
Kenya swears in top electoral officials after president's approval
The chairperson and six commissioners, who will serve for six years, took their oaths at a ceremony overseen by Chief Justice Martha Koome, local broadcast footage showed.
"You are taking office at a time when our nation is undergoing a period of great reckoning, a moment when Kenyans, especially our young people, are expressing discontent, are expressing frustrations with public institutions," Koome said.
The East African nation's next general election will be held in 2027, but Ruto is already under pressure from street protests led by young people dissatisfied with high living costs, corruption and police brutality.
The speedy appointment of electoral officials was one of the rallying cries during protests last year.
Chairperson Erastus Ethekon is a human rights lawyer and previously worked as Turkana County's top legal adviser. He has also worked with the United Nations Development Programme and the U.N. Resident Coordinator in Kenya.
"My first and foremost loyalty is to the people of Kenya who hold the sovereign power," Ethekon said after being sworn in.
"I wish to assure Kenyans that their voices will not only be heard, but they will also count during the coming elections."
Ruto suspended four election commissioners in December 2022 after they rejected his victory in elections held earlier that year. The dispute proceeded to the Supreme Court, which upheld Ruto's win and rejected the commissioners' arguments that the vote-tallying process had been opaque.
The appointment of new election commissioners had been delayed in part due to several legal petitions, which a high court dismissed on Thursday.
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BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
WAEC speak on report of cancellation of 2025 exam
Di West African Examination Council (Waec) say report say dem cancel all di papers for di just concluded West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) 2025 no be true. WAEC say dem see news wia one supposed press statement wey dey fly up and down for social media dey claim say di federal ministry of education don cancel di examination sake of 'examination malpractice, leaked exam papers and unauthorised spread of exam materials.' Di WASSCE 2025 papers bin take place few months back and during dat time, some conversation about malpractice bin come up. For May 2025, students write di English Language paper 2 essay exam for di WAEC examination late into di night on Wednesday 28 May, 2025 wia parents say dem no happy wit dat kain development. Dat particular paper suppose take place for afternoon but na for late for night dem write di paper. Now, WAEC say dem no get hand for di press statemen wey dey spread for 19 July 2025 about cancelling di papers sake of exam malpractice and oda mago-mago. WAEC cancel di 2025 WASSCE paper? WAEC don come out to debunk di tori say dem no cancel di 2025 WASSCE papers wey students just write few months ago. According to di statement by Moyosola Adesina wey be di head of WAEC Public Affairs department, e say di fake press statement on di cancellation of di examination no be from dem. "We neva cancel di examination. Though we no sabi di source of dat information, di Council dey certain say di false claim dey spread from mischief-makers wey wan bring di Council into bad image." Waec say di pipo wey dey spread di fake news wan cause confusion for di candidates wey sit for di examination. Wen WAEC go release 2025 WASSCE? WAEC say dem don begin dey mark di examination scripts and don conclude am. According to dem, di 2025 WASSCE results na di next tin dem dey ready to release as dem don finish wit di marking of scripts. WAEC say WASSCE results go dey ready and dem go release am for August 2025. "As a matter of fact, we don conclude di marking of scripts of dis examination. Results go dey released on or bifor Monday 4 August 2025." Pipo wey dey mark WAEC scripts na examiners wey be sabi pipo for di education sector wey sabi classroom work well-well. WAEC go set up Committee of experts wey go come up wit marking guide, den drill all di appointed examiners well-well on all aspects of di marking scheme for one marking exercise wey dem dey call co-ordination. Na how WAEC dey pick dia examiners be dat and na dat same process dem take mark di 2025 WASSCE. Dis no be di first time wen pipo dey tok about exam malpractice for WAEC and di results. For 2023, results of 262, 803 candidates wey write di 2023 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) dey withheld, according to wetin di council tok. WAEC say di plenty results wey dem dey hold na those of candidates wey involve for examination malpractice and oda mago-mago. Di 262, 803 results wey dem hold na out of di 1,613,733 candidates wey sidon write di 2023 exam. For may 2025, WAEC for dia statement bin apologise to students for di delay in di exams wen dem write into di night. Dem acknowledge say dem get some challenges during di conduct of WASSCE for School Candidate, 2025 wey include delay in di timely conduct of English Language Paper 2 dem write on Wednesday 28 May, 2025. Dem say dem face some challenges primarily sake of dia major aim to prevent leakage of any paper, na why di paper happun for night. Offence wey count as exam malpractice for WAEC Wetin to know about WAEC? Di West African Examination Council, na international exam for senior secondary school student wey dey happun every year. Kontris wey dey write WAEC na, Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone. Na for 1952 dem establish am. According to information on top dia website, di vision of di West African Examinations Council na to be a world-class examining body wey dey add value to di educational goals of im stakeholders. WAEC na West Africa ogbonge examining board wey dey established by law. Dia work na to set, conduct di examinations and to award certificates wey dey comparable to dat of equivalent examining authorities internationally for di English-speaking West African kontris,.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Shares steady, yen up as markets unfazed by Japanese politics
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BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Boniface Mwangi: Kenyan activist faces terrorism charges over protests
Prominent Kenyan activist Boniface Mwangi is due in court on accusations of "facilitation of terrorist acts" during last month's deadly anti-government protests in which at least 19 people Sunday, investigators said they had seized phones, a laptop, and notebooks from Mr Mwangi's Lukenya home on the outskirts of the capital, Nairobi, and hard drives, computers, tear gas canisters and a blank firearm round from his office in the arrest has sparked a wave of condemnation, with human rights groups denouncing it was aimed at suppressing opposition activist has denied the accusations, saying in a post on X: "I am not a terrorist." According to the Kenya's Directorate of Criminal Investigations, Mr Mwangi stands accused of "offences related to facilitation of terrorist acts and unlawful possession of ammunition".The alleged offences are linked to the 25 June protests when, according to the state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR), 19 people died as demonstrators clashed with police. Hundreds were also injured and property and businesses were the aftermath, Interior Minister Kipchumba Murkomen described the demonstrations as "terrorism disguised as dissent" and an "unconstitutional attempt" to change the least 38 more people were killed in subsequent protests earlier this month, the KNHCR has said. Since June last year, more than 100 people have been killed in successive waves of anti-government protests, with police accused of using excessive force to quell Sunday, a coalition of 37 rights organisations condemned Mr Mwangi's arrest on "unjustified terrorism allegations", describing it as the "latest escalation in a systematic crackdown that has seen hundreds of young Kenyans detained on fabricated terrorism charges"."What began as targeted persecution of young protesters demanding accountability has metastasized into a full-scale assault on Kenya's democracy," they said in a joint Orengo, a veteran politician and governor of Siaya county, said it was "ridiculous to charge Boniface Mwangi and our children who have demonstrated a high level of political consciousness with terrorism".Mr Mwangi has been detained multiple times in the past, and has been at the centre of many protests. In May, he and a Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire were detained in Tanzania, where they had travelled to attend the trial of Tanzanian opposition leader Tundu Lissu, who is accused of their release several days later, both said they had been abducted, tortured and sexually assaulted. They have since filed a case at the regional East African Court of Justice over the matter. You may also be interested in: Is William Ruto the most disliked president in Kenya's history?Why the death of a blogger has put Kenya's police on trial'Shoot in the leg' - Kenyan leader orders police to curb violent protestsAre East African governments uniting to silence dissent?BBC identifies security forces who shot Kenya anti-tax protesters Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica