Abdullah spurns US-brokered Afghan election audit

Agence France-Presse

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Abdullah spurns US-brokered Afghan election audit

AFP

An audit of votes cast in Afghanistan's June presidential election resumes without the backing of Abdullah Abdullah, one of the two candidates, as the fraud-tainted poll descended into further uncertainty

KABUL, Afghanistan – An audit of votes cast in Afghanistan’s June presidential election resumed Sunday, August 3, without the backing of Abdullah Abdullah, one of the two candidates, officials said, as the fraud-tainted poll descended into further uncertainty.

The country’s first democratic transfer of power has been engulfed in a dispute over alleged fraud, wrecking hopes that the election would be a key achievement of the US-led military and civilian aid effort since 2001.

Instead, the battle between Abdullah, a former anti-Taliban resistance fighter, and Ashraf Ghani, an ex-World Bank economist, threatens to spark a spiral of instability as NATO troops pull out and violence increases nationwide.

After Abdullah rejected preliminary results that named Ghani as the winner, US Secretary of State John Kerry flew into Kabul three weeks ago and persuaded the two candidates to agree to the audit to sift out fraudulent votes.

But the United Nations-supervised process only triggered another outbreak of disagreements, and Abdullah’s campaign on Sunday refused to rejoin after repeated stoppages.

“The commission waited yesterday and today, but we are half through the day and Dr. Abdullah’s observers are not here,” Noor Mohammad Noor, the Independent Election Commission (IEC) spokesman, told reporters.

“We have decided to continue the process without any further interruptions.”

More than eight million votes were cast on polling day, but Abdullah claimed “industrial-scale” fraud denied him victory.

“Our negotiations with the UN are ongoing,” Abdullah’s spokesman Mujib Rahman Rahimi told Agence France-Presse without giving any further details.  – Rappler.com

 

 

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