More people voted for President than for Governor

More people voted for President than for Governor

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Close to 800,000 Kenyans went to their respective polling stations on August 8, only to vote for their preferred presidential candidate, ignoring the other seats, IEBC results suggest. This is an impossibility under the law.

An analysis of IEBC's countrywide election results indicate that 15,863,193 people participated in the presidential elections as compared to 15,085,122 for governor.

This means that 778,081 people, translating into 4.1 per cent of the registered voters, participated only in presidential polls, over and above those who took part in governor polls. President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner, having garnered 54.27 per cent of the votes.

According to IEBC regulations, a voter is strictly to be issued six stamped ballot papers, and has to cast all of them, even if they decide to spoil the ballot for a particular seat.

The revelations are likely to bolster opposition claims that the polls, endorsed by the international community as free and fair, were flawed.

Yesterday, the opposition announced its intention to challenge the presidential results at the Superme Court, saying it believes them to be a product of a hacked computer system.

“We have now decided to move to the Supreme Court and lay before the world the making of computer-generated leadership,” Raila said.

Earlier, the opposition had ruled out going to the Supreme Court.

The revelations from IEBC's own data are similar to 2013 claims that two million voters allegedly voted only for the President and left without casting a vote for any of the remaining elective seats.

Raila, ahead of last week polls, opposed the award of the ballot paper printing tender to Dubai firm Al Ghurair over fears it would print extra presidential papers which he claimed were to be used to rig in Uhuru.

The IEBC, however, went ahead to contract Al Ghurair after a protracted court battle with the opposition. The commission clarified that only 1.2 million extra presidential papers were printed and promised to account for them after the polls.

In one of the shocking cases, the IEBC portal indicates that in Kirinyaga county for instance, 296,392 more people voted for President than for Senator.

The same trend was replicated in Embu, one of Uhuru's strongholds, where 200,021 more people voted for President than senator.

The trend, upon deeper interrogation of the results posted on the IEBC portal, played out in almost all counties with a constant range of between 4,000 and 19,000 people voting for President only and not any of the remaining five positions.


In Kilifi, 13,494 people walked into polling stations on Tuesday last week, voted for President and left without casting a vote for governor.

In NASA co-principal Moses Wetangula's Bungoma turf, IEBC figures indicate that 12,916 voters cast their ballot for President and not any other seat.

Kakamega also had 17,066 people voting for the President position alone, while in Kisii, 16,652 people did not vote for the governor position but voted for the presidential candidates.

In the neighboring Nyamira county, 10,023 only voted for the presidential candidates.

President Uhuru's Kiambu backyard had 24,676 people casting their votes for the President only.

The other Mt Kenya counties of Murang'a, Kirinyaga and Nyandarua had 5,586, 6,751 and 4,296 respectively voting only for President.

In Raila's Luo Nyanza support base, the same pattern was witnessed with Migori leading with number of voters participating in the presidential election at 18,848.

Kisumu had 15,922, Homa Bay 14,816, while Siaya recorded 9,912, according to the official results posted by the IEBC.

The IEBC portal in other glaring inconsistencies that erode the credibility of the results posted some Forms 34A with conflicting figures from those keyed in the portal.

For instance, Kisian polling station in Kisumu West constituency, a known Raila stronghold, he scored zero according to the Form 34A posted by IEBC in its online portal.

At the same polling station located at Central Kisumu ward, independent candidate Joseph Nyagah leads the eight presidential candidates with 516 votes followed by Uhuru, who managed a paltry nine votes.

Prior to the polls, IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati clarified that in case of inconsistency between the keyed in results and results captured in Form 34A, the results in Form 34A takes precedence.

“There is a possibility of inconsistencies between the keyed in results transmitted by officers and the scanned forms transmitted. In such cases, the commission has decided that the result in the scanned forms takes precedent,” clarified Chebukati in a communication dated August 4.

At Marinyin Primary School 01 polling station in Bomet county, Konoin constituency, the commission has in its portal a blank Form 34A.

