August 30, 2009 10:57 AM

Major Fraud Allegations in Afghan Vote

(AP)  Major allegations of fraud in Afghanistan's presidential election topped 550 by Sunday, more than doubling the figure investigators reported just two days earlier, officials said.

The spike indicates just how pervasive ballot box stuffing and voter intimidation may have been during the country's Aug. 20 vote, threatening the legitimacy of the election.

The hundreds of complaints could also greatly delay final results, which cannot be announced until major fraud allegations have been investigated, and are already not expected until mid-September at the earliest.

A delay could create a power vacuum in Afghanistan and the volume of allegations could foment violence if people feel they have been cheated.

On Sunday, an election official was attacked in the south. Gunmen on motorbikes drove up to the home of the second-highest electoral official in Kandahar province and shot him as he walked out of his front gate to go to work, said Mohammad Samimi, a spokesman for the provincial electoral commission.

Sharafuddin, who only goes by one name, was seriously wounded and is being treated in a military hospital, he said.

Sharafuddin was the operations manager for the provincial commission, meaning he was in charge of the logistics of how polling stations would operate and how ballots would be handled.

Partial results of the vote so far show President Hamid Karzai leading with 46.2 percent of votes, and top challenger Abdullah Abdullah with 31.4 percent. The count is based on votes from 35 percent of the country's polling stations. Karzai will need to reach 50 percent of the votes to avoid a two-man run-off.

Polls had favored Karzai to win the election, though not necessarily in a single round. Karzai's popularity has waned in recent years over concerns about corruption and resurgent violence. He also has been criticized for recruiting former warlords to gain the votes they control.

One of the most controversial of these, Uzbek warlord Gen. Abdul Rashid Dostum, flew into Afghanistan from Turkey shortly before election day to show his support for Karzai and left late last week, a representative said.

"The purpose of his coming to Afghanistan was to participate in the election and to support Karzai," said Sayed Noorullah Sadat, the chief of Dostum's political party.

Dostum is alleged to have been responsible for the deaths of up to 2,000 Taliban prisoners early in the Afghan war, and U.S. officials were critical of the decision to allow him to return.

"The United States maintains serious concerns about the prospective role of Mr. Dostum in today's Afghanistan," the embassy said in a statement Sunday.

Sadat said Dostum has no immediate plans to return to Afghanistan. Asked if a second round of voting might bring Dostum back, Sadat said it was premature to talk about a runoff with votes still being counted. He added that Turkey is Dostum's home and that Dostum has a medical condition that is easier to treat in Turkey. He did not provide further details.

The independent Electoral Complaints Commission has received more than 2,000 allegations of fraud and intimidation on voting day or during the subsequent counting of ballots, said Nellika Little, a spokeswoman for the group.

Of those, 567 have been deemed serious enough to affect the outcome of the poll if proved true, Little said. The commission had reported 270 major allegations on Friday.

(AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
(Left: Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah, the top rival of Afghan President Hamid Karzai, displays allegedly fraudulent ballot papers during a news conference in Kabul on Tuesday.)

The commission is still evaluating complaints, so the figure could rise further.

The widespread fraud allegations have raised concerns about whether Afghans will accept the certified results. Voting day was marred by low turnout amid Taliban threats and attacks.

Fraud allegations against Karzai were also raised in the 2004 election. A joint U.N.-Afghan panel found many cases of ballot-box stuffing, but said there was no evidence it was widespread and only favored Karzai. Karzai received 55.4 percent of the votes in the 2004 election - 39 percentage points ahead of his closest challenger.

This time, several presidential candidates have leveled accusations of fraud, including allegations that electoral officials forced voters to cast ballots for certain candidates and marked unused ballots for their candidate after election day.

Abdullah and other candidates have produced videos documenting many allegations and Abdullah has charged Karzai of mobilizing state resources to steal the election. Karzai's campaign has denied that and countered by accusing Abdullah's campaign of fraud.

Both camps have urged the country to wait for the complaints commission to finish its work.

Military operations and violent insurgent attacks have continued in the interim. On Saturday, militants killed a provincial counterterrorism chief in an ambush in eastern Afghanistan. Fayez Khan, who headed counterterrorism operations for Khost province, was driving home in a convoy with police and bodyguards when he was ambushed, said Tahir Khan Sabari, the province's deputy governor.

