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Afghan Elections: Vote For Parliament Takes Place Amidst Taliban Rockets And Bombings

AP / Huffington Post   First Posted: 09/19/10 01:38 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:40 PM ET

Afghan Elections

Despite Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans voted for a new parliament, the first election since a fraud-marred presidential ballot last year cast doubt on the legitimacy of the embattled government.

As officials tally votes over the next few days, the real test begins: Afghans will have to decide whether to accept the results as legitimate despite a modest turnout and early evidence of fraud.

The Taliban had pledged to disrupt the vote and launched attacks starting with a rocket fired into the capital before dawn Saturday. The insurgent group followed with a series of morning rocket strikes that hit major cities just as people were going to the polls – or weighing whether to risk it.

At least 11 civilians and three police officers were killed, accoring to the Interior Ministry. The governor of Kandahar province survived a bombing as he drove between voting sites. In all, there were 33 bomb explosions and 63 rocket attacks, said Interior Minister Bismillah Khan Mohammadi. He said 27 Taliban were killed Saturday.

Yet there appeared to be less violence than during the last election, when more than 30 civilians were killed and a group of insurgents attacked Kabul. Afghan security officials dismissed the attacks as "insignificant" and said they did not hamper voting, adding that 92 percent of polling stations were open Saturday.

"There are no reports of major incidents," Afghan election commission chairman Fazel Ahmad Manawi told reporters.

A host of allegations of fraud and election worker misconduct piled up in the first few hours of the vote.

Election workers in Wardak Province stuffed ballot boxes, reports The Christian Science Monitor:

election workers were busy stuffing ballots on behalf of a candidate named Hajji Wahedullah Kalimzai. Although only about 20 men had come to vote thus far, hundreds of ballots were being marked in favor of Mr. Kalimzai.

It was a scene repeated throughout the province. The elections in Wardak were marred by widescale fraud, violence, and an extremely low turnout, casting doubt on the legitimacy of the new class of lawmakers that will represent the province.

"There were almost no elections in Wardak," said Ghulam Hassan, a local elder. "The votes were stolen right in front of our eyes."

Candidate monitors complained that the ink applied to voters' fingers to prevent them from casting multiple ballots was not working. The ink is supposed to last 72 hours, but many said they had been able to wipe it off with bleach.

In Jalalabad, observers said poll workers were letting people vote with fake registration cards.

"The women coming here have so many cards that don't have the stamp and are not real cards but still they are voting," said Nazreen, a monitor for the Free and Fair Election Foundation of Afghanistan, which has dispatched observers throughout the country.

Fake voter cards flooded into Afghanistan ahead of the balloting, but election officials had promised that poll workers were trained to spot them.

In one case in the eastern province of Paktia, security forces stopped a car and found 1,600 fake voter registration cards, said Rohullah Samon, a provincial spokesman.

NATO's senior civilian representative said some fraud was expected, and that it would not necessarily undermine the vote.

"The real issue is the scale of that and does it affect the result. And does it affect the credibility of the election, not in our eyes but in the eyes of the Afghan people?" Mark Sedwill said.

Last year's presidential election was similarly seen as a chance for the government to move forward to a more democratic future, then complaints of ballot-box stuffing – much of it for Karzai's benefit – and misconduct mounted.

Though Karzai still emerged the victor, the drawn-out process and his reluctance to acknowledge corruption led many of his international backers to question their commitment to Afghanistan.

If the people don't accept the results of this vote, it could have a profound effect both inside the country and with Afghanistan's international backers, who have 140,000 troops in country and have spent billions trying to shore up the Karzai administration in the face of a strengthening insurgency. Abdullah Abdullah, the runner-up to Karzai in the 2009 poll, said violence was a possibility if voters feel disenfranchised.

"There is a possibility of people taking things into their own hands," Abdullah said. But he said he was also worried about the administration pushing through candidates regardless of accusations of fraudulent voting.

"If, as a result of massive fraud, it turns out to be a sort of rubber stamp parliament in the hands of the government, then we will lose that opportunity for checks and balances which is expected from the parliament," he said, warning that a weakened legislature would make it easy for Karzai to make constitutional amendments to stay in power past the end of his term.

Many of those who voted said they were determined to be heard over the Taliban.

Gen. David Petraeus, the commander for NATO's troops in Afghanistan, praised Afghans who braved threats to vote, as did the United Nations, European Union, the United States and Canada. But none went so far as to call the vote a success given the way mounting fraud charges nearly undid Karzai.

At a mosque in eastern Kabul, a former schoolteacher said she had traveled from her home on the outskirts of the city the night before because voting was safer in the city center.

"Even though I heard about those rocket attacks, I wanted to vote," said Aziza, 48, who gave only her first name. "Today is a historic day for Afghan people and it is very important for the restoration of democracy."

