This is why The Mighty Lead Counsel Admin believes beyond any - TopicsExpress



          

This is why The Mighty Lead Counsel Admin believes beyond any reasonable doubt that Raila won the March 4 elections. My only problem is that Nation Newspapers and Oswago had the opportunity to say the truth when it really mattered. Why are they telling us now? Read on the story from the Nation Newspapers: The behind-the-scenes drama and intrigues just hours to the announcement of the presidential election results on March 9, can now be revealed. Wide-ranging interviews with senior electoral commission officials reveal the frantic final moments at the national tallying centre at the Bomas of Kenya in Nairobi during which high- profile calls came through, asking the commissioners to declare or withhold results before the conclusion of a vote scrutiny. Monitoring centre The interviews also point to a cloud of suspicion that hung over the room on the night of the long knives, with the rival Jubilee and Cord camps listening in on telephone conversations with commission officials from their respective election results monitoring centres, making calls to selected officials to complain about perceived conspiracies or issuing threats to some officials. The manual audit, which was being undertaken after the electronic transmission of results from the polling stations and constituencies collapsed, aborted after some commissioners walked into the tallying centre in turns and insisted that the verification must be completed in two hours. Speaking in detail for the first time about the events that characterised the preparations for the March 4 General Election and the declaration of Mr Uhuru Kenyatta as President- elect on March 9, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) chief executive James Oswago appeared to suggest that the pressure piled on the commission officials by the Jubilee and Cord teams and the mounting public tension prompted them to declare the results prematurely. “On the day we started the audit, commissioner Mohammed Alawi walked into the room where I was leading other IEBC staff in scrutinising the results. There was already a lot of pressure and the long wait was almost fatiguing. He then asked, ‘how much time do you need?’ Before I could answer, he declared: ‘two hours’,” Mr Oswago said. “We looked at one another and laughed. We knew the enormous work that we had just begun. A two-hour deadline was obviously impossible to meet.” Later, another group of commissioners led by Mr Ahmed Issack Hassan, the chairman, and Mr Thomas Letangule, walked into the room to get updates. “It reached a point where I said let it be. I told the chairman if you want the results the way they are, take them. Commissioner Letangule came shouting and I told him if you want the raw results, take them,” Mr Oswago added. Official results “Then we decided to move on but we have not recovered from that event to date. I think we should have done more, but we let do with what we could manage. And that is how we came up with what we relied on to declare official results.” Mr Oswago, who says he has suffered high- profile personal attacks over the exercise, said political party leaders, scared by the uncertainty arising from the delay in releasing the results, singled him out for blame. “Uhuru Kenyatta (now President) and William Ruto (deputy President) had begun complaining that I was the one delaying the results. Ruto called the chairman and I heard him asking; ‘Why do you allow him? We will deal with him’,” Mr Oswago claimed. Asked about the intriguing moments when the whole nation’s attention was on him, Mr Hassan admitted that he received high-profile calls as well. “Yes, people called me. I received calls from Mr Kenyatta, Mr (Raila) Odinga, Mr Kalonzo Musyoka and even Ruto. Some calls even came from outside the country,” Mr Hassan said, without elaborating. Mr Letangule admitted having gone to the tallying centre but explained that this was out of his concern that the exercise was taking too long. “There is a time the chairman came where we were on the first day. Results had begun trickling in and he said, ‘If things continue like this then by tomorrow morning we will be done’,” said Mr Letangule. “But on the second day, when the results transmission system collapsed, I went into the tallying room and found agents shouting all over. I said, ‘No. We can’t continue like this’. I then mobilised other commissioners, including Alawi, and we decided to remove them to ensure progress of business.” Background went quiet Mr Oswago said he also received a call from Ms Yvonne Khamati, now Kenya’s Deputy Ambassador to Somalia, who had joined Mr Kenyatta and Mr Ruto at the centre where they were monitoring results. “She asked, ‘Mr Oswago what you are doing? Does it mean you intend to change the results and the winner of this election?’ All of a sudden the background went quiet. I later learnt Uhuru and Ruto were listening to our conversation. She had put me on speaker phone. But I told her I cannot do it. Whoever has won has won,” the IEBC chief executive said.
Posted on: Sat, 17 Aug 2013 07:20:40 +0000

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