More people voted for President than for Governor
 
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Aug. 17, 2017, 12:00 am
By LUKE AWICH and FELIX OLICK @ THESTARKENYA
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More people voted for President than for Governor
President Uhuru Kenyatta
Close to 800,000 Kenyans went to their respective polling stations on August 8, only to vote for their preferred presidential candidate, ignoring the other seats, IEBC results suggest. This is an impossibility under the law.
An analysis of IEBC's countrywide election results indicate that 15,863,193 people participated in the presidential elections as compared to 15,085,122 for governor.
This means that 778,081 people, translating into 4.1 per cent of the registered voters, participated only in presidential polls, over and above those who took part in governor polls. President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner, having garnered 54.27 per cent of the votes.
According to IEBC regulations, a voter is strictly to be issued six stamped ballot papers, and has to cast all of them, even if they decide to spoil the ballot for a particular seat.
The revelations are likely to bolster opposition claims that the polls, endorsed by the international community as free and fair, were flawed.
Yesterday, the opposition announced its intention to challenge the presidential results at the Superme Court, saying it believes them to be a product of a hacked computer system.
“We have now decided to move to the Supreme Court and lay before the world the making of computer-generated leadership,” Raila said.
Earlier, the opposition had ruled out going to the Supreme Court.
The revelations from IEBC's own data are similar to 2013 claims that two million voters allegedly voted only for the President and left without casting a vote for any of the remaining elective seats.
Raila, ahead of last week polls, opposed the award of the ballot paper printing tender to Dubai firm Al Ghurair over fears it would print extra presidential papers which he claimed were to be used to rig in Uhuru.
The IEBC, however, went ahead to contract Al Ghurair after a protracted court battle with the opposition. The commission clarified that only 1.2 million extra presidential papers were printed and promised to account for them after the polls.
In one of the shocking cases, the IEBC portal indicates that in Kirinyaga county for instance, 296,392 more people voted for President than for Senator.
The same trend was replicated in Embu, one of Uhuru's strongholds, where 200,021 more people voted for President than senator.
The trend, upon deeper interrogation of the results posted on the IEBC portal, played out in almost all counties with a constant range of between 4,000 and 19,000 people voting for President only and not any of the remaining five positions.
In Kilifi, 13,494 people walked into polling stations on Tuesday last week, voted for President and left without casting a vote for governor.
In NASA co-principal Moses Wetangula's Bungoma turf, IEBC figures indicate that 12,916 voters cast their ballot for President and not any other seat.
Kakamega also had 17,066 people voting for the President position alone, while in Kisii, 16,652 people did not vote for the governor position but voted for the presidential candidates.
In the neighboring Nyamira county, 10,023 only voted for the presidential candidates.
President Uhuru's Kiambu backyard had 24,676 people casting their votes for the President only.
The other Mt Kenya counties of Murang'a, Kirinyaga and Nyandarua had 5,586, 6,751 and 4,296 respectively voting only for President.
In Raila's Luo Nyanza support base, the same pattern was witnessed with Migori leading with number of voters participating in the presidential election at 18,848.
Kisumu had 15,922, Homa Bay 14,816, while Siaya recorded 9,912, according to the official results posted by the IEBC.
The IEBC portal in other glaring inconsistencies that erode the credibility of the results posted some Forms 34A with conflicting figures from those keyed in the portal.
For instance, Kisian polling station in Kisumu West constituency, a known Raila stronghold, he scored zero according to the Form 34A posted by IEBC in its online portal.
At the same polling station located at Central Kisumu ward, independent candidate Joseph Nyagah leads the eight presidential candidates with 516 votes followed by Uhuru, who managed a paltry nine votes.
Prior to the polls, IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati clarified that in case of inconsistency between the keyed in results and results captured in Form 34A, the results in Form 34A takes precedence.
“There is a possibility of inconsistencies between the keyed in results transmitted by officers and the scanned forms transmitted. In such cases, the commission has decided that the result in the scanned forms takes precedent,” clarified Chebukati in a communication dated August 4.
At Marinyin Primary School 01 polling station in Bomet county, Konoin constituency, the commission has in its portal a blank Form 34A.
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These guys thought they were so smart. How on earth can 700, 000 more voters vote for the president position as opposed to the governor position? Something is not just fishy but I also smell a rat, and it smells bad.
 
