Kenya goes to polls hoping to avoid violent crisis of 2007

East African nation faces its most 'important and complicated' election after bloodshed of previous poll

An elederly Maasai woman is watched over by an IEBC official as she casts her vote in Ilngarooj, Kajiado County, Maasailand, on March 4, 2013 during the nationwide elections. Long lines of Ke
(Image credit: 2013 AFP)

KENYA'S GENERAL election got off to a bloody start yesterday when at least four policemen were hacked to death by a gang armed with machetes in the coastal town of Kilifi. The incident – the day before polls opened – is a stark reminder of the violence unleashed by the 2007 election which left 1,100 dead and forced 600,000 people to flee their homes. Here's why today's election has been called the most "important and complicated" in the East African nation's 50-year history.

The events of 2007-2008 still haunt the country. Mwai Kibaki was declared the winner of the December 2007 poll, but his opponents claimed the vote had been manipulated. The dispute unleashed a wave of "ethnically targeted" violence that left at least 1,100 people dead and Kenya in the grip of what the BBC calls its "worst political crisis since it gained independence in 1963".

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