|
50 Afghan election staffers fired for fraud
Foreign Desk Report
KABUL—Afghanistan Election authorities have fired about 50 employees for
suspected fraud in last month’s legislative polls, officials said
Sunday. Some 680 ballot boxes, about 3 percent of votes, have been taken
out of the counting process because of suspicions that they were
stuffed, said Richard Atwood, chief of operations for the joint
U.N.-Afghan election commission. He said “approximately 50” employees
had been fired.
But he ruled out a recount, saying, “The fraud that has occurred does
not affect the integrity of the election”. “The fraud is not systematic
or widespread across the country,” Atwood told reporters. Election
organizers have “done all we can to ensure this fraud is caught”.
Atwood said investigations into fraud had slowed the ballot counting.
Almost a month after the Sept. 18 vote, provisional results have been
published for only 20 of the 34 provinces. Accusations of irregularities
have sparked demonstrations in several cities, including the capital,
Kabul.
“These elections no longer have any meaning. So many bribes have been
given. Some candidates have bought their way to power,” said Bashir
Bezhen, an official with the state Ariana airlines who ran as an
independent candidate in Kabul but lost. “The counters were shameless in
their work. They were like businessmen, making deals with whoever had
money. There should be a recount,” Bezhen said.
Many candidates declared winners by provisional results are suspected
warlords, including Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, a powerful militia leader who
has been accused of war crimes by the New York-based Human Rights Watch.
Electoral law barred anyone with links to armed groups from competing,
but with nearly 2,800 candidates, critics say many warlords slipped
through a UN-backed review.
At least two former Taliban members have been elected, according to
preliminary results. One is Abdul Salaam Rocketi, a front-line general
who spent eight months in US detention and now encourages other Taliban
members to reconcile with the Afghan government.
Another is Mawlawi Mohammed Islam Mohammadi, who was the governor of
Bamiyan province in 2001 when the Taliban blew up two giant
1,500-year-old Buddha statues there, deeming them an affront to Islam. |