Kenya pressured over disputed poll as toll rises

Mon Dec 31, 2007 6:46pm EST
 
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By Daniel Wallis

NAIROBI (Reuters) - The United States and Britain are pressuring Kenya to investigate possible voting irregularities in an election that returned President Mwai Kibaki to power and triggered rioting in which more than 100 people have died.

The death toll appeared certain to rise after Kibaki's disputed victory in east Africa's biggest economy.

International observers who first hailed the ballot as an example for the continent expressed serious concerns about the vote-counting and abhorred the nationwide clashes that followed.

"All sides should exercise and work for a solution that reflects the will of the Kenyan people," said a spokesman for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who spoke to Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga and urged them to work together.

The United States said disputes over the result should be resolved promptly through "constitutional and legal remedies" and that it was working with all parties to avoid more violence.

Reuters estimates about 100 people have been killed, based on witnesses, body counts and credible media reports of the battles between police and machete-wielding protesters.

Residents said bodies still lay on some streets of Kisumu, a city in the opposition's western heartland. Local TV station KTN said the nationwide toll had reached at least 124.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon deplored the bloodshed and urged the security forces to show the utmost restraint.

The violence in the capital Nairobi, the Indian Ocean resort of Mombasa and many smaller towns put investment in the economy at risk and dented Kenya's image as a haven of relative stability in an often dangerous region.

In a New Year message, Kibaki urged reconciliation but promised to deal decisively with any troublemakers.

TENSIONS HIGH

Much of the fighting has pitted members of his Kikuyu ethnic group, Kenya's largest and most economically dominant tribe, against Luo supporters of opposition leader Raila Odinga.

As many people stayed at home in fear, most businesses remained closed and supplies of food, fuel and water ran low.

Kisumu, where witnesses said police fired on protesters when riots erupted on Sunday, has been the scene of the worst of the violence.

On Monday, 21 bodies lay at a mortuary there. Most had gunshot wounds. Verifying the toll was hard because reporters were barred by a man who said he was a government employee.  Continued...

 
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