
Audio By Carbonatix
Kenya's electoral commission has denied opposition claims its IT system was hacked in order to manipulate Tuesday's election results.
Chief electoral officer Ezra Chiloba told reporters the systems were not compromised at any point.
He spoke out after presidential candidate Raila Odinga rejected provisional results indicating a strong lead for President Uhuru Kenyatta.
The opposition's claim led to sporadic outbreaks of violence.
Mr Chiloba said his team had "established that the claims being made could not be substantiated".
He added: "I wish to take this opportunity to confirm that our elections management system is secure. There were no external or internal interference to the system at any point before, during or after the voting."
His comments were made amid repeated calls for calm.
The government has denied that anyone died in clashes on Wednesday between security forces and Mr Odinga's supporters in the capital, Nairobi, and the western town of Kisumu, an opposition stronghold.
Earlier reports quoting police said two protesters had been shot dead in Nairobi after police were attacked with machetes while two men had been killed by officers in Kisumu when a gang attacked a vote tallying station.
Many fear a repeat of the violence after the disputed election 10 years ago when more than 1,100 Kenyans died and 600,000 were displaced.
What do provisional results say?
Raw polling data published on the website of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) says that with almost 97% of results in, Mr Kenyatta - who is seeking a second term - is leading with about 54.3%, to Mr Odinga's 44.8% share of the vote.
These suggest Mr Kenyatta is heading for a first-round victory.
However, it has been emphasised by the IEBC that these results are preliminary, and have yet to be certified officially.
Observers from the African Union and the European Union among others issued a joint statement urging political parties "to use the legally provided channels of dispute resolution in case of any dissatisfaction with the process", adding that police should "avoid excessive use of force".
They also said the IEBC should carry out the tallying process "with full integrity and transparency".
Speaking to the BBC, John Mahama, former president of Ghana and head of the Commonwealth Observer Mission in Kenya, said the responsibility to maintain calm fell to the two leading candidates.
"They can take Kenya down the slippery slope of violence like in 2007, or they can both rise to the occasion and let Kenya surmount this democratic hurdle and become one of the leading democracies in Africa," he said.
The commission has not said when it will publish the final results. Legally, it has to announce the results within seven days of polling stations closing.
Latest Stories
-
UniMAC Vice Chancellor warns Ghana needs AI investment to secure future of media industry
4 minutes -
Health Ministry supports Mövenpick Green Stay Initiative to promote healthy workplace nutrition
9 minutes -
Weija Children’s Hospital contractor arrested over alleged procurement irregularities – Gov’t
25 minutes -
Health Ministry says Weija Children’s Hospital handover was focus of meeting with contractor
49 minutes -
Gov’t to enforce sanitation by-laws, demolish structures on waterways – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
1 hour -
PIAC warns global energy transition policies adoption could threaten Ghana’s petroleum industry
1 hour -
Ga South Assembly identifies 1,200 illegal structures for demolition to curb flooding
2 hours -
Military personnel allegedly seize 15 excavators from Enchi Assembly yard despite court order
2 hours -
Gov’t general clean-up exercise will be sustained, not a one-off response – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
2 hours -
Fuel prices set to go down from July 16 despite current war in the Middle East – COMAC CEO
2 hours -
KMA demolishes illegal structures, summons sanitation offenders during Adum clean-up
2 hours -
Lele Group donates 1,000 relief packages to flood victims in Tema West
2 hours -
Standard Chartered urges portfolio diversification as Ghana’s outlook improves amid global market uncertainty
2 hours -
Why Accra’s current flood strategy may not be futureproof for the city of 2035
2 hours -
Nurses’ union urges government to replace health workers leaving Ghana for abroad
2 hours