Kenyan police fired
tear gas and water cannon on Monday at stone-throwing protesters in Nairobi who
had gathered to demand that a body supervising next year's elections resign, a
Reuters witness said.
The presidential and parliamentary polls are more than a year
away but politicians are already lining up for what could be a bruising battle
in a nation where violence erupted after the 2007 vote and the opposition
disputed the 2013 result.
Hundreds of demonstrators
gathered near the university and the offices of the Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC).
The opposition have
accused the IEBC of bias in favor of the government, demanding it be disbanded.
The IEBC has dismissed the charges and says its members will stay on.
A few demonstrators
hurled stones at police standing near the gate of the IEBC offices.
"IEBC must go," protesters shouted in
the center of Nairobi, where dozens of police with support vehicles had been
mobilized.
When
stone throwing began, police fired tear gas canisters and trucks shot water
cannon. Protesters dispersed after that.
Members
of the opposition Coalition of Reform and Democracy (CORD), which
unsuccessfully sought to overturn the 2013 result, staged a street protest last
month.
The
2013 vote, which brought President Uhuru Kenyatta to power, proceeded calmly
despite the opposition challenge. Raila Odinga, the CORD leader who has lost
previous presidential bids, accepted the court ruling. He is expected to run again.
Western
diplomats say the authorities must prepare carefully to ensure another peaceful
vote in a country where ethnic loyalties usually trump policy among voters.
About 1,200 were killed in ethnic killing that erupted after the 2007 poll.
Kenyatta
and his deputy, William Ruto, who in 2007 were on opposing sides but in 2013
united in a coalition, were charged by the International Criminal Court with
stoking the post-election violence. Both denied this. Charges were later
dropped.
Reuters
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