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Aug. 17, 2017, 12:00 am
By LUKE AWICH and FELIX OLICK @ THESTARKENYA
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More people voted for President than for Governor
President Uhuru Kenyatta
Close to 800,000 Kenyans went to their respective polling stations on August 8, only to vote for their preferred presidential candidate, ignoring the other seats, IEBC results suggest. This is an impossibility under the law.
An analysis of IEBC's countrywide election results indicate that 15,863,193 people participated in the presidential elections as compared to 15,085,122 for governor.
This means that 778,081 people, translating into 4.1 per cent of the registered voters, participated only in presidential polls, over and above those who took part in governor polls. President Uhuru Kenyatta was declared winner, having garnered 54.27 per cent of the votes.
According to IEBC regulations, a voter is strictly to be issued six stamped ballot papers, and has to cast all of them, even if they decide to spoil the ballot for a particular seat.
The revelations are likely to bolster opposition claims that the polls, endorsed by the international community as free and fair, were flawed.
Yesterday, the opposition announced its intention to challenge the presidential results at the Superme Court, saying it believes them to be a product of a hacked computer system.
“We have now decided to move to the Supreme Court and lay before the world the making of computer-generated leadership,” Raila said.
Earlier, the opposition had ruled out going to the Supreme Court.
The revelations from IEBC's own data are similar to 2013 claims that two million voters allegedly voted only for the President and left without casting a vote for any of the remaining elective seats.
Raila, ahead of last week polls, opposed the award of the ballot paper printing tender to Dubai firm Al Ghurair over fears it would print extra presidential papers which he claimed were to be used to rig in Uhuru.
The IEBC, however, went ahead to contract Al Ghurair after a protracted court battle with the opposition. The commission clarified that only 1.2 million extra presidential papers were printed and promised to account for them after the polls.
In one of the shocking cases, the IEBC portal indicates that in Kirinyaga county for instance, 296,392 more people voted for President than for Senator.
The same trend was replicated in Embu, one of Uhuru's strongholds, where 200,021 more people voted for President than senator.
The trend, upon deeper interrogation of the results posted on the IEBC portal, played out in almost all counties with a constant range of between 4,000 and 19,000 people voting for President only and not any of the remaining five positions.
In Kilifi, 13,494 people walked into polling stations on Tuesday last week, voted for President and left without casting a vote for governor.
In NASA co-principal Moses Wetangula's Bungoma turf, IEBC figures indicate that 12,916 voters cast their ballot for President and not any other seat.
Kakamega also had 17,066 people voting for the President position alone, while in Kisii, 16,652 people did not vote for the governor position but voted for the presidential candidates.
In the neighboring Nyamira county, 10,023 only voted for the presidential candidates.
President Uhuru's Kiambu backyard had 24,676 people casting their votes for the President only.
The other Mt Kenya counties of Murang'a, Kirinyaga and Nyandarua had 5,586, 6,751 and 4,296 respectively voting only for President.
In Raila's Luo Nyanza support base, the same pattern was witnessed with Migori leading with number of voters participating in the presidential election at 18,848.
Kisumu had 15,922, Homa Bay 14,816, while Siaya recorded 9,912, according to the official results posted by the IEBC.
The IEBC portal in other glaring inconsistencies that erode the credibility of the results posted some Forms 34A with conflicting figures from those keyed in the portal.
For instance, Kisian polling station in Kisumu West constituency, a known Raila stronghold, he scored zero according to the Form 34A posted by IEBC in its online portal.
At the same polling station located at Central Kisumu ward, independent candidate Joseph Nyagah leads the eight presidential candidates with 516 votes followed by Uhuru, who managed a paltry nine votes.
Prior to the polls, IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati clarified that in case of inconsistency between the keyed in results and results captured in Form 34A, the results in Form 34A takes precedence.
“There is a possibility of inconsistencies between the keyed in results transmitted by officers and the scanned forms transmitted. In such cases, the commission has decided that the result in the scanned forms takes precedent,” clarified Chebukati in a communication dated August 4.
At Marinyin Primary School 01 polling station in Bomet county, Konoin constituency, the commission has in its portal a blank Form 34A.
STAR COMMUNITY POLICY AND PARTICIPATION GUIDLINES
Thank you for participating in discussions on The Star, Kenya website. You are welcome to comment and debate issues, however take note that:
Comments that are abusive; defamatory; obscene; promote or incite violence, terrorism, illegal acts, hate speech, or hatred on the grounds of race, ethnicity, cultural identity, religious belief, disability, gender, identity or sexual orientation, or are otherwise objectionable in the Star’s reasonable discretion shall not be tolerated and will be deleted.
Comments that contain unwarranted personal abuse will be deleted.
Strong personal criticism is acceptable if justified by facts and arguments.
Deviation from points of discussion may lead to deletion of comments.
Failure to adhere to this policy and guidelines may lead to blocking of offending users. Our moderator’s decision to block offending users is final.

The Star ni gutter press.
In Kirinyaga, only 4% of the senatorial results have been posted on the portal.
In Embu, only 22% of the senatorial results have been posted on the portal.

Then those writers are comparing these figures with the presidential figures, which have been posted 100%.
 
These guys thought they were so smart. How on earth can 700, 000 more voters vote for the president position as opposed to the governor position? Something is not just fishy but I also smell a rat, and it smells bad.

I see you are still looking for excuses for losing. Denial stage taking too long?
Why don't you go on the portal yourself and see what percentage of the senatorial in those counties vs the percentage of the presidential have been posted.

At the Supreme Court, rumours, fake news and fake tweets will be rubbished immediately.
 
I see you are still looking for excuses for losing. Denial stage taking too long?
Why don't you go on the portal yourself and see what percentage of the senatorial in those counties vs the percentage of the presidential have been posted.

At the Supreme Court, rumours, fake news and fake tweets will be rubbished immediately.
So ten days after elections bado kuna results hazijakuwa uploaded? If it's true then that is not normal at all. By now they should have been uploaded. Anyway I don't expect the two of us to agree on this issue so I am done. Let us wait for the supreme court but even there I don't expect the court to rule against the current govt. The judges have kids and family to take care of, if you know what I mean. 'Msando'
 
So ten days after elections bado kuna results hazijakuwa uploaded? If it's true then that is not normal at all. By now they should have been uploaded. Anyway I don't expect the two of us to agree on this issue so I am done. Let us wait for the supreme court but even there I don't expect the court to rule against the current govt. The judges have kids and family to take care of, if you know what I mean. 'Msando'

At this point I don't think Jesus himself will make you get the point.
The portal is immaterial. It's even possible the staff responsible for maintaining it were sent home.

Every candidate from MCA to President has been issued with a certificate based on manual counting and tallying.
You can all yap about how the portal was hacked, and even take steps to prevent this in 2022.
Meanwhile, the other side knows where the votes lie.

And we know Supreme Court will only be seen to have done justice if they rule in Raila's favour. Otherwise they were bribed. We have learnt to deal with such allegations for many years.
Just know that in 2013, Cord failed to show the judges where they can deduct 7000 Uhuru votes to force a run off.
I don't fancy Nasa's chances now that we're talking of 1.4 million votes.
 
