Afghan run-off campaigning begins
Campaigning for Afghanistan’s presidential election run-off is due to
officially get under way.Incumbent President Hamid Karzai is due to face
his main challenger, Abdullah Abdullah, in two weeks’ time.
The run-off was announced after the Election Complaints Commission
decided fraud in August’s first round had inflated both candidates’
results.But Mr Abdullah now says he will pull out of the 7 November vote
unless poll officials are dismissed.Mr Abdullah’s spokesman said the
officials from the government-appointed Independent Election Commission
(IEC) should be replaced by people who both Mr Abdullah and President
Karzai found acceptable. Mr Abdullah, a former foreign minister, has
previously accused the commission of not being impartial.Meanwhile, the
US special envoy to Afghanistan has said it is reasonable to hope for
fewer irregularities in the presidential run-off poll than in the August
election.At a state department briefing in Washington, Richard Holbrooke
told reporters: “It is reasonable to hope that there will be less
irregularities this time for several reasons.“One, there are only two
candidates.
Two, there is the experience factor.Three, the international
community... are going to go all out to help make this a success.”Kai
Eide, chief of the UN mission in the country, admits that fraud cannot
be eliminated but also says he expects its level to be reduced.
The Election Complaints Commission says it is sacking thousands of
officials from the first round and cutting the number of polling
stations.But the BBC’s Charles Haviland in the Afghan capital Kabul says
there are mixed feelings about the run-off.
He says that while many diplomats feel it will clear the air after a
first round marked by rampant fraud, including the stuffing of ballot
boxes on a huge scale, many ordinary Afghans cannot see the need for a
second round, with some feeling that the politicians do not serve them
well in any case.
Our correspondent adds that others fear the consequences of voting -
hardly surprising when some had their ink-stained voting fingers cut off
by Taliban militants in August. -BBC
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