Uhuru Kenyatta Article

Uhuru Kenyatta summary

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Below is the article summary. For the full article, see Uhuru Kenyatta.

Uhuru Kenyatta, (born Oct. 26, 1961, Nairobi, Kenya), President of Kenya from 2013. The son of Jomo Kenyatta, Kenya’s first president, he was born into a wealthy and politically powerful Kikuyu family and found success as a businessman before entering politics. Kenyan Pres. Daniel arap Moi appointed him to positions in government agencies before nominating him in 2001 to fill a parliament seat. In 2002 Kenyatta was elected as one of four vice-chairs of the ruling party, Kenya African National Union (KANU), and he was chosen to be the KANU candidate in Kenya’s presidential election held later that year; he was defeated by Mwai Kibaki. During Kibaki’s second term, Kenyatta served as deputy prime minister (2008–13), minister of trade (2008), and minister of finance (2009–12). He became chairman of KANU in 2005 but left the party in 2012 and formed The National Alliance (TNA). Later that year TNA joined the Jubilee Coalition, and he became the group’s candidate in Kenya’s 2013 presidential election, which he won. At the time of his victory, he faced charges at the International Criminal Court in connection with postelection violence that occurred after the 2007 presidential election. The charges were dropped in 2014, and the case proceedings were terminated the next year. Kenyatta was reelected in August 2017, but his victory was overturned the next month by the Supreme Court, which invalidated the results of the election and ordered a new one. Although Kenyatta won that election as well, his victory was marred by the withdrawal of his main challenger and the subsequent boycott of the poll by his challenger’s supporters, which contributed to a poor turnout.