Kenya's education system iko na shida sana. Ikiwa mleta mada hajafanya basics ya kuongeza kura kama zilivyotangazwa na iebc Bali akaona tu a copy paste kutoka the star, kweli spoon feeding kwa mashule yetu imetukosea sana
 
NASA case will stand or fall by providing or failing to provide evidence that presidential vote count does not tally with the numbers on form 34A. It all boils down to Form 34A.
 
Kenya's education system iko na shida sana. Ikiwa mleta mada hajafanya basics ya kuongeza kura kama zilivyotangazwa na iebc Bali akaona tu a copy paste kutoka the star, kweli spoon feeding kwa mashule yetu imetukosea sana
Haya basi umesema The star ni mbaya. Watu wengi wanaquestion IEBC sio The star pekee yake. And don't get personal but respond to the article itself because I did not write the article in the star. Hii hapa article ingine from the standard and these questions are not going away until the supreme court makes its ruling even though NASA won't win coz this is Africa.

Politics
Queries over the disparities in IEBC poll results
By Moses Michira
Published: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:41, Updated: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:43
IEBC officials verifying results at the Bomas of Kenya before presidential results were released. [Wilberforce Okwiri, Standard]
Glaring inconsistencies are emerging about the actual number of voters who took part in last Tuesday’s polls and the source of the provisional results posted on the portal.
ALSO READ: Kura Yangu Sauti Yangu disputes IEBC figures
Prior information indicated that the numbers displayed on the portal had been digitally transmitted from the voting equipment at the polling stations.
But the variance with the official results raises questions on how the numbers would have changed so significantly. The reluctance of the electoral agency to produce the legal documentation has not helped to clarify the matter.
International organisations, including the European Union, have voiced their concerns about delays in publishing all the forms 34A and forms 34B.
On Wednesday, however, IEBC said all forms 34B were now available to the public.
Tallying norm
ALSO READ: IEBC yet to pay 360,000 poll officials
The votes garnered collectively by the eight presidential candidates varies significantly from the aggregates of the other positions.
Typically, the total votes cast for all the six positions should tally, assuming that all voters were given a ballot paper for each elective post.
Official results contained in the forms 34B published late on Wednesday show that 15.1 million votes were cast for the eight aspirants – about 500,000 less than previously indicated on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) portal.
Nearly 15.6 million votes were cast for the presidency, according to the information that is still being displayed on the portal. Less than 15.1 million votes were cast for each of the other positions.
After accommodating the absence of parliamentary polls in Kikuyu and Kitutu Chache South, about 400,000 more votes had been cast for presidental position than legislators. In Kikuyu, the sitting MP, Kimani Ichung’wa, had no challenger while in Kitutu Chache South, one aspirant died days before the polls, prompting the postponement of parliamentary elections.
Ten days after the polls, several polling stations were still submitting their results for the other five positions, making it impossible to know exactly how many people voted.
But on August 14, IEBC explained: “The last 41 polling station results trickling in are from gadgets with challenges. They are not new results. We had all in signed hard copies.”
ALSO READ: Requiem mass for slain IEBC ICT Manager Chris Msando- PHOTOS
However, there is significant variance between the initial and official results even in constituencies that had completed transmitting their numbers.
In Kajiado North, for instance, prior results showed that nearly 7,600 votes were reported as rejected while the official results indicate zero.
It is also unclear how President-elect Uhuru Kenyatta’s votes had reduced from 25,982 to 25,707.
The tally for his main challenger, Raila Odinga, also shrank by 456 to 39,222.
the constituency returning officer, Mark Lempaka, signed the form on August 9, while one party agent signed the following day. The Jubilee Party agent signed on August 18 – today.
It is a variance that is replicated in all constituencies but on different scales, except Matungulu in Machakos where 51,378 votes were cast for the presidency and member of National Assembly positions.
In Nyeri Town constituency, more than 2,000 people voted for the member of the National Assembly than they did for the presidential candidates.
Collectively, there are 21,759 more votes for the MP position than the president across 51 constituencies.
ALSO READ: Raila Odinga's decision rekindles memories of 2013 legal battle
IEBC spokesman Edwin Limo said such inconsistencies could be a result of wrong entries by presiding officers.
“It is likely that the errors arose at entry before the electronic transmission,” he said, adding that the returning officers at the constituencies would have arrested such mistakes.
Should the returning officers fail to detect the errors, the wrong tallies would be transmitted and counted as such since the results declared at the constituency are final.
Delayed forms
He added that some results took longer to arrive owing to failure of mobile phone networks in remote parts of the country.
Mr Limo told The Standard that fake forms have been circulating on the internet with the intention of damaging the credibility of the IEBC.
He also dismissed as rumours claims that returning officers from Kisii and Nyamira had been summoned to sign new forms.
ALSO READ: Sakuda loses MP seat to his former student
IEBC has, however, been unable to explain why it would take six days to upload 290 forms 34B since receiving the last one on Friday before declaring Mr Kenyatta the victor.
It was not until Wednesday evening that the forms were available, yet they were central in the dispute pitting the Opposition against the electoral body.
Electoral body
Thousands of forms 34A, which indicate the result from the polling station, were available hours after the voting ended on Tuesday.
The electoral agency’s reluctance to make the forms available informed concerns that the commission might have been engaging in fraud, as claimed by Raila and his NASA coalition.
International organisations helped amplify the calls for the publishing of the forms containing the official results.
Raila and his NASA coalition have contested the outcome of the polls and are expected to challenge the presidential results at the Supreme Court by Friday.
mmichira@standardmedia.co.ke
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IEBC
Kenya General Election
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Haya basi umesema The star ni mbaya. Watu wengi wanaquestion IEBC sio The star pekee yake. And don't get personal but respond to the article itself because I did not write the article in the star. Hii hapa article ingine from the standard and these questions are not going away until the supreme court makes its ruling even though NASA won't win coz this is Africa.

