IEBC bosses hold crisis talks after firm prints papers without Wiper
candidate's details as police probe kits deal
MAKUENI
BY-ELECTION | Safaricom agrees to transmit results of Friday polls IEBC
bosses hold crisis talks after firm prints papers without Wiper
candidate's details as police probe kits deal
Electoral
commission bosses yesterday held a crisis meeting to discuss how to
reprint fresh ballot papers after a UK firm printed the documents without
the name of Makueni Wiper Democratic Party candidate Mutula Kilonzo Jnr.
The
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) had ordered over
300,000 ballot papers from Smith & Ouzman, which were expected in
Nairobi yesterday.
Last
evening the IEBC chairman Ahmed Issack Hassan confirmed that the
commission had ordered the ballot papers printed even as a court case
against lawyer Kethi Kilonzo progressed in court.
It
appeared the commission did not expect the court ruling that forced them
to allow Wiper to replace Ms Kilonzo after she was disqualified from the
race over the legal status of her registration.
“Yes
we had ordered for the printing of ballot papers from Smith and Ouzman in
readiness for the Friday’s elections, but we are meeting now to see how
to deal with this matter following the latest development,” Mr Hassan
said.
The
printed ballot papers that were expected only captured four candidates
including John Harun Mwau of the Party of Independent Candidates of Kenya
(Pick), Philip Kaloki of the National Rainbow Coalition (Narc), Jane
Kitundu of Labour
Party
of Kenya (LPK) and Urbanus Muthoka (Independent). The commission was last
night expected to make fresh orders to accommodate Mutula Junior’s name
in what could cost the IEBC millions of shillings.
“We
are working on this matter and we know we will quickly resolve it.
Everything
will be alright, ” IEBC chief executive James Oswago said.
The
reprinted ballot papers are expected in the country tomorrow, but there
were fears the hitch could occasion logistical challenges to the
elections widely watched by Kenyans after the controversial March 4
presidential elections that were challenged at the Supreme Court.
Makueni
voters are expected to elect a new senator on Friday to replace Mutula
Kilonzo, who died on April 27.
Yesterday,
the commission said that Safaricom had agreed to transmit re
sults
of the Makueni by-elections.
The
mobile phone firm had initially refused to transmit the results
electronically.
Safaricom
pulled out of the deal with the commission as it did not have confidence
in the level of preparedness of the agency.
As
preparations for the by-elections continued, detectives are expected to
fly out this week to three foreign countries in their bid to find out the
roles played by suppliers of electronic kits, which failed during the
last elections.
Sources
at the EACC said the team, which is investigating the failure of the
electronic voter identification devices (Evids) and the biometric voter
registration (BVR) kits is to fly to Canada, France and the United
Kingdom, where suppliers of the equipment and a credit line provider are
based.
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