Editor's Review

Chebukati had faulted the State for the arrest of key officials at JKIA.

IEBC Commissioner Francis Wanderi has weighed on the standoff that saw three Venezuelans arrested after they were found in possession of election stickers.

Wanderi, who was addressing a media summit on Friday, explained that they have been cooperating with the police as they prepare for the coming polls.

The IEBC Commissioner while addressing the Summit, explained the arrested official at JKIA was joining two of his other colleagues who had arrived in the country to set key technology infrustructure.

{IEBC Commissioner Francis Wanderi. IMAGE: COURTESY}

"The person who was coming from Venezuela was joining members of the team here so he came with those stickers. Stickers are not strategic election material. I commend the police officers because we are working together to ensure that anything that is coming to the country regarding election material must be correct."

"That is part of our cooperation, there is no conflict. The police are doing their work and the commission is doing its work," Wanderi said.

The comments are a sharp contrast of what IEBC Chair Wafula Chebukati said in a press release Thursday night.

Chebukati appeared to fault the State for arresting the officials yet they had explained to them their whereabouts.

Chebukati said the three Venezuelans arrested at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport are " are key personnel responsible for deployment and management of election technology infrastructure".

He expressed disappointment in the arrests terming their detention as tantamount to intimidation.

"The brazen decision of the security authorities to arrest, detain and confine in a solitary hideout the three personnel without justification, is an exhibition of intimidation on hardworking persons who are only keen to deliver a robust technology infrastructure for conduct of a credible, secure and verifiable election," Chebukati said in a press release.