World

Kenya sets Oct. 17 election date after earlier result annulled

Kenya will hold fresh presidential elections on Oct. 17 after the Supreme Court nullified the Aug. 8 results, the electoral commission announced Monday.

Opposition Leader Odinga wants the electoral commission disbanded and reformed with new people

Supporters of Kenya's Opposition National Super Alliance (NASA) celebrate in a street of Kibera slum in Nairobi, on Sept. 1, after the country's top court ordered a new presidential election. (Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images)

Kenya will hold fresh presidential elections on Oct. 17, the electoral commission announced Monday.

The new elections will be between President Uhuru Kenyatta and Opposition Leader Raila Odinga following the Supreme Court's ruling last week to nullify the results of the Aug. 8 polls, which gave victory to Kenyatta, according to a statement issued by the electoral commission chairman, Wafula Chebukati.

The new elections will be held in just over 40 days, well within the time limit set by the Supreme Court ruling, which determined the commission had committed irregularities in adding up the votes, and the fresh polls must be held within 60 days.

President Uhuru Kenyatta criticized the court decision, calling the judges "crooks," but said he would win again in the second elections.

Opposition presidential candidate Raila Odinga, right, and his running mate, Kalonzo Musyoka, left, protested the results even before they were officially announced. (Sayyid Abdul Azim/Associated Press)

Odinga has called for the electoral commission to be disbanded and new officials to be appointed so that the fresh elections would be fair and accurate.

The electoral commission is "revising the operational and procedural requirements for the conduct of the fresh election and will share details with stakeholders," said chairman Chebukati in his statement.

He asked for the Supreme Court to issue a detailed judgment "in order to allow the commission to identify areas that require improvement in the management of the fresh election."

Chebukati said the commission and other election participants will "work together to deliver free, fair, credible and peaceful elections."