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Afghan minister claims Karzai poll win, UN says wait


http://en.youth.cn   2009-08-25 13:50:00

Afghan President Hamid Karzai holds up his ink stained finger after voting in the presidential election in Kabul August 20, 2009.

 

Afghanistan's finance minister claimed victory on Monday for President Hamid Karzai in last week's presidential election but, with no official figures released, the claim was rejected by his main rival's camp.

The United Nations called on all candidates and voters to be patient while authorities investigate allegations of fraud in the poll. The first, partial figures are due to be released on Tuesday, five days after the election.

Taliban attacks failed to stop the election, although violence did suppress turnout, especially in the south.

Afghanistan has been in a state of political limbo since the vote, the second since the overthrow of the hardline Islamist Taliban in late 2001. With no official result, candidates have been claiming victory and alleging fraud.

An election result respected by the candidates and their supporters is crucial for the country and for US President Barack Obama, who has made stabilizing Afghanistan his top foreign policy priority.

Speaking to reporters over dinner in Kabul, Finance Minister Hazrat Omar Zakhilwal said figures supplied to him as a member of the cabinet showed the president has secured support across the country, including in the north. Zakhilwal said this would make the result impervious to a challenge of fraud.

He said he was uncertain of precisely who had prepared the figures that he was given, but that he accepted them as valid. They were based on a tally of about 4.5 million votes counted so far, out of a total of about 5 million votes cast, he said.

Karzai had received about 68 percent, or more than 3 million, while his main opponent, former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah, had received more than 1 million.

 
source : China Daily/Agencies     editor:: Fu Qinghua
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