Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai leads making up for 56.44% of the total votes

AfghanistanAshraf Ghani Ahmadzai leads making up for 56.44% of the total votes

Kabul: Afghan President election Results: Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai leads with exactly 4,485,888 votes making up for 56.44% of the total votes.

afghanelectionresults

The Independent Election Commission (IEC) announced in a press conference on Monday the first installment of publicly released results from the June 14 runoff. US Department of State expressed its view point after election results came up and said that:

It is essential that the IEC work with the Independent Electoral Complaints Commission and the United Nations to execute the UN proposed audits and to answer all the legitimate questions raised by the two campaigns and independent observers.

AFGHANISTAN-ELECTION-CANDIDATES-FILES

 

The preliminary figures place Ashraf Ghani ahead by over one million votes with total share as 56.4 percent of votes comparing to Abdullah Abdullah with 43.5 percent. The Team of Presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah has refused to accept the results. Preliminary results divides Afghanistan clearly as Ashraf Ghani got maximum votes from Putstun speaking areas in Run Off elections because sitting President Karzai and Ashraf Ghani in their speeches  and informal talks kept sending message to Pustun speaking voters to come  forward in elections and vote for their Pushtun brother —Ashraf Ghani. Run Off election results indicates clearing that Abdullah Abdullah got very less votes from Pustun belt as he is considered as Tajik and non-Pushtu speaking candidate although his father was a Pushtun and his mother was a Tajik. If  no rigging was done in Putun dominated areas and results are clean than it is clear that Afghanistan is clearly divided into Pushtun and Non-Pushtun Afghanistan.

“We want to say to the people of Afghanistan that if our conditions aren’t accepted and the assigned commission doesn’t reach an outcome and our condition that invalid votes be distinguished from genuine votes is not accepted, we will not accept the results and consequences will follow and responsibility will be on the government, the rigging commission and rigging team,” said spokesman of Abdullah Abduallah after the announcement of results.

The Free and Fair Election Foundation of Afghanistan (FEFA) has also showed signs of concern with the announcement of preliminary results.

“The election process must return to a normal routine before the preliminary results are announced and both candidates must be involved in the process,” FEFA spokesman Fahim Naeemi said. “Efforts should be made to discard fake votes from genuine votes, preliminary results must not lead to fighting, because this can have devastating impact on Afghanistan.”

 

US  Department of State released following statement after election results:

The United States reaffirms its support for a sovereign, unified, and democratic Afghanistan and for the Afghan election process. We have seen today’s announcement of preliminary results and note that these figures are not final or authoritative and may not predict the final outcome, which could still change based on the findings of the Afghan electoral bodies. Serious allegations of fraud have been raised and have yet to be adequately investigated.

We note that the United Nations, invited by President Karzai and both candidates to facilitate the process, has proposed a series of additional audits of suspect ballots, and that other measures have been under discussion. As the Independent Election Commission (IEC) statement noted, four additional measures have been accepted by both camps. Those measures affect more than 7000 ballot boxes, and potentially more than 3 million ballots.

It is essential that the IEC work with the Independent Electoral Complaints Commission and the United Nations to execute the UN proposed audits and to answer all the legitimate questions raised by the two campaigns and independent observers.

A full and thorough review of all reasonable allegations of irregularities is essential to ensure that the Afghan people have confidence in the integrity of the electoral process and that the new Afghan President is broadly accepted inside and outside Afghanistan. It is the two electoral Commissions’ responsibility to address all credible allegations of fraud. They must implement a thorough audit whether or not the two campaigns agree.

We call upon both campaigns and their supporters to cooperate with these audits and to refrain from provocative statements or actions. As the Commission made clear, these results are not final and neither candidate should claim victory on the basis of this announcement. It is especially important that both campaigns send agents to observe the audit process. We believe that UN recommended audit process, provided it begins immediately, can be completed in time to allow the inauguration of the next President to proceed as scheduled on August 2.

The United States does not support any individual candidate. We have long stated our support for a credible, transparent, and inclusive process that is broadly supported by the Afghan people and produces a president who can bring Afghanistan together and govern effectively. We call on all sides to work toward this goal and to avoid steps that undermine national unity. The continued support of the United States for Afghanistan requires that Afghanistan remains united and that the result of this election is deemed credible.

 

Tags:

Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai leads making up for 56.44% of the total votes

Asad Haroon
Asad Haroon
All the information published under this Author is via Web desk/Team/Contributors. Opinons and views of the Organization may differ from the views represented here

Must read

Advertisement