Police have also clashed with protesters in Nairobi, where the opposition said it would also stage rallies on Monday.
Kenyan
opposition Coalition of Reform and Democracy (CORD) supporters protest
at the premises hosting the headquarters of Independent Electoral and
Boundaries Commission (IEBC) to demand the disbandment of the electoral
body ahead of next year"s election in Nairobi, Kenya, May 23, 2016.
Protesters in Kenya's western
city of Kisumu blocked roads with burning tyres and stones on Monday to
demand an electoral body that will oversee next year's elections quit, a
witness said.
Police and demonstrators have
repeatedly clashed during protests that have been organised on an almost
weekly basis since late April by the opposition, which accuses the
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) of bias.
Kisumu
and other towns in the western Kenya, traditionally an opposition
stronghold, have seen some of the worst violence. Three people were
killed in clashes in the region on May 23.
Police have also clashed with protesters in Nairobi, where the opposition said it would also stage rallies on Monday.
"IEBC must go," demonstrators in Kisumu shouted, while others carried a banner carrying the same slogan.
A meeting last week between President Uhuru Kenyatta and opposition leader Raila Odinga failed to defuse tensions in a nation prone to political strife. Violence after the 2007 election killed about 1,200 people.
The opposition have demanded dialogue on reforming the IEBC.
IEBC
commissioners deny any bias and say they will stay on, while the
government has said any reform needs to follow constitutional channels,
which could involve a petition to parliament where Kenyatta's Jubilee
coalition has a majority.
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