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Deputy president William Ruto and veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga in tight Kenyan presidential election

Kenya's deputy president William Ruto. File photo.

Kenya's deputy president William Ruto. File photo.
Image: REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya

Preliminary results from Kenya's presidential election showed a tight race between the two main candidates vying to replace outgoing President Uhuru Kenyatta.

Tuesday's election was an important test for stability in east Africa's biggest economy after two of its three last elections were marred by violence following disputes over accusations of rigging.

The front-runners, deputy president William Ruto and veteran opposition leader Raila Odinga, were neck and neck with 1.2-million votes each, results tabulated by the private Citizen Television early on Wednesday showed, putting them at just over 49% each.

The winning candidate must get 50% plus one vote.

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) posted images of more than 90% of election result forms from 46,663 polling stations.

For now, the commission is posting pictures, not numbers. Only two constituency-level results are available on the commission's website.

The constituency result forms have to be physically taken to the national tallying centre in Nairobi and verified before the commission issues them as official results.

The process is partly the result of a Supreme Court ruling in 2017 that overturned the initial re-election of Kenyatta in August that year, citing the commission's failure to follow the process to the letter.

The final result from the IEBC is expected in days, though legally it has up to a week.

Turnout was low on Tuesday, when voters also chose legislative and local authority representatives.

The commission said it believed about 60% of the 22.1-million registered voters cast ballots. Turnout was nearly 80% in the election in 2017.

Several factors were blamed for the disappointing turnout, including drought in the north and voter frustration with the government's failure to tackle economic problems such as rising food and fuel prices.

Kenyatta fell out with his deputy Ruto after their re-election in 2017. He has endorsed Odinga.

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