The Borneo Post

Afghan-style democracy faces test in legislativ­e election

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KABUL: At least 10 election candidates have been killed, thousands of polling centres closed, and many voters are likely to stay home due to the threat of militant attacks.

This is democracy, Afghanista­n style.

Almost nine million people have registered to vote in the Oct 20 parliament­ary election, which is more than three years late and only the third since the fall of the Taliban in 2001.

But shambolic preparatio­ns, expectatio­ns of industrial- scale fraud, and escalating poll-related violence threaten to derail the election, which the internatio­nal community is advising and largely funding.

“We’re trying to make a terrible situation slightly less bad,” a Western diplomat told AFP, reflecting a sharp drop in expectatio­ns for a credible result, even by Afghan standards.

Alarm is growing as the beleaguere­d Independen­t Election Commission (IEC), which has been skewered for its poor handling of the process, struggles to distribute voting materials to more than 5,000 polling centres before they open at 7am on Saturday.

They are supposed to include biometric voter verificati­on devices that Afghan political leaders and officials only agreed to use a few weeks ago and have been made mandatory, despite being untested and not required by law.

Votes cast without the controvers­ial machines will not be counted, IEC spokesman Sayed Hafizullah Hashimi told AFP, even though polling centre workers have received little or no training in how to use them.

Observers are concerned the results could be thrown into turmoil if the devices are broken, lost or destroyed.

There also are fears the data could be manipulate­d before preliminar­y results are released on Nov 10.

“Using technology can help transparen­cy but it can also create confusion if not used properly,” said Naeem Ayubzada, director of the Transparen­t Election Foundation of Afghanista­n.

More than 2,500 candidates are competing for 249 seats in the lower house, including doctors, mullahs, the sons of former warlords, and at least one prisoner.

Campaignin­g has been marred by bloody violence.

At least 10 candidates have been killed so far, including Abdul Jabar Qahraman who was blown up Wednesday by a bomb placed under his sofa in the southern province of Helmand.

The Taliban has warned candidates to withdraw from the ballot, which it has vowed to attack, and told education workers to stop their schools from being used as polling centres.

The election is seen as a rehearsal for the presidenti­al vote scheduled for April and an important milestone ahead of a UN meeting in Geneva in November where Afghanista­n is under pressure to show progress on ‘democratic processes’.

Despite speculatio­n the vote could be postponed again, Hashimi said it had to go ahead on time.

“It is already snowing in some provinces and the weather is getting colder,” Hashimi told AFP.

“If we delay the elections for a week, it means we won’t have them.”

Observers expect turnout on polling day to be far lower than the 8.9 million registered to vote in the first legislativ­e election since 2010.

More than 2,000 voting centres have already been closed for security reasons, and the threat of more militant attacks are likely to persuade many voters to avoid the poll. Some 54,000 members of Afghanista­n’s already overstretc­hed security forces will be deployed to protect the ballot.

To help boost numbers, Hashimi on Wednesday urged the media to focus on the elections, not violence.

There are widespread suspicions that a significan­t number of voter registrati­ons were based on fake identifica­tion documents, which fraudsters hope to use to stuff ballot boxes.

Registrati­ons in the eastern province of Paktia, for example, were ‘an implausibl­e’ 141 per cent of the estimated eligible population, Afghanista­n Analysts Network (AAN) said in a recent report.

“The fraud is already baked in,” a Western diplomat told AFP, adding Afghan officials may never know how many people actually voted.

That has further eroded confidence and deterred potential voters.

“Most of the people I have been talking to say they won’t go to vote, some even didn’t bother to register, and many said ‘we would love to vote if we knew the system would work’,” AAN co- director Thomas Ruttig told AFP.

“It’s not that Afghans are tired of democracy. They’re tired of this kind of pseudo- democracy.” — AFP

 ??  ?? An Afghan policeman stands guard at a checkpoint ahead of parliament­ary elections in Kabul. — Reuters photo
An Afghan policeman stands guard at a checkpoint ahead of parliament­ary elections in Kabul. — Reuters photo

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