Originally published Tuesday, January 15, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Exit poll indicates Kenya president lost
An exit poll carried out on behalf of a U.S. government-backed foundation indicates that Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki was defeated in last...
McClatchy Newspapers
NAIROBI, Kenya — An exit poll carried out on behalf of a U.S. government-backed foundation indicates that Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki was defeated in last month's disputed election rather than being re-elected as he claims, according to officials with knowledge of the document.
The poll by the Washington-based International Republican Institute — which hasn't been publicly released — further undermines an election result that many international observers have described as flawed. The outcome has sparked protests and ethnically driven clashes that have killed hundreds.
Opposition leader Raila Odinga led Kibaki by roughly 8 percentage points in the poll, which surveyed voters as they left polling places during the election Dec. 27, according to one senior Western official who has seen the data. That's a sharp departure from the results that Kenyan election officials certified, which gave Kibaki a margin of 231,728 votes over Odinga, about 3 percentage points.
U.S. and European observers have criticized the official results, which came after long, unexplained delays in counting the votes, primarily from Kibaki strongholds. Jendayi Frazer, the assistant secretary of state for African affairs, said over the weekend that there were "serious irregularities in the vote tallying, which made it impossible to determine with certainty the final result."
The head of the International Republican Institute, a nonpartisan democracy-building organization whose work in Kenya was funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, said the data weren't released because of concerns about their validity.
The institute contracted an experienced Kenyan polling firm, Strategic Public Relations and Research, which had done two previous national opinion polls for the institute last year. But on Election Day, the institute's staff found that pollsters weren't gathering information in some areas.
Institute President Lorne Craner said institute staffers weren't in all areas where pollsters were working, so they couldn't be sure which areas weren't represented. Officials at the polling firm couldn't be reached for comment, although outside experts said such data problems could be adjusted for statistically.
The senior Western official, who reviewed partial results, described them as credible. The survey included a sufficient sample of voters from around the country, and Odinga's lead was comfortably outside the expected margin of error for a poll of that size, the official said.
The election and its aftermath have destroyed Kenya's reputation for stability. As the country braced for more opposition protests this week, former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was expected to arrive as early as today for talks with Kibaki and Odinga, though several tries to get the two rivals to meet have failed.
The International Republican Institute's work in Kenya dates to 1992, when it led an international mission to observe the country's first multiparty elections.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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