| November 2, 2009 Afghan election commission declares Karzai winner
|
KABUL (AP) - Afghanistan's election commission proclaimed
President Hamid Karzai the victor of the country's tumultuous
ballot Monday, canceling a planned runoff and ending a political
crisis that began with a fraud-marred first round two and a half
months ago.
The Obama administration has anxiously been waiting for a
government deemed legitimate to emerge in Kabul before announcing
whether to deploy tens of thousands more American troops to fight
the burgeoning insurgency.
The cancellation of Saturday's vote came one day after former
Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah announced he was pulling out
less than a week before the Nov. 7 vote. Abdullah said the ballot
would not have been fair and accused the Karzai-appointed
Independent Election Commission of bias.
The annulment is a huge relief to organizers who were scrambling
to hold the election before the onset of Afghanistan's harsh
winter, as well as authorities who feared a wave of bloody violence
on polling day after a Taliban spokesman threatened attacks against
anyone who took part.
Independent Election Commission chairman Azizullah Lodin
announced Karzai the winner during a news conference in Kabul.
"His excellency Hamid Karzai, who has won the majority of votes
in the first round and is the only candidate for the second round,
is declared by the Independent Election Commission as the elected
president of Afghanistan," Lodin said.
Karzai has led Afghanistan since U.S. forces invaded
to oust the
Taliban in 2001. He won elections in 2004 and his latest victory
will give him another five-year mandate. The U.S. will have to find
a way to work with the Afghan leader, who has fallen out of favor
in Washington after openly criticizing U.S. military tactics,
including the heavy use of air power that has killed many
civilians.
The mass ballot-box stuffing that characterized the Aug. 20 vote
further sullied Karzai's reputation. Fraud investigators threw out
nearly a third of Karzai's votes, dropping him below the 50 percent
threshold needed to win outright.
Worried that Karzai's government would not be seen as
legitimate, a bevy of international figures, including U.S. Sen.
John Kerry, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown, pressed Karzai to consent to a runoff.
But on Monday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who was in
Kabul on a surprise visit, welcomed the decision to forego the
runoff and congratulated Karzai.
"This has been a difficult election process for Afghanistan,
and lessons must be learned," said Ban. "Afghanistan now faces
significant challenges and the new president must move swiftly to
form a government that is able to command the support of both the
Afghan people and the international community."
Last week, insurgents in suicide vests stormed a guest house in
the heart of Kabul filled with U.N. election workers, killing five
U.N. staffers and three Afghans. The attack raised questions about
whether the world body might scale back its operations in the
war-ravaged country.
But Ban promised Monday that the U.N. work would continue in
Afghanistan despite the slayings. He also said Karzai had assured
him Afghan security forces would work to protect his staff.
Ban told reporters that "we cannot be deterred, we must not be
deterred. ... The work of the United Nations will continue."
The same day, however, the world body announced it would pull
some expatriate staff out of Pakistan and suspend long-term
development work in areas along the Afghan border because of
violence.
The U.N. kept operating after an August 2003 truck bombing at
its headquarters in Baghdad, which killed 22 people, including
mission chief Sergio Vieira de Mello, but after a second bombing it
shut down operations in Iraq in late October 2003 for years.
Meanwhile, Afghan authorities ordered all schools and
universities closed for three weeks amid swine flu fears that were
heightened Wednesday after the country registered its first death
from the virus.
The Health Ministry said large gatherings at public baths and
wedding halls will be forbidden for the same period. Many
pedestrians and drivers making their way to work in the capital
were wearing medical masks, which were being sold in markets and by
street children.
Elsewhere, NATO-led forces said one Afghan girl was accidentally
killed during an operation against militants in the southern
province of Kandahar on Sunday. A joint Afghan-international force
fired on two motorcycles carrying militants south of the city,
killing a girl who was on one of the motorbikes, NATO said in a
statement.
Associated Press Writer Todd Pitman contributed to this report
from Kabul.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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