Taliban tells voters to stay away from presidential election
June 7 TN
Taliban insurgents threatened Monday to attack Afghanistan´s run-off
presidential election, warning voters to stay away from polling stations
for fear of injury or death.
Afghans are due to go to the polls on June 14 to choose whether
Ashraf Ghani or Abdullah Abdullah should succeed President Hamid
Karzai.The militants, ousted from power in Kabul by a 2001 US-led
invasion, threatened to attack the first round of voting on April 5 but
the day passed off with no major security incidents.In a statement in
English on their website, the Taliban said their fighters "are once
again fully prepared to operate against the workers and polling stations
in the second phase of these counterfeit elections". "Therefore, you
(the masses) should remain far away from the polling stations on 14th
June, 2014, lest you should be hurt or killed.
"On Friday Ghani, a former World Bank economist, said if elected he
would put his name to a long-delayed security pact with the United
States that Karzai has refused to sign. Abdullah has also said he would
sign.Ghani´s pledge came only days after US President Barack Obama said
the 32,000 American forces in Afghanistan will be scaled back to 9,800
by early 2015 and complete a full withdrawal by the end of 2016. Ghani
faces an uphill task after finishing second with 31.6 percent behind
Abdullah with 45 percent in the eight-candidate first round.
The Taliban last week denounced US plans to keep troops in
Afghanistan until the end of 2016, threatening to wage war against the
"occupation" until the very last foreign soldier pulls out.
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