But at one school serving as a voting center in Kabul, observers for candidates or election-monitoring groups outnumbered voters by about 10 to one. Four men in tunics marked their ballots surrounded by about 50 people taking notes on their actions.

Though there were lines and bustling crowds at some stations, that appeared to be the exception. Observers across the country reported fewer voters than a year ago, even though the number of sites had been cut to help authorities provide better security.

Defense Minister Wardak described the turnout as "low." He said that fear of attacks and the difficulty of getting to polling stations were likely reasons people stayed home.

The election commission has yet to provide an overall turnout figure but said late Saturday that 3.6 million people cast ballots at the 86 percent of polling stations that had reported figures so far. Nearly 6 million ballots were cast in the presidential vote last year, out of 17 million registered voters.

In several cities, voters appeared to cluster at a few main sites, leading to those sites running out of ballots well before the end of polling.

In the key southern city of Kandahar, a Taliban stronghold where NATO and Afghan forces have been ramping up security, insurgents launched about a dozen attacks on the city. No one died but about a half-dozen people were injured, according to hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

One bomb attack narrowly missed the Kandahar provincial governor's convoy as he traveled between polling stations to observe Saturday's parliament vote. One rocket damaged the wall of a police station.

Kandahar voter Lalia Agha, a 26-year old taxi driver, said he was pleased with election day security.

"The election is the only thing we have in our hands in which to change our future," he said.

While the number of voters picked up through the day after a slow start, officials in Kandahar said it was clear turnout was less than during the presidential vote.

A very low turnout – particularly in provinces wracked by the insurgency – could hurt the credibility of the vote in a country where democratic rule has yet to take deep root after decades of war. If residents reject results outright it could enflame ethnic tensions and complicating the transition to a new parliament.

"If voter turnout is low, despite the fact that we had better security, it means that people are disapppointed with the democracy in their country," said Haroun Mir, director of the Afghanistan Center for Research and Policy Studies, a Kabul-based think tank.

About 2,500 candidates were vying for 249 seats in the parliament, and drawn-out fights between candidates slinging accusations of fraud could also hobble an institution that has so far served as only a weak check on the administration of President Hamid Karzai.

The first partial vote tallies are expected early next week. Full preliminary results are not expected until the end of the month and final results in late October, after fraud complaints are investigated.

"It's not over yet," said Martine van Bijlert, codirector of the Afghanistan Analysts Network think tank in Kabul. "This is the time – when the counting is going on – where you start moving around ballot papers, where you start kicking out the observers when you're counting."

___

Associated Press writers Kathy Gannon in Jalalabad, Mirwais Khan in Kandahar and Amir Shah, Rahim Faiez, Deb Riechmann, Dusan Stojanovic and Kimberly Dozier in Kabul contributed to this report.

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Despite Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans voted for a new parliament, the first election since a fraud-marred presidential ballot last year cast doubt on the legitimacy of the embattled gov...
Despite Taliban rocket strikes and bombings, Afghans voted for a new parliament, the first election since a fraud-marred presidential ballot last year cast doubt on the legitimacy of the embattled gov...
 
