KABUL: An election official has said on Thursday that Preliminary results from Afghanistan’s delayed presidential results will be announced in the coming few days after the main candidate ended his boycott of a recount.
Afghanistan has been stuck in political limbo since the vote, with the two top candidates President Ashraf Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah locked in a close race.
Independent Election Commission (IEC) spokesman Zabih Sadat said the key recount and audit of votes from the Sept 28 election had been completed in all but one province.
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“The recount in one remaining province will be completed today,” Sadat said. “Then we will gather data and announce the preliminary results to the public early next week,” he added. In Afghanistan, Saturdays mark the start of the week.
The result was originally due on Oct 19 but was repeatedly delayed amid technical issues, as well as fraud allegations from Abdullah’s team. Abdullah last month withdrew his team’s election observers from an official recount.
His supporters then blocked the process in seven northern provinces, demanding the electoral commission first invalidate around 300,000 “fraudulent” ballots out of a total of 1.8 million. Last Friday, however, Abdullah said the recount could go ahead.
Fazel Ahmad Manawi, a senior official with Abdullah’s team, said he did not plan to protest the preliminary results and was counting on the country’s electoral complaint commission to purge any fraudulent votes before final results are announced.
“The result if not first cleaned from hundreds of thousands of fraudulent votes will not be acceptable for us and the people,” said Manawi.
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