Politics
Queries over the disparities in IEBC poll results
By Moses Michira
Published: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:41, Updated: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:43
IEBC officials verifying results at the Bomas of Kenya before presidential results were released. [Wilberforce Okwiri, Standard]
Glaring inconsistencies are emerging about the actual number of voters who took part in last Tuesday’s polls and the source of the provisional results posted on the portal.
ALSO READ: Kura Yangu Sauti Yangu disputes IEBC figures
Prior information indicated that the numbers displayed on the portal had been digitally transmitted from the voting equipment at the polling stations.
But the variance with the official results raises questions on how the numbers would have changed so significantly. The reluctance of the electoral agency to produce the legal documentation has not helped to clarify the matter.
International organisations, including the European Union, have voiced their concerns about delays in publishing all the forms 34A and forms 34B.
On Wednesday, however, IEBC said all forms 34B were now available to the public.
Tallying norm
ALSO READ: IEBC yet to pay 360,000 poll officials
The votes garnered collectively by the eight presidential candidates varies significantly from the aggregates of the other positions.
Typically, the total votes cast for all the six positions should tally, assuming that all voters were given a ballot paper for each elective post.
Official results contained in the forms 34B published late on Wednesday show that 15.1 million votes were cast for the eight aspirants – about 500,000 less than previously indicated on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) portal.
Nearly 15.6 million votes were cast for the presidency, according to the information that is still being displayed on the portal. Less than 15.1 million votes were cast for each of the other positions.
After accommodating the absence of parliamentary polls in Kikuyu and Kitutu Chache South, about 400,000 more votes had been cast for presidental position than legislators. In Kikuyu, the sitting MP, Kimani Ichung’wa, had no challenger while in Kitutu Chache South, one aspirant died days before the polls, prompting the postponement of parliamentary elections.
Ten days after the polls, several polling stations were still submitting their results for the other five positions, making it impossible to know exactly how many people voted.
But on August 14, IEBC explained: “The last 41 polling station results trickling in are from gadgets with challenges. They are not new results. We had all in signed hard copies.”
ALSO READ: Requiem mass for slain IEBC ICT Manager Chris Msando- PHOTOS
However, there is significant variance between the initial and official results even in constituencies that had completed transmitting their numbers.
In Kajiado North, for instance, prior results showed that nearly 7,600 votes were reported as rejected while the official results indicate zero.
It is also unclear how President-elect Uhuru Kenyatta’s votes had reduced from 25,982 to 25,707.
The tally for his main challenger, Raila Odinga, also shrank by 456 to 39,222.
the constituency returning officer, Mark Lempaka, signed the form on August 9, while one party agent signed the following day. The Jubilee Party agent signed on August 18 – today.
It is a variance that is replicated in all constituencies but on different scales, except Matungulu in Machakos where 51,378 votes were cast for the presidency and member of National Assembly positions.
In Nyeri Town constituency, more than 2,000 people voted for the member of the National Assembly than they did for the presidential candidates.
Collectively, there are 21,759 more votes for the MP position than the president across 51 constituencies.
ALSO READ: Raila Odinga's decision rekindles memories of 2013 legal battle
IEBC spokesman Edwin Limo said such inconsistencies could be a result of wrong entries by presiding officers.
“It is likely that the errors arose at entry before the electronic transmission,” he said, adding that the returning officers at the constituencies would have arrested such mistakes.
Should the returning officers fail to detect the errors, the wrong tallies would be transmitted and counted as such since the results declared at the constituency are final.
Delayed forms
He added that some results took longer to arrive owing to failure of mobile phone networks in remote parts of the country.
Mr Limo told The Standard that fake forms have been circulating on the internet with the intention of damaging the credibility of the IEBC.
He also dismissed as rumours claims that returning officers from Kisii and Nyamira had been summoned to sign new forms.
ALSO READ: Sakuda loses MP seat to his former student
IEBC has, however, been unable to explain why it would take six days to upload 290 forms 34B since receiving the last one on Friday before declaring Mr Kenyatta the victor.
It was not until Wednesday evening that the forms were available, yet they were central in the dispute pitting the Opposition against the electoral body.
Electoral body
Thousands of forms 34A, which indicate the result from the polling station, were available hours after the voting ended on Tuesday.
The electoral agency’s reluctance to make the forms available informed concerns that the commission might have been engaging in fraud, as claimed by Raila and his NASA coalition.
International organisations helped amplify the calls for the publishing of the forms containing the official results.
Raila and his NASA coalition have contested the outcome of the polls and are expected to challenge the presidential results at the Supreme Court by Friday.
mmichira@standardmedia.co.ke
Share Tweet
IEBC
Kenya General Election
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Haya basi umesema The star ni mbaya. Watu wengi wanaquestion IEBC sio The star pekee yake. And don't get personal but respond to the article itself because I did not write the article in the star. Hii hapa article ingine from the standard and these questions are not going away until the supreme court makes its ruling even though NASA won't win coz this is Africa.

