Afghan poll result delayed again despite US pressure

Published August 29, 2014
Afghan election commission workers sort ballots for an audit of the presidential run-off votes in front of international observers at an election commission office in Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2014.  — Photo by AP
Afghan election commission workers sort ballots for an audit of the presidential run-off votes in front of international observers at an election commission office in Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2014. — Photo by AP

KABUL: Afghanistan will not have a new president in time for a key Nato summit next week, officials said on Thursday, as the country’s prolonged election crisis lurched towards another damaging delay.

The latest deadline of September 2 was abandoned as a UN-supervised audit of all eight million ballots has fallen behind schedule, with both candidates still claiming victory in the fraud-tainted vote.

A Nato summit in Britain from September 4 is meant to agree on future support for Afghanistan after the 13-year US-led combat mission ends later this year.

But Nato members had repeatedly stressed a new president should be in place before the summit to prove that the country is becoming a functioning state after receiving billions of dollars of military and civilian aid assistance.

The United Nations released a statement saying that its mission chief Jan Kubis had told outgoing President Hamid Karzai “that a rigorous and credible audit required time, but could be completed around 10 September”.

“Following all necessary steps, as required by law, the inauguration of the new president should then be possible soon after,” it said.

The US had led a strong international effort to push for the next president to be inaugurated by September 2 to allow him to attend the summit.

Mr Karzai, who has had a series of bitter spats with US-led military coalition, has confirmed that he will not go to Britain, though a senior minister may attend in his place.

Nato press officials in Kabul were not immediately available to comment on whether both Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, the two presidential candidates, could attend the event.

The summit was meant to showcase the signing of a security pact that would allow a US-led Nato support mission in 2015 after all foreign combat troops depart by December.

The disputed June 14 election has sparked fears that protests could spiral into ethnic violence — and even lead to a return of the fighting between warlords that ravaged Afghanistan during the 1992-1996 civil war.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2014

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