Afghanistan begins partial vote recount
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Afghan officials are recounting a sample of the votes from last month's disputed presidential election, in an effort to resolve weeks of uncertainty about the outcome.
Preliminary results from the August 20 vote show the incumbent candidate, president Hamid Karzai, in first place, with 54%. But if enough votes are found to be fraudulent, and his tally falls below 50%, he will face a run-off against his chief rival, former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah.
To speed up the recount process, the United Nations-backed panel investigating the fraud allegations agreed to allow election officials to review only a portion of the votes from polling stations with suspected problems. If any runoff is not held soon then the Afghan winter will prevent one until the spring should it be required.
The Electoral Complaints Commission said Friday that 313 ballot boxes had been randomly selected from the more than 3,063 stations considered suspicious. "It will be fair. We've got these international experts who have been doing this and who have advised that this is a good approach," said Electoral Complaints Commission head Grant Kippen.
The recount process is estimated to take around two weeks to complete.
Related news
- "Karzai retains lead in Afghan presidential elections" — Wikinews, September 13, 2009
- "Afghan presidential candidate Karzai wins majority of votes" — Wikinews, September 8, 2009
- "Afghan election rival accuses incumbent Karzai of vote rigging" — Wikinews, August 24, 2009
- "Presidential election held in Afghanistan" — Wikinews, August 21, 2009
- "Afghan president Karzai widens lead in early voting count" — Wikinews, August 26, 2009
Sources
- "Afghanistan Begins Partial Vote Recount" — VOA News, September 25, 2009
- "Afghanistan holds limited recount" — Al Jazeera, September 25, 2009
- Heidi Vogt of the Associated Press. "1 in 10 suspect Afghan ballot boxes face recount" — Google News, September 25, 2009