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Publication date: April 2008
Overview: In the late afternoon of 30 December 2007, the Election Commission of Kenya declared Mwai Kibaki to be the winner of the countryâs election, the count of which was considered by both national and international observers as ïŹawed, possibly rigged.
Within an hour, as Kibaki was sworn in as President in the capital, Nairobi, smoke could be seen rising from homes being burned in Kibera, the biggest slum in Africa. Within six weeks, more than 1,000 people across the country had been killed, and perhaps 500,000 others driven from their homes or ïŹed in fear.
On January 22, 2008, international reports began to appear, claiming that media, and particularly local language (commonly called vernacular) radio stations in Kenya, were responsible for fanning ethnic hatred and fuelling violence.
This Policy BrieïŹng, compiled for development policymakers, provides a brieïŹng on these complex and fast-moving series of events.