Uhuru Kenyatta will be sworn in for a second term as Kenya's president on Tuesday, the final act of an electoral saga that exposed deep and lasting divisions in the country. His inauguration comes ahead after Kenya's Supreme Court last Monday validated his poll victory, although the country's political crisis is not over. Protests sparked by the court decision left two dead, the latest casualties in a four-month period of unrest in which 56 people have died, according to an AFP tally. Most victims were killed at the hands of police, rights groups say.
The election chaos goes back to an August 8 poll that was annulled in September by Chief Justice David Maraga over "irregularities and illegalities" - a decision hailed across the globe as an opportunity to boost Kenyan democracy. The most recent violence erupted after Maraga's Supreme Court dismissed two petitions seeking to overturn 56-year-old Kenyatta's victory in the election re-run on October 26.
Kenyatta's rival Raila Odinga boycotted the vote saying the electoral commission had not made fundamental reforms to make the contest fair. Kenyatta went on to receive 98 percent of the vote - but on turnout of only 39 percent. The decision to validate the October result now leaves the country deeply split - even if violence has not reached the scale of that which followed a 2007 poll when 1,100 were killed.
No amount of military fanfare or the presence of around 20 heads of state for the swearing-in ceremony in a Nairobi stadium can mask the palpable unease hanging over the occasion, according to Rashid Abdi, analyst with the International Crisis Group (ICG).
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