Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah may boycott runoff election
From Wikinews, the free news source you can write!
Saturday, October 31, 2009
- 2 December 2009: US President Obama delivers address on Afghanistan plan
- 24 November 2009: Four US, eight Afghan troops killed in Afghanistan after attacks
- 22 November 2009: Afghan Member of Parliament escapes assasination attempt
- 21 November 2009: Rocket strike near hotel in Afghan capital injures four
- 20 November 2009: Suicide bomber kills sixteen in Afghanistan
Sources close to Afghanistan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah said that he may pull out of next week's runoff election against President Hamid Karzai, due to concerns about the credibility of the poll.
Abdullah had given Karzai until Saturday to remove the country's Independent Election Commission (IEC) chief, Azizullah Lodin.
It was one of several conditions that Abdullah had voiced this week to avoid a repeat of the massive fraud that marred the August 20 presidential election. As of Saturday, Karzai had not agreed to his opponent's requests.
Abdullah is expected to hold a press conference on Sunday about the planned vote, scheduled for November 7. News reports cited sources close to the former foreign minister as saying that Abdullah may pull out of the runoff.
A spokesman for the Afghan election commission, Noor Mohammad Noor, however, said that legally, Abdullah cannot officially withdraw a week away from the vote. "Now is too late, according to IEC procedure of the election law, the withdraw time is already done, so they must continue," he said to the Voice of America news agency.
Speaking from Kabul, the director of Afghanistan's Center for Research and Policy Studies, Haroun Mir, said a boycott would have a major impact on the public's perception of the country's government. "If Dr. Abdullah boycotts and we have a very low voter turnout, then President Karzai will be declared winner, but he will not be considered a legitimate president," said Mir.
Mir said that he believes Karzai would have a hard time asserting his authority in Afghanistan's northern areas, which are the base for Abdullah's support.
Afghan election officials say they plan to increase the number of voting stations for the runoff, despite concerns that it could lead to more fraud than in the first vote.
The Taliban also promised to intensify its attacks leading up to the November 7 election. Several days ago, insurgents launched an attack on a Kabul guest house that killed five United Nations staff members.
Related news
- "Afghanistan prepares for presidential runoff election". Wikinews, October 26, 2009
Sources
- "Reports: Abdullah May Boycott Afghan Presidential Runoff". VOA News, October 31, 2009
- Associated Press "Sources: Abdullah to pull out of Afghan runoff". Yahoo! News, October 31, 2009
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