act as a tourist attraction ... to preserve the authenticity of the Kenya's Cultural values and to portray them in the pure form".
On 4, 5 and 6 March national and international media have descended on Bomas to watch another Kenyan tradition unfold – the tight and tense election count. Five years ago the process was disastrously bungled by the now disbanded Electoral Commission of Kenya, partly blamed for the ensuing post-election violence that claimed over a thousand lives.
This time Kenyans have been repeatedly asked to trust the IEBC's processes. Every few hours an IEBC representative will explain various technical difficulties associated with the now tortuously slow progression of the count. On Monday night journalist Charles Onyango Obbo tweeted that it might be possible to call this thing by midnight. That pronouncement now seems wildly optimistic.
From promising to deliver the results within 48 hours, the IEBC now says that it is only legally required to deliver results within a week.
Around 40% of the result has been "provisionally" released. However, the IEBC has strongly maintained that these are not the final results. We must wait patiently for them. This morning we have been told that the final counts will be delivered to Bomas by the country's 290 returning officers. Essentially this has now become a manual, rather than highly technological process – the electronic transmission of the votes seems to have ground to a halt and no one really knows why.
As many have said before, Kenya now seems to be in a strange state of stasis. Few people are going to work, matatus largely did not run yesterday and all Nakumats (a supermarket chain) are closed. Nairobi seems calm still, but the long watching and waiting won't be doing nerves any good in potential hot spots like Kisumu in Nyanza Province.
Among all the talk of process, the provisional results are gaining little coverage. Uhuru Kenyatta of the Jubilee Alliance currently leads with about around 53% to Raila Odinga's 42%. It is difficult to interpret what this actually means as Odinga's strongholds in the west of the country do not seem to have been added to the tally. Odinga's VP candidate Kalonzo Musyoka yesterday declared that the Cord coalition was still confident of victory. Yesterday afternoon, Odinga's percentage of the vote slowly ticked up, the gap between him and Kenyatta remaining at a steady 700,000 votes.
Today I'm not sure what to do – venture back to Bomas (where I spent eight hours yesterday) or to wait it out in Westlands until something happens. My taxi driver seems to be the only person enjoying the whole experience as he cheerfully offers to ferry me across Nairobi again at great expense.
Magnus Taylor is the editor of African Arguments. He is reporting from Nairobi over the election period
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