President William Ruto has been urged to release the servers by opposition leader Raila Odinga, who claims that his victory was stolen and that this is why many are afraid to comply with the Azimio La Umoja One Kenya's request.

PHOTO | COURTESY Azimio leader Raila Odinga asks president Ruto to open servers

According to claims provided by a poll agency whistleblower, Odinga has reaffirmed that he won the elections with 8.9 million votes.

"My guys, the whistleblower plainly demonstrates that they stole the election. What's the fear when they would open the server otherwise? The Supreme Court was subsequently compromised, just as they had done with the IEBC", Odinga tweeted.

According to the Azimio La Umoja Leader, Monday will signal the end of Kenyans' persecution due to the country's high cost of living and treatment of his protesters.

"They are currently robbing Kenyans while refusing to pay for living expenses while robbing the national purse. Kenyans are currently being shot and killed. Monday is when it must end. It's time to move on. Let them begin the countdown until Monday," he urged.

PHOTO | COURTESY Raila promised the mother of all demos on Monday

Odinga declared the "mother of all demonstrations" would occur on Monday of the following week after police prevented him from entering the Jacaranda grounds on Thursday.

If the Kenya Kwanza government does not address their complaints, including the high cost of living and election reforms, he claimed he would be forced to organize additional rallies.

"The demonstrations will continue, according to Odinga, who added, "On Monday, there will be another demonstration." "We are very reasonable people, and we believe that we have very valid reasons why we need to have a conversation, but in the absence of preparedness of the other side to cooperate, these demonstrations will continue," he said. This will be the most crucial demonstration regardless of what our critics say or believe.

PHOTO | COURTESY President William Ruto jetted back into the country on Thursday

After Thursday's demonstrations, Odinga held a press conference at his Karen home and insisted that they would continue to advocate for electoral reforms and lower living costs despite the overbearing behaviour of police officers who prevented Azimio supporters from staging demonstrations in various parts of the nation.

Odinga is adamant that the election from the previous year was his, and he accuses President William Ruto of stealing his vote.

He sought the restoration of four commissioners who had disputed the election's final results because they believed they had been rigged in Ruto's favour. He stated that the IEBC servers needed to be exposed so that everyone could learn the truth.

Odinga appealed the outcomes to the Supreme Court, but the motion was denied for lack of supporting documentation.

The ongoing effort to reconstitute the electoral commission has drawn criticism from him, who claimed that "it is an exercise in futility until all players are involved."

He decried the use of force by police officers against journalists during the protest on Thursday. Many were hurt when tear gas canisters were thrown at their van as they broadcast live footage.