Kenya: Spears, machetes, other weapons reign as re-run election sparks ethnic tensions



Last Thursday’s repeat election in Kenya which was boycotted by millions of Kenyans has reignited tension between ethnic communities in some areas.



Inhabitants of a small village in the West of Kenya picked up traditional arms on Saturday as the tension grew worse.

 Reuters reports that in the bright green sugarcane fields where the western Nyanza region rolls toward the Nandi hills, two tribes — the Luo and the Kalenjin — have lived in relative peace for years.

But in the village of Koguta, down the road from the town of Mugoroni in Kisumu County, Thursday’s polarizing vote reignited old grievances. The stand-off, is a reminder of how Kenya’s political crisis could easily spark ethnic violence. In 2007, an election induced ethic unrest led to the death of over 1,200 people. On one side of Koguta are Kalenjins.

Here are ardent supporters of President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Kalenjin deputy, William Ruto. But the Luos across the road support opposition leader Raila Odinga, who called for a boycott of the vote because he said it would not be fair.

Some of the Luos here fought police to stop ballot boxes being delivered. The Luo accused the Kalenjin of stealing cattle and burning their sugarcane crop in revenge, prompting both sides to grab machetes, spears, bows and arrows, and wooden clubs. “This is an area where they tried to come in with ballot boxes, there was serious resistance, so that was the genesis of all this enmity between the Kalenjins and the Luos,” said Julius Genga, a county legislator, as a colleague stood atop a sports utility vehicle to calm a crowd of men with spears. The opposition dismissed the vote as a “sham” although Kenyatta’s supporters say it was legitimate.

Protests stopped four counties from opening polling stations at all. Only a third of voters turned up, and the opposition is likely to challenge the poll in court. “This has to do with politics,” said Collins Owuor, 21, holding a machete. “Before politics we did not have problems with these people.”

(Telegraph/Reuters)
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  1. Reading this, we really have a lot to thank Goodluck Jonathan for, if he did not concede defeat in 2015, Nigeria would have been worse.

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