 
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09:28 AM on 09/20/2010
I have looked at the lead picture of the Afghan woman seated at the table for the last two days. I am more interested in the woman with her arms folded, third from the right. Her hands look like a man's, a hard working man. They are ash covered and large.
06:49 PM on 09/19/2010
Unless you are some kind of psychopath you have to be trained to take a life. You have to kill something inside you to kill others. That is the job of the miltary to take young impressionable people and train them to become killers. One of the first things you have to do is make the person you are going to kill less than human and so not worthy of life. In every confilct we have given the enemy less than attractive names "gook", "nip", "kraut", "towelhead", "sandnigger" and now they have taken a name of respect "hadji" the name given to one who has completed the Hajj and made it a badge of dishonor and disrespect. The blame lies with all of us who ignored Dwight Eisenhowers advice to beware of the miltary industrial complex. We have traded butter for guns and have become less human for it. Less someone write that I am anti-military I am not and fully recoginise the need for a strong miltary, I am simply pointing out the problems that arise when we teach our youth to have no respect or concern for the life of another human being. And when we as a nation have an economy that needs war to survive.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
spacewalker
no time to hate
04:42 PM on 09/19/2010
The soldiers have a name for the men and boys in iraq and afghanistan,they call them Hodji's and see them as "the enemy" and some even view them as something sub human.Until we accept these folks as our brothers and sisters,certain individuals will continue to use combat as an excuse to execute innocent people to avenge fellow soldiers killed in the war zones.These soldiers who commited these war crimes are criminals and nothing more.This is what happens when human life becomes something less than sacred.We need to end these "wars" and bring our soldiers home where they belong.The small percentage of radicals who view us as the enemy is not enough to justify the indiscriminate killing of innocents that die from our "combat operations" including drone attacks.Enough is enough,end the wars and bring our troops home.
04:40 PM on 09/19/2010
Not much difference from US politics and elections in New Orleans, Chicago or New Jersey.
03:48 PM on 09/19/2010
One way to view this is that a simple lack of discipline lead to an isolated Lord of the Flies situation. Except for the fact that it is not an isloated case, but an indication of a much deeper problem. Then you read about the financial mismanagement and pentagon pornography purchases; and then you google up bohemian grove and find out what our political and military leaders are doing with other world leaders in the california backwoods, the rituals of mock human sacrifices and homosexual orgies, and you begin to understand that the Lord of the Flies circumstances on the ground are coming from the very top, and all of the pentagon prayer breakfasts in the world cannot wash away their sins.
02:47 PM on 09/19/2010
Except for the violence this could be a story of the US elections. It seems like the Afghans are fitting right in to the American system.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RudyHaugeneder
02:31 PM on 09/19/2010
The current Afghanistan election: badly tarnished, yes; a good start, also yes.
Democracy is not something that can be introduced, or imposed, overnight or even over a decade, but it will ultimately win.
Certainly many, if not most, people doubt this election is worthwhile because of the fraud involved, but it is a significant inroad nevertheless.
People tend to forget how long it took for democracy and legitimate elections to take hold in the West, including Britain, Canada and the United States. Generally speaking it has been less than a century since women, Blacks, Asians, certain religious groups, and people who did not own land or property were finally allowed to vote. Until then only landowners and select groups were allowed to vote, often fraudulently, with voters being bribed with cash, booze and other goodies at the ballot box to vote for certain candidates -- which they did.
It took time for democracy to take hold. Give it a chance in Afghanistan, Iran and other countries where it is new and people have no history of being able to freely voice their desires through a ballot box. It will eventually work and work very well. Thank you.
01:51 PM on 09/19/2010
Meanwhile, gays are still considered a greater threat to the performance of our armed forces than plain old wacko redneck soldiers ... yes, it's just another daily "shame moment" for us Americans, while the mass media ignores the story altogether. The sun comes up, the sun goes down, and the nation's suffering continues ...
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
01:36 PM on 09/19/2010
Afghanistan is a an occupied country.

There are no free and fair elections in occupied countries.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Halter
01:10 PM on 09/19/2010
There needs to be better psychological screening of these young people. It is nothing new, this happened in 2000:
"Marine Lance Cpl. Carson, a Russian-language student at the prestigious Defense Language Institute in Monterey, was arrested March 15 after allegedly admitting that he and Pvt. Jason Blad, 21, were responsible for the November attack that nearly drained the life from a 20-year-old woman on the Pacific Grove Recreation Trail.

Pacific Grove police said shortly after the arrest that the young Marines apparently just wanted to kill someone, anyone, and had their sights on other targets as well. Though authorities say Carson spelled it all out in a journal found near his barracks bunk, details are being kept under wraps by a court-imposed gag order."
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Nutcase
Of, By and For - Elsewhere known as Psycho MD
12:47 PM on 09/19/2010
It appears we haven't taught them the modern method of stealing an election, by using the Supreme Court.
Gaylord P Farqua
Herb Gardner Amateur Chef, Historian and Political
01:07 PM on 09/19/2010
Thanks for the memories... It is painful to think what our world could have been like without Gomer and THE DICK and their destruction of the economy and their commercial wars.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
urnumbersix
"I am not a Number. I am a Free Man!"
02:11 PM on 09/19/2010
Hey - at least they aren't dependent on Diebold Voting Machines!

Yet....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
enlightened45
12:36 PM on 09/19/2010
What chance of any freedom in a country where the headline photo has the women so bowed and subjugated to the males that they are covered head, body, face....Are females so repulsive or so unable to resist that these Afghans perpetrate this horror...With this behavior in place, there is no hope for anything in this forsaken place.....Why are Americans still dying for this?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sambaso777
12:36 PM on 09/19/2010
Voter Fraud, Violence and Ballot Stuffing? Looks like we succeeded in exporting our democracy after all.
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Scoutitout
Never wear anything that panics the cat.
12:34 PM on 09/19/2010
This breaks my heart - how I wish we had never gone into either Iraq or Afghanistan - it has been the most destructive thing for this country since 911.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
enlightened45
12:41 PM on 09/19/2010
And still no Osama bin Laden......
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
urnumbersix
"I am not a Number. I am a Free Man!"
02:14 PM on 09/19/2010
Remember: McCain said he Knew where Bin Laden was & how to capture him, and would do so "IF" he won the Presidency!

He lost, so.... {crickets}

Fine Patriot, that McCain!
12:15 PM on 09/19/2010
Sounds like Acorn, SEIU, and the Black Panthers are doing what they do best in Afghastan. It's pre season traning for the Nov. 2012 election here in the US. I doubt that Soros is spending any money to rig the elections there, like he does here!
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Scoutitout
Never wear anything that panics the cat.
12:33 PM on 09/19/2010
you are sick