Last month, the IT manager of Kenya's election commission was brutally murdered. Now his death is playing a role in unrest in the wake of Tuesday's presidential vote, chaos that threatens to plunge Kenya into violence with reverberations around the African continent. Here's what's happening:
- Disputed results: The first results in the closely watched election suggest a clear-cut finish: President Uhuru Kenyatta got more than 50% of the vote over opposition leader Raila Odinga and thus can avoid a runoff. The problem: Odinga is refusing to accept the results, alleging that hackers helping Kenyatta's party rigged the outcome, reports the BBC. Election officials inside and outside the country are scrambling to assess the claims.
- The murder: Odinga cites the July killing of Chris Msando, whose tortured body was found on the outskirts of Nairobi. He had been in charge of IT for Kenya's election body, and Odinga alleges that Msando's killers stole his credentials, accessed the nation's election servers on Tuesday, and manipulated them to ensure a big Kenyatta win, reports the New York Times. The election "was a fraud," he charged.