NAIROBI — Kenya's presidential race tightened Friday with frontrunner Uhuru Kenyatta gaining just under half of the ballots counted four days after the vote, raising the prospect of a tense runoff against his main rival Prime Minister Raila Odinga. Kenyatta, deputy prime minister and son of Kenya's founding president, has led since results started trickling in after polls closed Monday. He is due to go on trial at The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity linked to the violent aftermath of the last election in 2007, posing a dilemma for Western policymakers. Results from strongholds loyal to Odinga closed some of the gap, but with about a fifth of constituencies still to report, Kenyatta could yet secure more than 50 percent of the vote, the level needed for a first-round victory. The count, questioned by both sides but considered broadly credible so far by international observers, is likely to go down to the wire. The poll is seen as a critical test for Kenya, East Africa's largest economy, after its reputation as a stable democracy was damaged by the bloodshed that followed the 2007 election. Much will rest on whether the final result is accepted, and whether any challenges take place in the courts or on the streets. By 1145 GMT Friday, with 10,056,702 total votes tallied, Kenyatta had 5,000,900 votes or 49.7 percent, to Odinga's 4,425,997 or 44.0 percent, according to a display by the electoral commission. That was based on votes reported from 233 of 291 constituencies. As counting has progressed, Kenyatta's tally has been nudged above and below the crucial 50 percent mark. If no candidate achieves more than that level, the top two go to a runoff tentatively set for April. The Kenyatta and Odinga camps have both raised concerns about the process, so legal battles could delay that, heightening tensions in the divided nation. But this time, both sides have promised to turn to legal channels and keep the peace. International observers have said the vote and count have been transparent so far, and the electoral commission has promised a credible vote. Yet Kenyans are still in the dark about the outcome. The United States and other Western nations, big donors that view Kenya as vital in the regional battle with militants, have already indicated that a victory by Kenyatta would complicate diplomatic relations. Kenyatta, son of former president Jomo Kenyatta, and his running mate, William Ruto, face trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges of unleashing death squads after the 2007 election. Both men deny the charges and have said they plan to clear their names. At this stage of the count, turnout is running at 70 percent of eligible voters, roughly the level election officials had suggested it would reach, but there is still no clear picture of how many more votes have yet to be tallied. Reflecting how voting tends to run along ethnic lines rather than ideology, constituencies in tribal strongholds of the leading hopefuls often report results that show more than 90 percent or more of votes going to one candidate. That means the remaining constituencies to report could have a big impact. Kenyatta, 51, comes from the Kikuyu tribe, Kenya's biggest ethnic community accounting for about a fifth of Kenya's 40 million people, and Odinga, 68, is a Luo. Neither can rely solely on their own tribal supporters to win and both have running mates from other tribes to beef up their support. Odinga's camp raised the strongest challenge to the process on Thursday, calling for counting to be stopped saying it lacked integrity and some results were “doctored.” — Reuters