Washington Post: UN Data Shows Vote Discrepancies in Afghan Election

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07 October 2009

U.N. officials have confirmed that data on Afghanistan's disputed
election was kept confidential. The information allegedly shows that
the official vote count in some provinces exceeded the estimated number
of voters by more than 100,000.  


The Washington Post reported
voter turnout information allegedly kept secret by the chief envoy for
the United Nations in Afghanistan, Kai Eide, provides further evidence
the August 20 contest was marred by fraud.

The information the
newspaper obtained reportedly shows widespread discrepancies between
the estimated voter turnout and the results reported by the country's
Independent Election Commission.

U.N. spokesman in Kabul Dan McNorton, speaking by phone to VOA, says it is early to make any conclusions based on the data.

"It is unsubstantiated raw data and should be treated as such," he said.

The
reported discrepancies in the election data are particularly prevalent
in Afghanistan's volatile southern and eastern provinces, where Afghan
President Hamid Karzai won by large margins.

One example is in
the country's southern province of Helmand, where the Independent
Election Commission recorded roughly 135,000 votes, but the United
Nations estimated between 5,000 and 38,000 people actually voted.

The U.N. data also reportedly shows fraud in favor of candidate Abdullah Abdullah, but on a much smaller scale.

Allegations
of rampant fraud and vote-rigging have surrounded the Afghan
presidential election and raised questions about its legitimacy.

Unofficial
tallies indicate Mr. Karzai leads with about 54 percent of the vote. 
If his lead falls below 50 percent, he could face top challenger
Abdullah Abdullah in a runoff.

Last week, U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon removed Kai Eide's deputy, U.S. diplomat Peter Galbraith,
from his post after Galbraith accused his boss of failing to provide
Afghan and international officials with evidence of fraud, primarily by
Mr. Karzai's supporters. Mr. Karzai's chief rival, Abdullah Abdullah,
also has questioned the United Nations' role in the election.

McNorton dismisses the allegations, saying election officials are thoroughly investigating all instances of alleged fraud.

"To suggest that the United Nations in Afghanistan has supported one particular candidate over another is ludicrous," he said.

Afghan
election officials say workers are recounting some of the ballots from
the presidential election and expect to formally declare a winner by
late next week.

While the political uncertainty has prevailed
since the August 20 poll, the Taliban-led insurgency continues to
undermine international efforts to bring stability to Afghanistan eight
years after the U.S.-led coalition launched the anti-Taliban offensive.