Fraud complaints haunt Afghan vote
| focus | 
KABUL — Millions of Afghans may have risked Taliban attacks to vote for a new parliament, but the credibility of the entire process is on the line at a crucial time for the US-led war strategy.
Even  before polls closed on Saturday, the parliamentary vote appeared to be  heading into a similar quagmire of claims and counter-claims of fraud,  ballot-stuffing, vote-buying and fudged figures as the 2009 presidential  poll.
More than 2,500 candidates stood for 249  seats in the Lower House in Afghanistan’s fourth election and second  parliamentary vote since the 2001 US-led invasion evicted the hardline  Taliban regime.
It was the latest step in a US-led  process to bring democracy to an impoverished country ravaged by 30  years of war, and a key plank of the strategy to try to end a brutal  nine-year Taliban insurgency and strengthen government.
But  after the 2009 election returned Hamid Karzai for a second term amid  massive fraud, Western and Afghan officials made sure they kept  expectations low, warning that Saturday’s poll would also be riddled  with irregularities.
Source: The Daily Tribune
URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100923com7.html

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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