An official crucial to
running Kenya's presidential election next week has been found tortured and
killed, the electoral commission chairman said Monday, as concerns grew that
the East African nation's vote again would face dangerous unrest.
Associated
Press report continues:
Wafula
Chebukati helped identify the body of Christopher Msando at the city morgue and
said he had injuries to the neck and head. Mssando had been reported missing a
few days ago.
"This
is a brutal murder of our employee and we are demanding to know who killed him
and why," Chebukati said. "We are demanding government provide
security to all IEBC (electoral commission) staff."
Police
did not immediately comment.
Msando
had been in charge of managing information technology systems at the electoral
commission. Kenya will be using biometric technology to identify voters and
electronic transmission of results, which reduces the chances of fraud.
Msando
had publicly sought to reassure voters that the election results would not be
tampered with. Chebukati said they have postponed a test run of the technology
scheduled for Monday because Msando was crucial in the process.
The
opposition has charged that President Uhuru Kenyatta wants to rig the
elections, an accusation the presidency has denied.
Msando
was found dead a day after police killed an intruder at Deputy President
William Ruto's home after an 18-hour siege. Police said the intruder had
attacked a guard at the gate with a machete and taken his gun, which he used to
kill another police guard.
Analysts
have warned that further violence could accompany the hotly contested Aug. 8
vote in which Kenyatta is running again.
Kenyan
elections have turned violent in the past, notably after the 2007 presidential
vote that international observers said was flawed. More than 1,000 people died.
The
stakes are high for the candidates this time, said Murithi Mutiga, a senior
analyst with the International Crisis Group.
"Kenyatta,
a scion of one of the most prominent political families in the country, does
not want to make history as the first Kenyan president not to achieve
re-election. His rival, Raila Odinga, son of Kenya's first vice president, is
probably making his last serious attempt at capturing the presidency,"
Mutiga said. "None of them can afford to lose."
In
addition, the electoral commission is relatively new and has faced multiple
challenges in preparing for the vote, Mutiga said.
Another concern is the threat from the al-Shabab extremist group based in neighboring Somalia. The group recently threatened to disrupt Kenya's election and has carried out more than 100 attacks inside the country since 2011 in retribution for Kenya sending troops to Somalia to fight it.
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