NAIROBI, Kenya — Four months after Kenya's presidential vote, the country's election commission on Thursday released vote totals for all races, though the commission chairman's refused to take an oath before parliament and testify for a committee.
Isaak Hassan, the chairman of Kenya's Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commissions, left the hearing without testifying but the commission later released all vote totals for the first time since the March vote.
Kenya's election was largely peaceful, and though the reporting and tallying of votes was marred by several irregularities, the country largely accepted the judgment of the Supreme Court that President Uhuru Kenyatta was legitimately elected — albeit by the slimmest of margins: 50.07 percent of the vote.
The loser, former Prime Minister Raila Odinga, who lodged the Supreme Court appeal, accepted the court's decision, helping Kenya to avoid the vicious tribal post-poll violence that killed more than 1,000 people in 2007-08.
But Odinga maintains that the vote was rigged, telling Kenya's Daily Nation in May that his opponents were stuffing ballot boxes and that the presidential vote received 1 million more votes in total than other races. A second Nairobi paper, The Star, later quoted an anonymous IEBC commissioner saying that the commission hasn't been able to reconcile the presidential vote totals — which have been released — with those of the other races, resulting in "sleepless nights."
The commission on Thursday released vote totals that show no such discrepancy. The commission said 12.2 million ballots were cast for president. Some 60,000 fewer were cast for governor races and some 90,000 fewer were cast for senatorial races. Nearly 165,000 fewer were cast for country assembly ward representatives.
"Contrary to what has been circulating in the public domain, the difference in votes cast per each elective position is not significant as alleged," the commission said. "The variance, which is about 1 percent, may be attributed to some voters choosing or being able to vote only for certain positions."
Hassan called the claim that there is 1 million vote difference a "naked lie," speaking this week on Kenyan television. But his refusal Thursday to take an oath before parliament testimony did little assuage conspiracy theorists. The commission said it did not receive individual summons to appear before the committee. "Therefore, the committee did not find it necessary to take an oath," an IEBC statement said.