Politics
Queries over the disparities in IEBC poll results
By Moses Michira
Published: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:41, Updated: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:43
IEBC officials verifying results at the Bomas of Kenya before presidential results were released. [Wilberforce Okwiri, Standard]
Glaring inconsistencies are emerging about the actual number of voters who took part in last Tuesday’s polls and the source of the provisional results posted on the portal.
ALSO READ: Kura Yangu Sauti Yangu disputes IEBC figures
Prior information indicated that the numbers displayed on the portal had been digitally transmitted from the voting equipment at the polling stations.
But the variance with the official results raises questions on how the numbers would have changed so significantly. The reluctance of the electoral agency to produce the legal documentation has not helped to clarify the matter.
International organisations, including the European Union, have voiced their concerns about delays in publishing all the forms 34A and forms 34B.
On Wednesday, however, IEBC said all forms 34B were now available to the public.
Tallying norm
ALSO READ: IEBC yet to pay 360,000 poll officials
The votes garnered collectively by the eight presidential candidates varies significantly from the aggregates of the other positions.
Typically, the total votes cast for all the six positions should tally, assuming that all voters were given a ballot paper for each elective post.
Official results contained in the forms 34B published late on Wednesday show that 15.1 million votes were cast for the eight aspirants – about 500,000 less than previously indicated on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) portal.
Nearly 15.6 million votes were cast for the presidency, according to the information that is still being displayed on the portal. Less than 15.1 million votes were cast for each of the other positions.
After accommodating the absence of parliamentary polls in Kikuyu and Kitutu Chache South, about 400,000 more votes had been cast for presidental position than legislators. In Kikuyu, the sitting MP, Kimani Ichung’wa, had no challenger while in Kitutu Chache South, one aspirant died days before the polls, prompting the postponement of parliamentary elections.
Ten days after the polls, several polling stations were still submitting their results for the other five positions, making it impossible to know exactly how many people voted.
But on August 14, IEBC explained: “The last 41 polling station results trickling in are from gadgets with challenges. They are not new results. We had all in signed hard copies.”
ALSO READ: Requiem mass for slain IEBC ICT Manager Chris Msando- PHOTOS
However, there is significant variance between the initial and official results even in constituencies that had completed transmitting their numbers.
In Kajiado North, for instance, prior results showed that nearly 7,600 votes were reported as rejected while the official results indicate zero.
It is also unclear how President-elect Uhuru Kenyatta’s votes had reduced from 25,982 to 25,707.
The tally for his main challenger, Raila Odinga, also shrank by 456 to 39,222.
the constituency returning officer, Mark Lempaka, signed the form on August 9, while one party agent signed the following day. The Jubilee Party agent signed on August 18 – today.
It is a variance that is replicated in all constituencies but on different scales, except Matungulu in Machakos where 51,378 votes were cast for the presidency and member of National Assembly positions.
In Nyeri Town constituency, more than 2,000 people voted for the member of the National Assembly than they did for the presidential candidates.
Collectively, there are 21,759 more votes for the MP position than the president across 51 constituencies.
ALSO READ: Raila Odinga's decision rekindles memories of 2013 legal battle
IEBC spokesman Edwin Limo said such inconsistencies could be a result of wrong entries by presiding officers.
“It is likely that the errors arose at entry before the electronic transmission,” he said, adding that the returning officers at the constituencies would have arrested such mistakes.
Should the returning officers fail to detect the errors, the wrong tallies would be transmitted and counted as such since the results declared at the constituency are final.
Delayed forms
He added that some results took longer to arrive owing to failure of mobile phone networks in remote parts of the country.
Mr Limo told The Standard that fake forms have been circulating on the internet with the intention of damaging the credibility of the IEBC.
He also dismissed as rumours claims that returning officers from Kisii and Nyamira had been summoned to sign new forms.
ALSO READ: Sakuda loses MP seat to his former student
IEBC has, however, been unable to explain why it would take six days to upload 290 forms 34B since receiving the last one on Friday before declaring Mr Kenyatta the victor.
It was not until Wednesday evening that the forms were available, yet they were central in the dispute pitting the Opposition against the electoral body.
Electoral body
Thousands of forms 34A, which indicate the result from the polling station, were available hours after the voting ended on Tuesday.
The electoral agency’s reluctance to make the forms available informed concerns that the commission might have been engaging in fraud, as claimed by Raila and his NASA coalition.
International organisations helped amplify the calls for the publishing of the forms containing the official results.
Raila and his NASA coalition have contested the outcome of the polls and are expected to challenge the presidential results at the Supreme Court by Friday.
mmichira@standardmedia.co.ke
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Haya basi umesema The star ni mbaya. Watu wengi wanaquestion IEBC sio The star pekee yake. And don't get personal but respond to the article itself because I did not write the article in the star. Hii hapa article ingine from the standard and these questions are not going away until the supreme court makes its ruling even though NASA won't win coz this is Africa.

