NAIROBI, Kenya
The Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC) used a second set of results transmission forms
that it resolved with political parties to seal in tamper-proof envelopes prior
to the August 9, 2022 presidential election, a Judiciary report has revealed.Judiciary staff scrutinize ballot papers for presidential candidates after opening ballot boxes from Mombasa at the Supreme Court on August 31, 2022
The Judiciary ordered a
recount of votes in 15 polling stations following a request by Azimio la
Umoja’s candidates Raila Odinga and Martha Karua.
Technical teams from the
Judiciary were tasked with compiling reports on the recount, and a scrutiny of
the IEBC's servers.
An IEBC commissioner has in
her affidavit accused the chairperson Wafula Chebukati of secretly printing a
second set of the results transmission forms, which show votes garnered by each
candidate at polling stations.
Political parties in July
protested at the printing of the second set of forms, prompting the IEBC to
call them for a consultative meeting.
In the meeting, it was
resolved that the second set of forms would not be used in the elections but
sealed in tamper-proof envelopes.
In its report, the Judiciary
team says it found nine polling stations where the second set of results forms
was used, some of which had discrepancies in their tallying.
The 15 polling stations are in
Nandi, Kericho, Mombasa, and Nyandarua. Some tallying discrepancies were noted
after the vote recount.
For instance, in Kericho’s
Chepkutung polling station, two of three, one vote had been taken from Raila
Odinga’s tally and attributed to William Ruto.
The report states that another
six polling stations failed to provide their sets of forms 34A book two.
“Some returning officers
explained the absence of form 34A book 2 by indicating that the presiding
officers used them instead of form 34 book 1.
"In such cases the team
verified the information by looking for the form 34A book 1 to confirm if it
was indeed intact for purposes of accountability. The reason given by some
returning officers is that some presiding officers mistook the two books
because they did not understand the procedure,” the report states.
“Other returning officers had
no explanation for the absence of form 34A book 2. They indicated that they had
just learned of the anomaly together with the scrutiny. The Kiambaa
constituency returning officer explained that her presiding officer used book 2
because he had spoilt book 1. They, however, did not provide the spoilt form
34A book 1 for the team’s scrutiny, and the PSD did not indicate that the form
34A book 2 had been spoilt,” the report further states.
The second set of forms 34A
sampled were from Kericho, Kiambu, Bomet and Kakamega constituencies.
On scrutiny of IEBC’s servers,
the report states that voter identification kits used in the elections have an
application that converts images into PDF format.
By the time the scrutiny exercise
was concluded, the IEBC had not provided a forensic image of form 34C, the
final results transmission document for Presidential polls, to the Judiciary’s
team. The IEBC, however, committed to submitting the forensic image.
The forensic image is intended
to assist in finding out how and when the document was filled with results.
The report has been submitted
to the Supreme Court judges for review, and will be the subject of proceedings
on Friday. – The EastAfrican
No comments:
Post a Comment