On the same day in Kandahar, three civilians died in the blast of a roadside bomb struck by a police vehicle, said Fazen Mohammad Sherzad, the deputy police chief. Two police officers were wounded but none killed.

Afghan and international forces battled insurgents on Friday in eastern Paktika province, killing about three dozen militants, said Capt. Elizabeth Mathias, a spokeswoman for U.S. forces. A NATO statement said the Afghan and international troops also destroyed weapons and a complex of bunkers belonging to the Haqqani militant network, which operates across the Afghan-Pakistan border.

No casualties were reported for international or Afghan troops, nor for civilians.
By Associated Press Writers Heidi Vogt; AP Writers Rahim Faiez and Amir Shah in Kabul and Noor Khan in Kandahar contributed to this report

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by wyodutch August 31, 2009 7:21 AM EDT
"Missus Brown... I'm sorry to hear that your 18-year old son, Larry has been killed in Afghanistan."

"Well, he died bringing democracy to those poor folks over there. Besides, he couldn't find any work here in Indiana."
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by wyodutch August 30, 2009 3:14 PM EDT
What could be more meaningless than an "election" while a foreign military is really in charge?

The Afghanis may be uneducated, but that doesn't mean they're stupid.
Reply to this comment
by donnerwetter August 30, 2009 1:16 PM EDT
Don't evere believe that America is interested in sprfeading democracy. America is interested in oil, oil,oil what ever it takes. America needs a war to keep the war machine going, jobs, contracts kickbacks, payoffs, yes a war is a good thing for America, that is why we always have at least one war going and another one started. Iraq is winding down so we go to Afganistan. When we lost that one we have one with Iran and than with China. America has neverr been a peaceful nation and never will be, profits, greed and power come first no matter how many wars it has going.
Reply to this comment
by vuenbelvue August 30, 2009 4:46 PM EDT
The sun never sets on the American empire. Quite an accomplishment. I have to say I like cheap oil driving and purchasing products less expensively and I like cheaper gas for heating my house for my family. I won't complain about that. Now that the unemployment rate is high in the US it helps to have alot of folks employed in the business of war. Yes, the sun never sets on the American Empire.
by donnerwetter August 30, 2009 1:16 PM EDT
Don't evere believe that America is interested in sprfeading democracy. America is interested in oil, oil,oil what ever it takes. America needs a war to keep the war machine going, jobs, contracts kickbacks, payoffs, yes a war is a good thing for America, that is why we always have at least one war going and another one started. Iraq is winding down so we go to Afganistan. When we lost that one we have one with Iran and than with China. America has neverr been a peaceful nation and never will be, profits, greed and power come first no matter how many wars it has going.
Reply to this comment
by mysteriousjz August 30, 2009 9:20 PM EDT
I will second that. "Big Satan" is well-known in that region and many part of the world even by uneducated and illiterate people who know it well. But that is not the sad part; people in "power countries" actually think "they" are angels of peace delivering justice.
by sleepyric August 30, 2009 12:11 PM EDT
what did you expect?? a fair election? Nothing in Afghanistan has changed in thousands of years, and it never will. We need to get out of that craphole now and let nature take it's course there, as it always has.
Reply to this comment
by woeisme1 August 30, 2009 10:45 AM EDT
I am SHOCKED! Just SHOCKED that such fraud could occur in Afghanistan.
Reply to this comment
by yelobrikroad August 30, 2009 4:48 PM EDT
HAHA! I like this comment! Yes, WHO WOULD HAVE THOUGHT? Golly, I thought they were all so honest over there. WE NEED TO LEAVE AFGHANISTAN NOW!!! But no, Obama keeps pouring in money rather than into more firefighting planes for California. Hey, if Russia put their tail between their legs and left after more than a decade how the H#LL does Obama think we'll be able to succeed in Afghanistan?? Absolutely Crazy! History repeats itself, and repeats itself...and...
by ibsteve2u August 30, 2009 10:21 AM EDT
Too bad that some of our most corrupt corporations...some even once lead by some of our most corrupt politicians...accompanied the so-called "spreading of democracy".

When you bring corruption with you at the point of a gun...well, this is what you get.
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