Politics
Queries over the disparities in IEBC poll results
By Moses Michira
Published: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:41, Updated: Aug 17th 2017 at 22:43
IEBC officials verifying results at the Bomas of Kenya before presidential results were released. [Wilberforce Okwiri, Standard]
Glaring inconsistencies are emerging about the actual number of voters who took part in last Tuesday’s polls and the source of the provisional results posted on the portal.
ALSO READ: Kura Yangu Sauti Yangu disputes IEBC figures
Prior information indicated that the numbers displayed on the portal had been digitally transmitted from the voting equipment at the polling stations.
But the variance with the official results raises questions on how the numbers would have changed so significantly. The reluctance of the electoral agency to produce the legal documentation has not helped to clarify the matter.
International organisations, including the European Union, have voiced their concerns about delays in publishing all the forms 34A and forms 34B.
On Wednesday, however, IEBC said all forms 34B were now available to the public.
Tallying norm
ALSO READ: IEBC yet to pay 360,000 poll officials
The votes garnered collectively by the eight presidential candidates varies significantly from the aggregates of the other positions.
Typically, the total votes cast for all the six positions should tally, assuming that all voters were given a ballot paper for each elective post.
Official results contained in the forms 34B published late on Wednesday show that 15.1 million votes were cast for the eight aspirants – about 500,000 less than previously indicated on the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) portal.
Nearly 15.6 million votes were cast for the presidency, according to the information that is still being displayed on the portal. Less than 15.1 million votes were cast for each of the other positions.
After accommodating the absence of parliamentary polls in Kikuyu and Kitutu Chache South, about 400,000 more votes had been cast for presidental position than legislators. In Kikuyu, the sitting MP, Kimani Ichung’wa, had no challenger while in Kitutu Chache South, one aspirant died days before the polls, prompting the postponement of parliamentary elections.
Ten days after the polls, several polling stations were still submitting their results for the other five positions, making it impossible to know exactly how many people voted.
But on August 14, IEBC explained: “The last 41 polling station results trickling in are from gadgets with challenges. They are not new results. We had all in signed hard copies.”
ALSO READ: Requiem mass for slain IEBC ICT Manager Chris Msando- PHOTOS
However, there is significant variance between the initial and official results even in constituencies that had completed transmitting their numbers.
In Kajiado North, for instance, prior results showed that nearly 7,600 votes were reported as rejected while the official results indicate zero.
It is also unclear how President-elect Uhuru Kenyatta’s votes had reduced from 25,982 to 25,707.
The tally for his main challenger, Raila Odinga, also shrank by 456 to 39,222.
the constituency returning officer, Mark Lempaka, signed the form on August 9, while one party agent signed the following day. The Jubilee Party agent signed on August 18 – today.
It is a variance that is replicated in all constituencies but on different scales, except Matungulu in Machakos where 51,378 votes were cast for the presidency and member of National Assembly positions.
In Nyeri Town constituency, more than 2,000 people voted for the member of the National Assembly than they did for the presidential candidates.
Collectively, there are 21,759 more votes for the MP position than the president across 51 constituencies.
ALSO READ: Raila Odinga's decision rekindles memories of 2013 legal battle
IEBC spokesman Edwin Limo said such inconsistencies could be a result of wrong entries by presiding officers.
“It is likely that the errors arose at entry before the electronic transmission,” he said, adding that the returning officers at the constituencies would have arrested such mistakes.
Should the returning officers fail to detect the errors, the wrong tallies would be transmitted and counted as such since the results declared at the constituency are final.
Delayed forms
He added that some results took longer to arrive owing to failure of mobile phone networks in remote parts of the country.
Mr Limo told The Standard that fake forms have been circulating on the internet with the intention of damaging the credibility of the IEBC.
He also dismissed as rumours claims that returning officers from Kisii and Nyamira had been summoned to sign new forms.
ALSO READ: Sakuda loses MP seat to his former student
IEBC has, however, been unable to explain why it would take six days to upload 290 forms 34B since receiving the last one on Friday before declaring Mr Kenyatta the victor.
It was not until Wednesday evening that the forms were available, yet they were central in the dispute pitting the Opposition against the electoral body.
Electoral body
Thousands of forms 34A, which indicate the result from the polling station, were available hours after the voting ended on Tuesday.
The electoral agency’s reluctance to make the forms available informed concerns that the commission might have been engaging in fraud, as claimed by Raila and his NASA coalition.
International organisations helped amplify the calls for the publishing of the forms containing the official results.
Raila and his NASA coalition have contested the outcome of the polls and are expected to challenge the presidential results at the Supreme Court by Friday.
mmichira@standardmedia.co.ke
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Kenya General Election
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Tatizo si lako. Kwa hivyo usiseme ni kuwa personal. Tatizo ni mfumo wa elimu wa Kenya ambao umewazoesha watu spoon feeding hadi wanaamini chochote kinachoandikwa magazetini. Hata hao Kura Yangu, Sauti Yangu ni watu wa elimu duni ambao hawezi kujifanyia hesabu ya kuongeza pekee.

