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Kenyans go to polls for tight presidential vote amid rigging claims
KENYA ELECTIONS NAI 6509067
Thousands of voters line up outside a polling station,Thursday, Dec. 27, 2007 during the Kenyan Presidential election in Kibera, one of Africa's largest slums in Nairobi, where thousands were lining up to vote amid tight security. A handful of young men were smashing windows, saying they were not listed on the voting register. "This time around, Kenyans are not the same," said Harun Owade, a 30-year-old mechanic who had been in line since 3:30 a.m. in Kibera, home to at least 700,000 people in a maze of potholed tracks and ramshackle dwellings. - photo by Associated Press
    NAIROBI, Kenya — Millions turned out Thursday for Kenya’s closest-ever presidential race — a contest pitting President Mwai Kibaki against a former ally — in relatively peaceful balloting after a campaign marked by violence and vote-rigging charges.
    Lines at polling stations stretched for miles in some areas, a sign Kenyans are increasingly confident their votes count as the continent swings firmly toward democracy.
    ‘‘This time around, Kenyans are not the same,’’ said Harun Owade, a 30-year-old mechanic who had been in line since 3:30 a.m. in the Kibera slum. ‘‘We cannot be tricked. We will put the politicians to the test.’’
    In the run-up to the vote between Kibaki and flamboyant opposition candidate Raila Odinga, clashes in western Kenya killed hundreds. An outlawed gang called Mungiki that had circulated leaflets in July calling on Kenyan youth to rise up against the government was blamed in a string of beheadings.
    Wednesday, authorities said opposition supporters had stoned three police officers to death in western Kenya, accusing them of being part of a government conspiracy to rig the elections.
    Thursday, supporters of a candidate in a rural area 300 miles west of Nairobi picked up a man suspected of bribing voters, and he fell from their truck and died. Local police chief Grace Kaindi said police were investigating whether the man was pushed from the moving vehicle, and were holding six suspects.
    There has been bloodshed every election year since multiparty politics was re-introduced in 1992 after 22-year period as a one-party state. While 2007’s campaign has so far been less violent than past elections, several diplomats have expressed concern that a narrow victory on either side could lead to rioting by those who don’t accept or trust the results.
    ‘‘At this stage, after closing the polling stations, our observers have not obtained any evidence of fraud,’’ said Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, chief European Union election monitor. ‘‘But we should keep in mind that the counting and the tally are still ahead.’’
    Kibaki won by a landslide victory in 2002, ending 39 years of rule by the Kenya African National Union and 24 years in power by Daniel arap Moi, who was constitutionally barred from extending his term. Moi’s blanket use of patronage resulted in crippling mismanagement and a culture of corruption that plunged Kenya into an economic crisis.
    Kibaki, 76, has been credited with helping boost this East African nation’s economy, with a growth rate that is among the highest in Africa and a booming tourism industry. But his anti-graft campaign largely has been seen as a failure, and the country still struggles with tribalism and poverty.
    Odinga, a 62-year-old former political prisoner under Moi, cast himself as an agent of change and a champion of the poor. But he has been accused of failing to do enough to help his constituents during 15 years as a lawmaker.
    Odinga’s main constituency is Kibera, one of Africa’s largest slums, a maze of potholed tracks and ramshackle dwellings that is home to at least 700,000 people.
    Early Thursday, Odinga said he and others in Kibera couldn’t vote because their names were not on the register, although an Associated Press reporter saw his name listed. He voted a few hours later, without comment, after holding a news conference and complaining to the electoral commission.
    Odinga’s complaints riled crowds in Kibera. A handful of young men smashed windows and pried the bars off doors, but most voters continued to queue patiently.
    By midafternoon, the long lines of voters stretching throughout the slums had evaporated and a few shops, which had shut due to fear of looting, reopened. Mothers with babies strapped to their backs compared ink-stained fingers as a crowd of youths gathered around a barbershop, listening to reports of voting coming in from around the country.
    Kibaki voted in his hometown of Othaya, some 125 miles from the capital, Nairobi.
    ‘‘These remaining five years let us work hard to finish the work that is left out,’’ Kibaki said after casting his vote with his wife and three children. ‘‘I wish to serve another five years, then my time will be over.’’
    His supporters turned out in droves, cheering the president and shaking his hand at the polling station.
    ‘‘I have not even milked my cow because today we are putting our country first,’’ Mary Muthoni Gikiri said.
    Kenya’s 14 million registered voters — out of a population of 34 million — also were electing 210 members of parliament and more than 2,000 local councilors. Most polls closed at 5 p.m., although several areas stayed open later because of delays in the morning.
    The first official results were expected Friday afternoon.
    To win, a presidential candidate has to get the most votes as well as garner at least 25 percent of votes in five of Kenya’s eight provinces. Different provinces tend to be dominated by different tribes, so the rule adopted with the advent of multiparty politics in 1992 was aimed at ensuring a president has some support in most of the country.
    ———
    Associated Press Writers Tom Maliti in Othaya, Malkhadir M. Muhumed in Mombasa, and Katharine Houreld, Tom Odula and Laura-Claire Corson in Nairobi contributed to this report.

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