China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chaotic Afghan polls drag into day 2

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KABUL, Afghanista­n — Afghanista­n’s parliament­ary elections entered a second day after delays caused by violence and technical issues, as a roadside bomb killed nearly a dozen civilians on Sunday, including several children.

Independen­t Elections Commission Chairman Abdul Badi Sayat said more than 3 million people out of 8.8 million registered voters cast their ballots on Saturday. The biggest turnout was in Kabul and the lowest in the southern Uruzgan province.

Polling on Sunday continued in 401 voting centers, including 45 in Kabul. The results of the polling will not be released before mid-November and final results will not be out until December.

The first parliament­ary elections since 2010 are being held against a backdrop of neardaily attacks by the Taliban, who have seized nearly half the country and have repeatedly refused offers to negotiate with the Kabul government.

At about of the 253 polling centers opened for voting on Sunday, election workers still struggled to use biometric verificati­on devices and voter rolls were “either incomplete or non-existent”, Electoral Complaints Commission spokesman Ali Reza Rohani told reporters.

“Most of the problems we had yesterday still exist today,” said Rohani, adding some polling sites again opened late and had insufficie­nt ballot papers.

The UN mission in Afghanista­n praised those who had made an effort to vote despite the technical issues, many of whom waited in long lines for hours as polling stations remained open late. “Those eligible voters who were not able to cast their vote, due to technical issues, deserve the right to vote,” it said in a statement.

The Taliban had vowed to attack the election, and on the first day of polling at least 36 people were killed in nearly 200 attacks, including 27 civilians, according to Deputy Interior Minister Akhtar Mohammed Ibrahimi. He said security forces killed 31 insurgents in gunbattles.

On Sunday, a roadside bomb in the eastern Nangarhar province struck a vehicle filled with civilians, killing 11 people, including six children, according to Attahullah Khogyani, spokesman for the provincial governor.

No one immediatel­y claimed the attack. The Taliban and an Islamic State affiliate are both active in Nangarhar. Afghan civilians are often killed by roadside bombs intended to target security forces.

In the northern Balkh province, insurgents shot and killed four men who were on their way to a polling station late Saturday, said Sher Jan Durani, spokesman for the provincial police chief.

Durani says the men were carrying their national IDs with stickers proving they had registered to vote. He blamed the attack on the Taliban, who have warned people not to participat­e in the election.

 ?? HOSHANG HASHIMI / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE THE NETHERLAND­S ?? An Afghan Independen­t Election Commission official scans a voter’s finger with a biometric device at a polling center for the country’s legislativ­e election in Herat province on Saturday.
HOSHANG HASHIMI / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE THE NETHERLAND­S An Afghan Independen­t Election Commission official scans a voter’s finger with a biometric device at a polling center for the country’s legislativ­e election in Herat province on Saturday.

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