Swali ni, wewe mwenyewe umejaribu kudhibitisha yale yanayosemwa na hao wataalamu au ume copy paste bila kufanya hesabu? Baadhi ya watu kama Makau Mutua wanaugwa ugonjwa huu pia. It's a systemic problem. Hii inaitwa Intellectual laziness ambayo hutegemea "intellectual vomit" kutoka kwa wale wanaojiita experts.

Tofauti kubwa kati ya Portal results na official results ni Rejected votes. Hizo 500,000 wanazodai, karibu 350,000 zinaletwa na rejected votes. NA Ukifuatilia hizo rejected votes utapata ya kwamba kila ward iko na polling station moja ambayo inatuma rejected votes ambazo ziko equal to the number of registered voters. Kwa mtu yeyote aliye na ufahamu wa logic atajua kuwa hili ni lile watu wa coding kama MK254 huita bug. Hata Microsoft hutoa operating system ambazo ziko na bugs. Kinachonishangaza ni media houses ambazo zafaa kutoa habari kwa wananchi, wanaandika tu mambo za kishenzi bila kufikiri.
 
My president is Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta for the next 5years! They can come with their stories in 2022 and ill still have someone else to vote for, not Raila! This jokers filed 500 cases against the IEBC before the 2017 elections!
 
Even in USA more people come out to vote for president than for their local governors
My president is Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta for the next 5years! They can come with their stories in 2022 and ill still have someone else to vote for, not Raila! This jokers filed 500 cases against the IEBC before the 2017 elections!
Those NASA jokers thought IEBC casts the votes ,courts can level the field and the ballot printing firm is a participant.You know,when your mindset is off ,your game sucks and your tactics misfire you'll end up making excuses that "its all the bad tools that need change"
 
I am not Kenyan so don't care who won or lost...What I wonder is why there were not younger guys running for the top job? Why do we always recycle spent politicians? Absolute power corrupts absolutely especially when you get drunk in it...Anyway that's beside the point...what if NASA wins the court case...then what?Can a Kenyan explain it to me...curious....
 
I am not Kenyan so don't care who won or lost...What I wonder is why there were not younger guys running for the top job? Why do we always recycle spent politicians? Absolute power corrupts absolutely especially when you get drunk in it...Anyway that's beside the point...what if NASA wins the court case...then what?Can a Kenyan explain it to me...curious....
I am not a lawyer but i heard a lawyer on t.v saying that if NASA wins then there will be a rerun between Uhuru and Raila. And this election will be held within sixty days after the supreme court judgement.
 
I am not a lawyer but i heard a lawyer on t.v saying that if NASA wins then there will be a rerun between Uhuru and Raila. And this election will be held within sixty days after the supreme court judgement.
Thanks Tony254 I hope the case is deliberated without prejudice....Kenya being a neighbor would want nothing but peace for them...Due to the nature of my job I have met many Kenyan communities out of Kenya who seem to get along very well...They have projects,get together,businesses,help each other and what not...I don't undestand why they are so tribal in their home country...
 
Thanks Tony254 I hope the case is deliberated without prejudice....Kenya being a neighbor would want nothing but peace for them...Due to the nature of my job I have met many Kenyan communities out of Kenya who seem to get along very well...They have projects,get together,businesses,help each other and what not...I don't undestand why they are so tribal in their home country...
Kenyans living outside Kenya are not tribal. The Kenyans living Inside Kenya are the ones who are tribal but not all of them . My parents come from different tribes and one of those tribes belongs to NASA and the other one Jubilee but my parents love each other. I will not disclose those two tribes. Intermarriage between tribes is slowly killing this beast called tribalism. The British also increased tribalism by oppressing other tribes and rewarding others with government positions. The British especially hated the Kikuyu and took their land away from them. Detained them in concentration camps e.t.c. It's all history. Finally I believe our political leaders are responsible for this mess by developing some areas and neglecting others. I was travelling to Ethiopia recently and I passed through Isiolo and Marsabit counties where there is virtually no development. Infact the Kibaki government started construction of a 500 km road from Isiolo to Moyale that was completed this year. People used to take two days and I took only twelve hours by bus from Nairobi to Moyale. Tribalism will never end until these people feel they are part of Kenya. At the Ethiopian border one Kenyan of Borana tribe asked me " Habari ya Kenya". You can imagine my shock when I heard that question coz this guy was a Kenyan. Anyway to cut the long story short, some people don't feel like they are part of Kenya because since 1963 successive governments have excluded some tribes from accessing resources, I have seen this with my eyes. Many Kenyans live in Nairobi and think that every Kenyan is enjoying life. However I love my country despite it's challenges.
 
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