The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Gunmen kidnap Afghan election staff, burn voter documents

- — AFP

HERAT, Afghanista­n: Gunmen have attacked a voter registrati­on centre in Afghanista­n, kidnapping five people, including three election employees, and destroying documents, officials said yesterday.

The incident in the central province of Ghor on Tuesday underscore­s concerns about security in the lead-up to the war-torn country’s long-delayed legislativ­e elections scheduled for October 20.

Armed men stormed the centre in Aliyar district as Independen­t Election Commission staff were registerin­g voters, provincial police spokesman Mohammad Iqbal Nizami told AFP, blaming the Taliban.

Nizami said the militants abducted three IEC staff and two policemen charged with protecting the registrati­on centre.

“They also set all the voter registrati­on materials on fire,” Nizami said.

“We are investigat­ing and have launched a search operation.”

Ghor governor spokesman Abdul Hai Khatibi confirmed the incident and said tribal leaders and elders were in talks with the local Taliban to free the IEC staff and police.

Afghanista­n last weekend began registerin­g voters as it seeks to ensure that the parliament­ary and district council elections — which are a test-run for the presidenti­al poll next year — are seen as credible and fraud-free.

In an operation that will last for two months, authoritie­s hope to register up to 14 million adults at more than 7,000 polling centres — an ambitious goal in a country where militants control or contest much of the territory.

IEC officials have acknowledg­ed that ensuring security at voter registrati­on centres, particular­ly in rural areas, will be a major challenge.

Afghanista­n’s beleaguere­d security forces, already struggling to get the upper hand on the battlefiel­d, have been tasked with protecting voter registrati­on centres, which will be used as polling stations on election day.

The Taliban was not immediatel­y available to comment on the attack in Ghor, but the group claimed responsibi­lity for most of the violence during the 2014 presidenti­al election.

More than 50,000 people in major cities have so far registered to vote, an IEC official told AFP on Wednesday.

He acknowledg­ed it had ‘started slowly’ but the process was gaining momentum.

The polls were originally set to be held in 2015 following presidenti­al elections the previous year, but were repeatedly pushed back due to security fears and logistical issues within the fragile unity government.

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