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With counting continuing into the second day since polls closed, partial results put Uhuru Kenyatta -- who faces an international trial for crimes against humanity over violence after the last elections -- in the lead. EU election observers called the election a success while some parties' claims of irregularities. 00:00:57 PRWINT CodeNameMMV496550_TEN FileNameMMV496550_TEN-Alojz Peterle (man), Chief Observer of the EUSHOTLIST: NATIONAL ELECTION CENTER, NAIROBI, KENYA, MARCH 6, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV SOUNDBITE 1 Alojz Peterle (man), Chief Observer of the EU (English, 9 secs): "Overall the atmosphere during the election was calm and the democratic spirit of Kenyans prevailed. This is a very important success." -MS panel -Rack focus of results screen -CU of result screen -MS of IEBC official verifying the results -CU of form 16A CATHOLIC CHURCH, NAIROBI, KENYA, MARCH 6, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV SOUNDBITE 2 Charity Ngilu (woman), Jubilee party spokeswoman (English, 25 secs): "Regarding the inclusion of rejected vote in the traditional poll tally, in the national poll tally the Jubilee coalition is scandalised that sensible Kenyans can even so much as think of including condemned ballots in the final results. The logic behind this is suspect and sinister." -WS of stage -WS of cameramen --------------------------- AFP TEXT STORY: Kenya-vote,lead-WRAP Frustration grows over slow Kenya vote count by Peter Martell NAIROBI, March 6, 2013 (AFP) - Kenyans awaited presidential results with growing frustration Wednesday at controversial delays and mountains of spoiled ballots, five years after violence sparked by a disputed tallying process. With counting continuing into the second day since polls closed, partial results put Uhuru Kenyatta -- who faces an international trial for crimes against humanity over violence after the last elections -- in the lead. Kenyatta, the deputy prime minister, has maintained a steady lead in partial results over rival Prime Minister Raila Odinga, but political parties on both sides have raised concerns at delays in the tallying process. Odinga says he was robbed of victory in 2007 when disputed results triggered bloody ethnic violence in which more than 1,100 people were killed and 600,000 were forced to flee their homes. While millions of Kenyans turned out peacefully on Monday for the elections, how they react to the final results will be key to stability in the regional powerhouse. Leaders and election officials have urged people to remain calm. Stalled electronic voter systems meant that by midday Wednesday just over 40 percent of the almost 32,000 polling stations had sent results, making up five million valid votes counted from the 14.3 million registered voters. Kenyatta had won just over 2.82 million or 53 percent of valid votes cast against Odinga with 2.23 million or 42 percent, a gap that could still be overturned. More than five percent of votes cast were rejected, and those were not initially included in total tolls. To win outright and avoid a second round run off, a candidate must win "more than half of all the votes cast", according to the constitution, as well as winning at least 25 percent of votes in more than half of all counties. If these spoiled ballots were included, it would greatly add to the numbers needed for a candidate to break the 50 percent threshold for a first round win, raising the prospect of another round due within a month after the vote. Kenya's Daily Nation in its Wednesday editorial warned that despite largely peaceful holding of polls there was a potential "rocky road" ahead. "Election-related violence last time occurred not during the peaceful voting and counting, but in protest after the announcement of suspect results following lengthy unexplained delays," it noted. Despite appeals by leaders for patience, in the western town of Kisumu, an Odinga stronghold and flashpoint in 2007-8 violence, concern was growing. "It's taking a long time, let's hope that they are not doing something fishy," said airport worker Jack Mwai. -- Delays cause confusion, frustration -- There have already been multiple complaints at the widespread failure of electronic biometric voting registration (BVR) kits introduced by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) to frustrate potential rigging. The failure meant stations used paper records and manual registration, and many returning officers were due to travel by road Wednesday to deliver results by hand. Sitting in the near empty hall at Kisumu county tallying centre, returning officer Dolly Akili was waiting for results for one final constituency. "Then I will get my security, they will take me to the airport to fly to Nairobi," she said, adding that she hoped to travel by nightfall Wednesday. Kenyatta's Jubilee Coalition late Tuesday called on the IEBC to "urgently remedy the technical issues" affecting the vote count, but expressed "surprise" at suggestions by Oding