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Top candidate’s running mate in Afghan poll claims fraud

By AFP
12 October 2019   |   10:18 am
Afghanistan's election commission is orchestrating "systematic fraud" following presidential polls last month, a top candidate's running mate alleged Saturday, an accusation likely to inflame political tensions following the key vote.

Abdullah Abdullah. Photo: DONPOLLARD

Afghanistan’s election commission is orchestrating “systematic fraud” following presidential polls last month, a top candidate’s running mate alleged Saturday, an accusation likely to inflame political tensions following the key vote.

The claims by Asadullah Saadati, a running mate for Afghanistan’s Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, come as the country is in the midst of an uneasy waiting period after the September 28 election.

Election officials have called on candidates to show restraint and wait for the announcement of preliminary results in a bid to avoid a repeat of the disastrous election of 2014 which was marred by dueling claims of victory and fraud by Abdullah and his top rival Ashraf Ghani, who went on to win the presidency.

“Circles within the election commission and the palace are jointly organising systematic fraud,” Saadati told a news conference, without giving evidence.

“The result sheets that are being counted are fraudulent and their entries must stop.”

Voting this year is supposed to be more secure than ever, with each voter-verified through biometric machines to ensure no one can cast multiple ballots.

Saadati claimed the Independent Election Commission (IEC) was counting “fraudulent” and non-biometric votes.

The IEC has repeatedly said it would not count votes unless they had been verified biometrically.

On September 30, just two days after the election and before all votes had even arrived in Kabul for counting, Abdullah claimed victory in a move that international and local observers panned as premature.

Preliminary results are not due until October 19 but officials have already said that date will likely be pushed back by a few days.

The IEC has said about 2.7 million of Afghanistan’s 9.6 million registered voters — a record low turnout — cast a ballot, but not all of those votes have been verified.

Turnout was down significantly amid fears of fraud and threats of deadly Taliban violence.

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