The full ruling yesterday detailing the court's shock decision on September 1 to annul President Uhuru Kenyatta's victory struck a searing blow to the credibility of the election commission, casting doubt on its ability to organise a new poll in less than a month.
Deputy chief justice Philomena Mwilu described "disturbing, if not startling, revelations" about the conduct of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) and singled it out for ignoring a Supreme Court order to open up its computer servers after opposition allegations of hacking.
Lawyers for Raila Odinga's National Super Alliance (NASA) coalition last month challenged Kenyatta's re-election alleging rigging, hacking and tampering with results.
On the hacking charge, the IEBC was excoriated for failing to provide evidence that could have cleared up some of Odinga's claims, with Mwilu arguing the burden of proof was on the electoral commission.
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"Our order of scrutiny was a golden opportunity for the IEBC to place before the court evidence to debunk the petitioner's claim," Mwilu read from the court's detailed judgement.
"But what did IEBC do with it? It contemptuously disobeyed the court orders in these very critical areas."
Mwilu said the judges were left with no choice but to accept opposition claims the election commission's "ICT system was infiltrated and compromised and the data therein interfered with, or IEBC officials themselves interfered with the data, or it had bungled the transmission system and were unable to verify the data."
However Chief Justice David Maraga rejected Odinga's calls to prosecute top IEBC officials, saying there was no evidence to prove electoral offences.
Maraga also said there was no evidence of misconduct from Kenyatta.
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