Kenya
Founding president and liberation struggle icon Jomo KENYATTA led Kenya from independence until his death in 1978, when
President Daniel Toroitich arap MOI took power in a constitutional succession. The country was a de facto one-party state
from 1969 until 1982 when the ruling Kenya African National Union (KANU) made itself the sole legal party in Kenya. MOI acceded
to internal and external pressure for political liberalization in late 1991.
The ethnically fractured opposition failed to dislodge KANU from power in elections in 1992 and 1997, which were marred
by violence and fraud, but are viewed as having generally reflected the will of the Kenyan people.
President MOI stepped down in December of 2002 following fair and peaceful elections. Mwai KIBAKI, running as the candidate
of the multiethnic, united opposition group, the National Rainbow Coalition, defeated KANU candidate Uhuru KENYATTA and assumed
the presidency following a campaign centered on an anticorruption platform.