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Afghan election audit disrupted as Abdullah threatens to walk out

Update : 27 Aug 2014, 07:38 PM

Afghanistan’s deadlocked presidential election veered further off course yesterday after both candidates withdrew their observers from a UN-supervised audit of votes that was meant to resolve the crisis.

The audit was part of a US-brokered deal to defuse escalating tension between rivals Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani, who have both claimed victory in the ballot intended to mark the country’s first democratic transfer of power.

“We boycotted the audit process today because it is worthless for us. Let them carry on,” Fazel Ahmad Manawi, Abdullah’s chief auditor, told Reuters early on Wednesday.

A few hours later, the United Nations asked Ghani’s team to withdraw its observers in the interests of fairness and it had agreed, according to a team member, who said the withdrawal was unfair but prudent.

A spokesman for the United Nations was not available for comment although it had confirmed earlier a “temporary disruption” of the vote count.

The United Nations has said it would go on regardless and officials involved in the process say it is likely Ghani would eventually be confirmed president.

US officials stepped in again earlier on Wednesday and held emergency talks with Abdullah, according to a member of his team.

The crisis over the outcome of the vote has raised the spectre of instability, turmoil and perhaps even another round of fighting in a country already battling a potent Taliban insurgency.

If the rival politicians needed a reminder of the militant threat, Afghan security forces were battling the Taliban for control of the northern province of Kunduz on Wednesday with heavy clashes also reported in parts of the south.

‘No legitimacy’

Abdullah, a former foreign minister, won a first round vote in April but without a majority needed for outright victory, while preliminary figures showed Ghani, a former finance minister, won the run-off by more than a million votes. But Abdullah complained of rigging and demanded a recount in which fraudulent votes would be thrown out.

Abdullah’s team believe that the more fraudulent votes are thrown out, the better his chances will be of victory but they have complained that the rules of the audit are not strict enough to weed out the invalid ballots.

“More than a million votes are fraudulent,” Mohammad Mohaqeq a leader of the Hazara minority and one of Abdullah’s vice presidential running mates, told Reuters.

“If these votes are not invalidated, we will never accept any outcome and it will have no legitimacy.” 

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