Initial Afghan Election Results Show Incumbent President with Slight Lead

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25 August 2009

Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai is leading by just two percent,
according to official, partial election results five days after
millions of voters braved Taliban threats to cast ballots. Mr. Karzai
has 40.6 percent of votes tabulated, while his closest challenger has
38.7 percent.


Afghanistan's
Independent Election Commission says President Karzai is leading his
closest rival by only 10,000 votes. The tallies released cover only 10
percent of the total and are partial results of 21 provinces, including
the capital, Kabul.  

Mr. Karzai has just under 213,000 votes while former foreign minister Abdullah Abdullah has nearly 203,000 votes.

IEC spokesman Nur Mohammad Nur tells VOA News these initial results do not give any candidate a basis to declare victory.

"No,
it is impossible because these are partial results," he said. "From
today we start and we will update the media and the candidates. It is
impossible to judge [who is the winner]."  

Election officials say they will release more partial tallies each day this week.

Abdullah,
in the meantime, is claiming he has videotape and documents that
demonstrate that there were "millions" of fake ballots cast last
Thursday.

"We will not allow a big fraud to decide the outcome
of the elections. There is no doubt that state-crafted and engineered
fraud has been under way," he said.

Abdullah urged his followers to remain calm and not resort to violence.

Six
longshot presidential candidates are warning fraud claims threaten to
undermine the election and could trigger violence in this country
already torn by a Taliban insurgency.

One of the disgruntled
contenders, former finance minister Ashraf Ghani, who is touted as a
possible chief executive in the next administration, alleges gunmen
told people to vote for Abdullah and officials stuffed ballot boxes in
favor of the president.

VOA News asked presidential spokesman Humayun Hamidzada for the Karzai administration's reaction to the accusations.

"The
allegations of fraud or any wrongdoing will be addressed by those
competent authorities," he said. "We are not the ones addressing that. 
We will be providing the environment that the elections commission can
do its job. So we will leave that to the elections commission."

Afghan
voters will not receive word until September 3, at the earliest, as to
who won the presidential election. The credibility of the announcement
will depend greatly on the reported level of voter turnout in key parts
of the country and the seriousness of claims of electoral fraud.

In
southern Afghanistan, four American servicemen died when a roadside
bomb exploded. The latest casualties make this year the deadliest for
foreign forces in the country since the 2001 overthrow of the Taliban.