Afghan election authorities received 16,500 complaints about the handling of this year’s presidential election, officials said Thursday, days after preliminary results put President Ashraf Ghani in place to secure a second term.
Afghanistan’s Independent Election Commission (IEC) announced earlier this week that Ghani had won a slim 50.64 percent majority in the voting on September 28. The final results are expected to be announced in the coming weeks after the complaints have been reviewed. Officials have 15 days to finalize their investigation of the complaints and release results to the candidates, said Zuhra Bayan Shinwari, head of the Independent Electoral Complaints Commission (ECC).
If the numbers hold following these investigations, the result is enough for Ghani to avoid a runoff. He easily beat his longtime rival, Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah, who scored 39.52 percent.
According to Shinwari, Abdullah’s team filed around 8,000 complaints to the ECC and Ghani handed in over 3,000, while the rest were submitted by other candidates.
Fraud alleged after delaysPreliminary results originally due October 19 were repeatedly delayed for what the IEC said were technical issues. Various candidates, particularly Abdullah, alleged fraud.
Observers and candidates have blasted the IEC for its handling of the count and its repeated disregard of the electoral calendar.
The election was meant to be the cleanest yet in Afghanistan’s young democracy.
A German firm supplied biometric machines to stop people from voting more than once.
But allegations of vote stuffing, illegal balloting and other fraud came almost as soon as the polls had closed.
Nearly 1 million of the initial 2.7 million votes were purged because of irregularities, meaning the election saw by far the lowest turnout of any Afghan poll.
Ultimately, only 1.8 million votes were counted — a tiny number given Afghanistan’s estimated population of 37 million and a total of 9.6 million registered voters.
Abdullah lost to Ghani in 2014 in a divisive election that saw the U.S. intervene to broker an awkward power-sharing deal between the two rivals.
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