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Karzai urges UN to help solve poll row

Supporters of Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah signing on a piece of cloth as they protested to demand the halt of vote counting in Kabul yesterday.

AFP

Afghan President Hamid Karzai yesterday intervened for the first time in the country’s growing election crisis, backing a call for UN mediation to help solve a standoff over alleged fraud.

Abdullah Abdullah, previously seen as the front-runner to succeed Karzai, has asked the UN to step in and said that he would reject the result due out next month because of “blatant” fraud committed in the vote a week ago.

The dispute has thrown the country’s first democratic transfer of power into turmoil to the dismay of international backers looking for a concrete sign of progress after 13 years of costly military and civilian
assistance.

Karzai appeared keen to lower tension ahead of demonstrations planned on Saturday by Abdullah’s supporters after the ongoing vote count reportedly put Abdullah well behind poll rival Ashraf Ghani.

The proposed rallies raised fears of clashes with security forces at a sensitive time for Afghanistan as Nato combat troops withdraw.

“I not only accept this proposal (for UN mediation), but I see it as positive step to ending these problems,” Karzai said in a statement.

“The disputes and doubts arising during the election process are a natural thing,” he
added.

“It is fine and calm in the country.”

The UN did not immediately respond to Karzai’s statement, but on Wednesday it described Abdullah’s decision to suspend all cooperation with the election authorities as
“regrettable”.

The 2009 election, when Karzai retained power, was mired in massive fraud, shaking the US-led international effort to develop Afghanistan after the Islamist rule of the Taliban.

Abdullah pulled out of that election before a run-off vote against Karzai, saying that systematic fraud made it impossible for him to win — and he has repeatedly said he will not
withdraw again.

Abdullah alleged that the turnout figure of seven million voters in the run-off was exaggerated and that in several provinces there were more votes than eligible voters.

And he accused Ghani, the election authorities and Karzai of all being involved in fraud against him.

A credible election is seen as a key benchmark for the US-led coalition that has fought against Taliban insurgents and donated billions of dollars in aid
since 2001.

But Nato military operations are winding down fast, and the dispute could wreck claims that a functioning state has been set up in place of the ousted Taliban regime which sheltered Osama bin Laden.

The election dispute also risks spilling into ethnic violence — a grim prospect for Afghanistan where tribal loyalties are still fierce after the 1992-1996 civil war.

Abdullah’s support is based among the Tajik minority and other northern tribes, while Ghani is a Pashtun — Afghanistan’s largest ethnic group, which is strongest in the Taliban heartlands of the south and east.

Both Abdullah, a former anti-Taliban resistance fighter, and Ghani, an ex-World Bank executive, have pledged to foster
national unity.

The run-off vote was held after the two came first and second in an eight-man election on April 5, when Abdullah was far ahead with 45% against Ghani’s 31.6%.

Karzai had previously stayed out of the election process — in public at least — and he has not endorsed any candidate to take over when he steps down after serving the maximum two terms in office.

As well as backing UN mediation, Karzai yesterday said negotiations between the poll rivals could be overseen by the two vice-presidents.

“Now it is up to the candidates to choose one of these two options and the government to respect their choice and encourage them,” he said.

The preliminary election result is due on July 2 and the final result, after adjudication of complaints, is scheduled for July 22.

 

 

 

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